Founded in 2013 by David Starkey, Gunpowder Press is located in Santa Barbara, California. Our name is a nod to our city's namesake, Saint Barbara, the patron saint of gunpowder. Gunpowder Poetry is now a 501(c)(3) nonprofit literary organization.
The press hosts several annual prizes including the annual Barry Spacks Poetry Prize for a full-length manuscript of original poetry. The Alta California Chapbook Prize, edited by Emma Trelles, publishes winning chapbooks by latinx poets in bilingual editions. The Dryden-Vreeland Prize is a book prize for poets working in K-12 education. Poets published by Gunpowder Press include Fred Arroyo, Kellam Ayers, Aaron Baker, Christopher Blackman, Todd Copeland, Meghan Dunn, Michelle Bonczek Evory, David Allen Case, Nan Cohen, Meghan Dunn, Glenn Freeman, Lee Herrick, Catherine Abbey Hodges, Gabriel Ibarra, Susan Kelly-DeWitt, Joshua McKinney, Sandra McPherson, Florencia Milito, Kurt Olsson, Jim Peterson, Catherine Esposito Prescott, Peg Quinn, Nicolas Reiner, Amelia Rodriguez, Crystal AC Salas, Dennis Schmitz, Gary Soto, Barry Spacks, and Chryss Yost.
The press also publishes thematic anthologies of poems by central California coast poets in the Shoreline Voices Project series which have featured dozens of established and emerging poets. Two Shoreline Voices anthologies are available online: While You Wait, edited by Laure-Anne Bosselaar; and Big Enough for Words, edited by David Starkey, Chryss Yost, and George Yatchisin.
Gunpowder Press also publishes a bimonthly online poetry journal, Anacapa Review.
Educators—currently active or retired, full- or part-time—are encouraged to submit a full-length poetry manuscript for the Dryden/Vreeland Poetry Prize. , named to honor two especially impactful teachers in the editors' lives. Your poems need not focus on schools or teaching, and all school employees are eligible. Submissions will be accepted between May 1 and August 30. The prize includes $1000, publication by Gunpowder Press and 10 author copies.
Final judge: Marsha de la O. A long-time educator, she is currently a lecturer in the English Department at CSU Channel Islands, where she teaches poetry and creative writing. She is the award-winning author of Every Ravening Thing, Antidote for Night, and Black Hope. Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Slowdown, and many other journals, and she is a recipient of the Morton Marcus Poetry Prize. She lives with her husband in Ventura, California, where they founded the Ventura County Poetry Project to support local poetry.
How to Submit: Attach an unpublished book-length manuscript of 48-100 pages. Please include a table of contents and a page which acknowledges previous publication of individual poems. Entrant's names will be removed from manuscripts presented to the final judge.
Entry fee is $20. For an additional $10, entrants will receive a copy of the winning book (includes shipping and $18 cover price). Word .doc or .docx preferred. We ask that close friends or students of the judge show respect for the judge by refraining from submitting work for this award. Due to our desire to respect international copyright, submissions are accepted from poets within the United States only.
About Gunpowder Press: Founded in 2013 by David Starkey and co-edited by David Starkey and Chryss Yost, Gunpowder Press is part of Gunpowder Poetry, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit literary organization.
Anacapa Review considers poems in any style. You may submit up to 3 poems per submission. When selecting which poems to submit, please keep in mind that Anacapa Review is an online publication, and viewers may be reading your poems on a range of devices; concrete poems or poems with very long line may display differently for some readers.
Accepted poems will appear one month after the deadline for a given issue. Accepted submissions made through May 31 will appear in issue 3.4. Please keep in mind that these poems are being considered for the July/August issue.
We make decisions on all submissions each month--no poems are held back for future issues. In short, you will hear from us promptly, and if your work is accepted, it will be published soon afterwards.
In submitting your work you agree that the poems submitted have not been previously published online or in print. We consider simultaneous submissions with the understanding that if your poems are accepted elsewhere you will promptly notify Anacapa Review by either withdrawing your entire submission in Submittable, or, if not all of the poems have been accepted elsewhere, by indicating in Submittable Messages which poems are still available.
Anacapa Review also hopes to publish poetry-related prose, such as book reviews, interviews, and reflections. If you have an idea for something you think might be a good fit for Anacapa Review, we invite you to email us at editors@anacapareview.com.
Previously published in Anacapa Review? Thank you! Your poems are what make Anacapa Review successful. Please wait one year before submitting again—diversity of voices is important to us.
Need to withdrawn one of your poems? Congratulations on having your work published elsewhere! Please use the Submittable messaging feature to let us know which poem(s) you'd like to withdraw, and we will keep the others in our consideration.