Cordite Home
HOME | ABOUT | ARCHIVES | ASHES | CURRENT | EDITORS | FEATURES | NEWS BLOG | POETRY | REVIEWS | SUBMIT! | SUBSCRIBE


Image by Ivy Alvarez: see larger image here.

FEATURES

Read Ivy Alvarez's interviews with poets Denise Duhamel and Nick Carbó, in which they reveal their ideas of the domestic (bliss), the enemy (mould) and what it's like to live and work with a poet as partner in crime (amongst other chores).

Richard Watts, creative director of Express Media's (producer of the youth literary magazine Voiceworks) has stepped down. Paul Mitchell reports on Richard's five years in a job that he describes as the best he's ever had. Roh!

Andy Jackson interviews Patricia Sykes: "I don't have any sense of 'poetry identity', of 'belonging' or 'fitting in' anywhere. I think I've always felt, generally, an outsider. Perhaps this has to do with poets being thieves in the night', or perhaps it's because I favour a dis-possessing eye, even if I don't always achieve this." Po!

EDITORIAL

David Prater on Cordite's future directions.

21 DOMESTIC ENEMY

Poetry Editor: Liam Ferney

Christopher Kelen
Spring!
Lu Yang
From 'Sackcloth Garments'
Ethan Paquin
Muse Has Lost Her Lustre
John Gascoigne
From Desolation Row
Richard Reeve
The All Blacks v Maoist China
Simon Hall
Ronald Reagan
Ouyang Yu
Invading Australia: a Sequence
Anna Jackson
Virgil at Bedtime
Louis Armand
Notes For A Prospectus
Sarah French
The Long Drop
Nick Carbó and Denise Duhamel
While Waiting For Denise To Emerge From the "I Dream of Jeannie" Room

ROBO POEMS!

Check out the winners of the deadliest poetry competition this side of Gallifrey!

REVIEWS

Our new reviews editor, Ali Aliazdeh presents reviews of new work by John Kinsella, Louis Armand, DJ Huppatz, Sebastian Gurcilio and Andy Jackson. Go!

AUDIO

Babble is back again in 2005! So yo!

CORDITE #21 DOMESTIC ENEMY released March 2005
1-11 | 12-13 | 14-15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 21.1 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 24.1 | 25 | 26 | 27
Home : Site & contents © 2000-2007 Cordite Press Inc. : Contact Us
This site looks best in IE6. Don't ask why. Words are bullets.