Smartish Pace

Smartish Pace
Editor Stephen Reichert
Categories Literary journal
Frequency Annually
Total circulation 1,100
First issue 1999
Company Smartish Pace
Country United States
Language English
Website www.smartishpace.com
ISSN 1532-3218

Smartish Pace is a non-profit, independent literary journal based in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Smartish Pace was founded in 1999 by Stephen Reichert[1][2][3] who was a University of Maryland School of Law student at the time. The name, Smartish Pace, originates from a tort case in which a horse carriage, which was travelling at a smartish pace, ran over and killed a donkey.[4] Smartish Pace has published poems by the following Pulitzer Prize winners: Natasha Trethewey, Claudia Emerson, Ted Kooser, Paul Muldoon, Carl Dennis, Stephen Dunn, Henry Taylor, Mary Oliver, Maxine Kumin, and Anthony Hecht.[5] When referencing places Pulitzer Prize winner Claudia Emerson had published, Newsweek called the journal "obscure".[6]

Smartish Pace’s website is the home of Poets Q & A, the first interactive poetry forum on the internet, where readers ask questions of well-known poets.[7] Past poets who have participated in Poets Q & A include Sherman Alexie, Eavan Boland, Robert Creeley, Carl Dennis, Stephen Dunn, Jorie Graham, Robert Hass, Bob Hicok, Campbell McGrath, Robert Pinsky, Elizabeth Spires, and David Wojahn.

Smartish Pace was named "Best Poetry Journal" in 2007 by the Baltimore City Paper.[8]

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See also

Notes and references

  1. Permutt, Sam (April 2004). "Pace setter". Baltimore Magazine.
  2. "Lines Online: Poetry Journals on the Web". The Chronicle of Higher Education. November 7, 2003. Retrieved 2010-12-10.
  3. "Poetry's Dead at Last But . . .". Trinity Magazine. Winter 2000. Retrieved 2010-12-10. (authored by member of journal's staff, published in an alumni magazine)
  4. Miceli, Thomas (Fall 2009). "Davies v. Mann from Chapter 2". The Economic Approach to Law, 2nd ed. Retrieved 2010-12-10.
  5. "Poets Index" Web page at the Smartish Pace Web site, accessed 2010-12-10
  6. Gates, David (June 12, 2006). "Heroine by a Hairbreadth". Newsweek.
  7. Larimer, Kevin (May–June 2003). "Literary MagNet". Poets & Writers. Retrieved 2010-12-10.
  8. "Baltimore Living: Best Poetry Journal". Baltimore City Paper. September 19, 2007. Retrieved 2010-12-10.

External links

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