• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

MAYDAY

  • Culture
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
  • Nonfiction
  • Translation
  • Fiction
  • Poetry
  • About
    • Submit
      • Contests
      • Contest Winners
      • MAYDAY:Black
    • Open Positions
    • Masthead
    • Contributors

Liam Hysjulien

LIAM HYSJULIEN is a graduate student in sociology at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. His work has been published in Salon, the Minnetonka Review, CounterPunch, Truthout, and Teaching Sociology.

On Learning of My Father’s Illness [November 22nd, 2011] by Liam Hysjulien

April 1, 2012 Contributed By: Liam Hysjulien

I don’t believe in anything, but nature-via-beauty-con-science— no cable that welcomes us all home. The crafted shore of crying birds. Alone in the belly of a single branched tree. I find these things all with you. Or the words we rearranged and the combinations that split along the dirty water in my head. I like […]

Filed Under: Poetry Posted On: April 1, 2012

Contributor Bios for Issue 5 Spring 2012

April 1, 2012 Contributed By: Alan Heathcock, Alejandro Méndez, Aleksey Porvin, Alyse Bensel, Amy Holwerda, Andrew Galan, Brandi George, Christopher Munde, Dana Kroos, Deena Metzger, Gerard Marconi, Helen Degen Cohen, Helen DeWitt, John Sibley Williams, Laura Chalar, Lauren Schmidt, Liam Hysjulien, Liz Robbins, Mark Neely, Michael T. Young, Neil Carpathios, Okla Elliott, Peter Golub, Richard Fein, S. P. MacIntyre, Sarah Marshall, Scott Tucker, Shelby Stephenson, Sheng Qi, Suzanne Richardson, Thom Dawkins, William B. Robison, WinLo333

Issue 5 Spring 2012 ALYSE BENSEL is currently pursuing her MFA in poetry at Penn State. Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Cider Press Review, The Summerset Review, and Foothill Poetry, among others. When not engaged in her teaching and studies, she volunteers for a cat rescue and participates in a work-share program at a local CSA farm. […]

Filed Under: Contributor Bios Posted On: April 1, 2012

MAYDAY Magazine: Issue 5 Spring 2012

April 1, 2012 Contributed By: Alan Heathcock, Alejandro Méndez, Aleksey Porvin, Alyse Bensel, Amy Holwerda, Andrew Galan, Brandi George, Christopher Munde, Dana Kroos, Deena Metzger, Gerard Marconi, Helen Degen Cohen, Helen DeWitt, John Sibley Williams, Laura Chalar, Lauren Schmidt, Liam Hysjulien, Liz Robbins, Mark Neely, Michael T. Young, Neil Carpathios, Okla Elliott, Peter Golub, Richard Fein, S. P. MacIntyre, Sarah Marshall, Scott Tucker, Shelby Stephenson, Sheng Qi, Suzanne Richardson, Thom Dawkins, William B. Robison, WinLo333

FEATURED ARTIST Sheng Qi Painting without Colour: A Gallery NONFICTION Helen DeWitt Experimental, Interstitial, and Hybrid an interview with Helen DeWitt conducted by S. P. MacIntyre Alan Heathcock Never Not a Writer an interview with Alan Heathcock conducted by Okla Elliott Amy Holwerda Like the Wine of Our Red Alaska FICTION WinLo333 Sob Stories Gerard […]

Filed Under: Issues Posted On: April 1, 2012

Primary Sidebar

Recently Published

  • A Cow Stood In the Field
    by Louise Bierig
  • Comprehension, If Not Closure: A Conversation with Riley Redgate
    by Nathan Winer
  • When All Your Seeds Fail
    by Amanda Roth
  • *
    by Simon Perchik
  • Four Poems
    by Asma Jelassi, translated from the Arabic by Ali Znaidi

Trending

  • Eight Contemporary Female Irish Artists to Fall In Love With Immediately
    by Aya Kusch
  • Four Poems
    by Asma Jelassi, translated from the Arabic by Ali Znaidi
  • MAYDAY Announces Poetry Micro Chapbook Contest
  • SOME DARKER BOUQUETS: A ROUNDTABLE
  • Comprehension, If Not Closure: A Conversation with Riley Redgate
    by Nathan Winer
  • ROUNDTABLE RESPONSES TO “SOME DARKER BOUQUETS”
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Footer

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Business


Reprint Rights
Privacy Policy
Archive

Engage


Open Positions
Donate
Contact Us

Copyright © 2022 · New American Press

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.