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POETRY submissions reopen JUNE 1.

Shō Poetry Journal

Established in 2002, revived in 2023

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      • Native American Heritage Month (2025)
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Shō Poetry Journal is a nonprofit print journal emerging from a 20-year hibernation. We publish an eclectic range of poetry twice a year and publish audio features on a rolling basis. We strive to champion voices that have been historically underrepresented or overlooked. Browse a list of our contributors and follow us on Instagram for updates.

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"Hopi Leia" relief print by Hopi artist Sikuyva Dawavendewa

CURRENT ISSUE

Shō No. 8

winter 2025/2026

This issue features 72 poems by 48 poets: Sean Cho A. • Hiwot Adilow • Elisa Luna Ady • courtney alyce • Seth Amos • Jack B. Bedell • Shlagha Borah • Apollo Chastain • Lyn Li Che • Chen Chen • Stephanie Choi • Lindsay D’Andrea • Loisa Fenichell • Cheyenne C. Fletcher • Reuben Gelley Newman • Carlos Andrés Gómez • Iain Grinbergs • Shira Leah Haus • Sarah Jordan • Joan Naviyuk Kane • Aiman Tahir Khan • Sophie Klahr • Whitney Koo • Giljoon Lee • Elizabeth Loudon • Betsy Mitchell Martinez • Rebecca Morton • Lisa Mottolo • James O’Leary • Mollie O’Leary • william o’neal ii • Konstantinos Patrinos • Ngoc Pham • Jessica Nirvana Ram • Jemma Leigh Roe • Adrie Rose • Rukan Saif • SM Stubbs • Virgil Suárez • Will Summay • Tiezst “Tie” Taylor • Tianyi • Reed Turchi • Margaret Wack • Joey Wańczyk • Gwenyth Wheat • Ross White • Yan Zhang

Cover art: “Hopi Leia” by Sikuyva Dawavendewa.

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A girl in a long white dress and a bird head mask sits on a bough under a full moon in a night forest landscape. Her hands are folded in her lap and her feet can't be seen. Text says: Shō Poetry Journal No. 7 Summer 2025.

PREVIOUS ISSUE

Shō No. 7

SUMMER 2025

This issue features 67 poems by 48 poets: Amber Adams • Emily Adams-Aucoin • Hannah Keziah Agustin • Ai Khanoum • Aldo Amparán • sterling-elizabeth arcadia • Michael Bazzett • Jared Beloff • Aaron Caycedo-Kimura • M. Cynthia Cheung • Christian J. Collier • Will Cordeiro • Crystal Cox • Sean Thomas Dougherty • Bobby Elliott • Danielle Shandiin Emerson • Clare Flanagan • Matthew Gellman • Kelly Gray • Saúl Hernández • Sara Hovda • Amorak Huey • Olivia Jacobson • Vasvi Kejriwal • Daniel Lurie • Jenna Martínez • Malia Maxwell • Rishona Michael • Tim Moder • Asheley Nova Navarro • Ohia, Ernest Chigaemezu • Kunjana Parashar • Paige Passantino • Nina C. Peláez • Sofia Rasic • Remi Recchia • Mallory Rodenberg • Brooke Sahni • Joan Jobe Smith • February Spikener • Jessica Q. Stark • Claire Taylor • J.K. Tsosie • Matthew Tuckner • Han VanderHart • Fred Voss • Nicholas Yingling • Aleks Zywicki

Cover art: “Interim” by Tanya Rastogi.

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Online Features

  • Apr 29, 2026

    Mental Health Awareness Month Playlist

  • Apr 29, 2026

    Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month Playlist 2026

  • Apr 29, 2026

    Jewish American Heritage Month Playlist 2026

  • Apr 21, 2026

    Audio Feature: Susanna Lang

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Past Issues

Shō No. 6

Winter 2024/2025

Shō No. 6 features 57 poems by 40 poets.

Cover art: “In Gilded Walls” by Tanya Rastogi.

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Shō No. 5

Summer 2024

Shō No. 5 features 68 poems by 47 poets.

Cover art: “Lucy” by Harim Choi.

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Shō No. 4

Winter 2023/2024

Illustration of girl wearing a large deer head mask with antlers. She is clothed in a dark blue tshirt and pants and stands in a high desert landscape, holding plastic flowers. A ghostly girl’s head is placed beside her in the grass.

Shō No. 4 features 73 poems by 47 poets.

Cover art: “Girl with Deer Mask” by Harim Choi.

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Shō No. 3

Summer/Fall 2023

Shō No. 3 features 62 poems by 42 poets.

Cover art: “Grandfather Autumn” by Juanita Violini.

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Shō Poetry Journal on Instagram

shopoetryjournal

Listen to Loisa Fenichell read “From where I arriv Listen to Loisa Fenichell read “From where I arrived” from Shō No. 8.

About this Poem: The poem started with an image of a blue whale — my poems usually start with images, though very occasionally poems will evolve from a line instead — and then I suppose as I was writing the blue whale became the past itself (I was thinking in a bit of an ecological way, too, if I recall correctly). The gas stations bit is very much inspired by a poem by Catherine Pond, “At the Sunaco in West Virginia,” and the ambulance image is inspired by a movie called “A Different Man.” Other moments are more autobiographical, like with the teacher...as with any poem (I think!) it stemmed from a myriad of places, from a myriad of sources of inspiration.

Loisa Fenichell’s work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net, and Best New Poets, and has been featured or is forthcoming in Poetry Northwest, Washington Square Review, The Iowa Review, and elsewhere. Her chapbook, all these urban fields, was published by nothing to say press and her collection, Wandering in all directions of this earth, which was a Tupelo Press Berkshire Prize finalist in 2021 and 2022, was the winner of the 2022 Ghost Peach Press Prize, selected by Yale Younger Poets Prize winner Eduardo C. Corral, and published by Ghost Peach Press. Her second collection, Folk Singer!, is forthcoming from Cornerstone Press. She is the winner of the 2021 Bat City Review Editors’ Prize, has been a finalist for Narrative Magazine’s 2021 30 Below contest, a runner-up for Tupelo Quarterly’s Tupelo Poetry Prize, and a finalist for the Dorianne Laux / Joe Millar prize. She has received support from Bread Loaf Writers’ Workshop and Community of Writers and holds an MFA in Poetry from Columbia University.

#jewishheritagemonthpoetry
Listen to Stephanie Choi read “Vulnerable” from Sh Listen to Stephanie Choi read “Vulnerable” from Shō No. 8.

Stephanie Choi’s poems appear in Beloit Poetry Journal, Blackbird, Copper Nickel, Electric Literature, New Ohio Review, and elsewhere. Her debut collection, The Lengest Neoi, was selected by Brenda Shaughnessy for the 2023 Iowa Poetry Prize and published in 2024. She was the 2023-24 Poet-in-Residence at Sewanee: The University of the South and one of Poets and Writers Magazine’s Debut Poets of 2024. She is an Assistant Professor at Oklahoma State University, where she teaches creative writing at the undergraduate and graduate levels.

#aapiheritagemonth
Listen to Emily Adams-Aucoin read “Melencolia I” f Listen to Emily Adams-Aucoin read “Melencolia I” from Shō No. 7. This is the first poem in the micro-chapbook “It Adheres to Many Things,” which won Harbor Review’s 2025 Editor’s Prize.

About this Poem: This poem is ekphrastic, and inspired by Albrecht Dürer’s copper engraving Melencolia I” (1514). I fell in love with the piece during one of the worst depressive episodes of my life. I related to the angel with her head in her hands, surrounded by tools of measurement but unable to locate, measure, or solve her own condition. I started writing poetry as a means to locate myself within the world, to keep me accountable for being here. Kind of like a fail safe, or a parachute. I wrote this poem because I needed a very specific tool.

Emily Adams-Aucoin is a writer whose poetry has been published in Electric Literature, Frontier Poetry, TriQuarterly, Sixth Finch, North American Review, Colorado Review and elsewhere. She is the author of the micro-chapbook It Adheres to Many Things which won Harbor Review’s 2025 Editor’s Prize.

#mentalhealthawarenessmonth
Look out for two audio features from Daniel Lurie Look out for two audio features from Daniel Lurie for Jewish American Heritage Month. Here's “Smoking Crows” from Shō No. 7.

Daniel Lurie is a Jewish, rural writer, from eastern Montana. He holds an MFA in Poetry from the University of Idaho. Daniel is co-editor of Outskirts Literary Journal, and his work has appeared or is forthcoming in swamp pink, Poetry Northwest, Gulf Coast, Pleiades, and others. He recently won the 2026 Mississippi Review Prize and phoebe’s 2026 Greg Grummer Poetry Contest awarded by Diane Seuss. He served as the 2025-2026 Ronald Wallace Poetry Fellow at UW-Madison and is a 2026-2028 Wallace Stegner Fellow. Find him at danielluriepoetry.com.
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Publishing Stats

Since our revival issue was published in Summer 2023:

375

Poems Published

269

Total Poets Published

131

Audio Features Published

61

Prize Nominations

5

Poems chosen for inclusion in anthologies

Shō Poetry Journal


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