Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: Majella Cullinane

Feather

If only every day was as simple as listening to birds, their small voices
plucking the grey-blue morning, emboldened on this first day of spring.
We too might dare to hope that what has long been desired is not so far away.
Let’s suppose it is here already, as real as this room’s radiator
switching itself on and off; the thermostat of our longing unhindered
by a dial of hours. Rather it exists in a kind of elsewhere,
or takes form in the wanderer who crosses bridges and borders
without restraint. Better to loosen the tangle of our rough wishes,
of the could-have-beens and might-have-beens and know we had it all,
just for a moment. Beneath the clamour of sounds –
logging trucks rattle to and fro from the port, a dog barks at the passersby.
A friend writes a message, subvoce – imagine, imagine,
and the bird that sheds a feather without knowing,
is the one we might chance upon, pick up and carry home.

Majella Cullinane
from Whisper of a Crow’s Wing, Otago University Press, 2018

Majella Cullinane writes essays, fiction and poetry and has lived in Aotearoa since 2008. She has published three poetry collections with Salmon Poetry Ireland and Otago University Press. Her most recent, Meantime (Otago University Press 2024) was chosen as The New Zealand Listener’s Top Poetry Books Of 2024. In 2020 she graduated with a PhD in Creative Practice from the University of Otago. Her short story collection Islands Ever After (Quentin Wilson Publishing) will be published in June this year. She lives with her family in Kōpūtai, Port Chalmers.

The Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: A place to enter and pause and take a long slow breath and then another, as you absorb the beauty movement joy stillness wonder movement of a poem.

Poetry Shelf Noticeboard: MAYDAY! a new anthology invites submissions

Call for submissions

M A Y D A Y

An Aotearoa call to action

The world is in trouble.
A state of emergency.
This is a call to action.

Submissions open May 1 – May 31. Seeking previously unpublished contemporary works with a submission period of one month beginning on May Day, May 1st.

This anthology aims to express a collective sense of immediacy and urgency about our times: the climate crisis, the forever wars, the stoked-up technological threats, the intense disregard for diversity and human rights, and more – our anxieties about the present and the future, the precariousness of now.

Sometimes what’s happening may feel almost unbearable, so let’s celebrate, too, hope, empathy and belief in the power of creatives and creativity to undo and ameliorate global conflict. Get up, stand up. Celebrate our common humanity.

We’re speaking out from Aotearoa. Join the mission. We welcome your submissions:

  • poetry up to 60 lines
  • flash fiction/ creative nonfiction / prose poems up to 400 words
  • short non-fiction (political or personal protest themes) and topical essays up to 2000 words
  • visual artworks, black and white: visually stunning drawings, graphics, woodblocks, cartoons, photographs, etc. – pdfs or jpegs for art submissions
  • Submit up to 2 pieces; include your name, location and email contact

Who can submit:

  • All citizens and residents of Aotearoa New Zealand.
  • Only humans. Absolutely no AI-generated or AI-adjacent submissions. This volume is for artistic voices that, even if crying out against the worst parts of humanity, are holding up the best parts of humanity. By the people, for the people.

How to submit:

  • Email 1-2 works to At the Bay | I te Kokoru: aotearoastories@gmail.com
  • Word docs, please – no pdfs (except if needed to show layout/ design)
  • Email your original work between May 1 and May 31, midnight.

Contributors will be paid: it takes all of us to make this work.
Edited by David Eggleton, Michelle Elvy & Siobhan Harvey

Let’s make some noise!

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Submissions call for next grief almanac

Call for Submissions: April 20th 2026 – May 20th 2026
2026 Submission Guidelines
Elixir & Star Press seek submissions for their next grief almanac a liminal gathering 2.
We welcome creative work that explores personal experiences of grief, from New Zealanders
anywhere in the world.

  • Poetry (30 lines maximum)
  • Creative Non-Fiction (400 words maximum)
  • Photography and Visual Art to fit an A5 portrait layout
  • A short biography (70 words maximum) including your connection to Aotearoa.
    Important Notes
  • Send us your best work. One submission per category.
  • Acceptance of your work requires confirmation that a human has created it.
  • Ensure written submissions are proofread and to a publication-ready standard.
  • If you have concerns about layout, attach a PDF to your submission.
  • Previously published work must have copyright permission for it to be reprinted.
  • Edits may be suggested, along with layout changes.
  • Work submitted outside the specified dates will not be considered.
    Elixir & Star Press is a small, independent publisher based on New Zealand’s southern West
    Coast, dedicated to the expression of grief in Aotearoa. Established in loving memory of
    Reuben Samuel Winter (1994 – 2020), we have a zero-tolerance policy for offensive or divisive
    content.
    As we are not on social media, we appreciate your support with sharing this submission window
    widely. We are open to bequests and donations that support our ongoing work.
    Editor: Iona Winter
    Submissions to: subs2026_esp@proton.me

Poetry Shelf speaks out for to with : Gregory Kan

[There’s a room]

There’s a room

that we keep finding ourselves in

and in that room

there’s a river

and in that river

there’s a voice

and in that voice

there’s a history of power

that we eat in black mouthfuls

barely coming up for breath.

Gregory Kan
from Under Glass, AUP, 2019

Gregory Kan is a writer and developer based in Pōneke/Wellington. His first collection of poetry, This Paper Boat, was shortlisted for the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards for poetry in 2017. Under Glass and Clay Eaters were longlisted for the award in 2020 and 2026. He was the 2017 Grimshaw Sargeson Fellow.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Landing Press call for submissions for water anthology

LANDING PRESS SMALL BOOKS GOING BIG PLACES
May 2026
Kia ora! 
Landing Press here, to give you a heads up on our call for poems about water for our next anthology, on recent Potluck events, AI, a winning opportunity, special deal and more …Calling for poems for our new anthology
We’ve started the call out for poems for our next anthology – on the theme of water.  
Water is a wide-reaching topic that wraps around the whole of life. There are so many ways to think about water – a necessity for life, a source of happiness, protest, and devastation, and much more. 
Whether you’re an established writer, an in-your-notes-app-midnight-poet or this is your first submission with your first-ever writing, Landing Press wants to read it. 
The submission guidelines are here  and if stuck for inspiration, check out  these water-related ideas. Note that the email for submissions is landingpresswater@gmail.com. You have until 30 June – lots of time to get thinking and writing. 

Poetry Shelf Noticeboard: Swamphen submissions

Call for Submissions – “Strange Letters” Swamphen Special Issue 2026

Swamphen welcomes submissions for a special issue focusing on work grounded in Aotearoa New Zealand. This special issue aims to open a space for considering place-based modes of reciprocity and exchange through the form of the letter: Who or what is a guest? How do our critical methodologies and modes of making respond to place, whether or not we are from (or feel that we’re from) that place? How does the form of the letter embody—or make strange—our relations of care with human and more-than-human others?

Submissions should foreground work about, grounded in, or produced by those with connection to Aotearoa. Submissions can be in any form, style, or media related to letters; they may be presented as epistolary correspondence with an addressee, or may take up more expansive understandings of “Strange Letters.” Writing may morph into marks of other kinds (textual, artistic, symbolic, representational, abstract), and submissions may take the form of scholarly writing, personal essay/memoir, visual or hybrid media, or creative writing. Writing may dissolve into singing, or kōrero, or karanga, or hīkoi–oral and embodied ways of knowing, exploring, and corresponding.

Submissions might be guided by—but are not limited to—the following questions and topics:

  • From manuhiri (guest) to tangata whenua to everything in between: How do we cultivate our own relationships with the place(s) and land(s) where we find ourselves?
  • How do we respond to—and correspond with—the beings, people, things, and environments who find us there?
  • What is it to be a good guest, in the short term or long term? Invited, or not?
  • What is the difference—relationally—between visiting a place one has whakapapa to but does not reside in, or live there maintaining  ahi kā? And how might we stay connected while living away?
  • How do people make connections to place and between places, and what narratives connect us, to each other and to the more-than-human world?
  • Contributors may entertain a wide range of topics and subjects: they may be inspired by historical letters (like Te Wharepapa’s homesick 1864 missive from England, or Kiingi Pōtatau Te Wherowhero’s 1843 letter to Queen Victoria, when manuhiritanga was pressing indeed and when pathways to alternative futures remained open, as they do now); they may connect to the need for an embodied, offline life and artistic practices (like the postcards in Sarah Hudson’s book Mana Whenua); they may be written together in ‘correspondence’ and under constraint (like Lauren Berlant and Kathleen Stewart’s The Hundreds); or they may, alternatively, explore the affordances of digital media and its ties to the long, long whakapapa of correspondence across distances.

This special issue emerges from Strange Letters Tuarua, a 2025 ASLEC-ANZ symposium hosted at the Tauhara Retreat & Conference Centre in Taupō. The Swamphen Editorial Collective welcomes contributions from anyone (whether or not you attended the symposium) responding to these questions and prompts. This issue of Swamphen will extend the work of the first “Strange Letters” issue (Swamphen, vol. 9, 2023).

Deborah Bird Rose Prize

The call for contributions to this special issue of Swamphen also encourages applications for the Deborah Bird Rose Pward, which was established in 2022 to commemorate and further Deborah Bird Rose’s immeasurable contribution to thinking and feeling in the environmental humanities, both globally and locally. This award is granted on a yearly basis to a postgraduate student (masters to PhD) currently studying or having graduated after 2022. Proposals should come in the form of a journal article currently in development mode. The in-progress article should clearly relate to ASLEC-ANZ’s focus on literature and environment, and in this case, with respect to Aotearoa. Applications include a cover sheet with your name, contact details and working title, and a first draft of the article as a Word document, to be submitted to adam.grener@vuw.ac.nz no later than May 31, 2026.  A selection panel composed of members of the Swamphen collective and ASLEC-ANZ executive will select one or two recipients for the prize, which consists of NZD$1000, a feature on the association’s website, mentorship by an appropriate ASLEC-ANZ member on the development of the article or other professional development, and potential to publish the article in the next Swamphen issue (see statements from previous winners on the ASLEC-ANZ website).

About the Journal

Swamphen: a Journal of Cultural Ecology is allied with ASLEC-ANZ and is a double-blind peer reviewed, Gold Open Access journal. The journal was previously called the Australasian Journal of Ecocriticism and Cultural Ecology and was renamed in 2020. The new name refers to the Australasian swamphen: kwilomi in Noongar language; milu in Kala Lagaw Yai language; ping ping in Dja Dja Wurrung language; porphyrio melanotus in binomial nomenclature; and pūkeko in te reo Māori.

This will be the 12th volume of the ASLEC-ANZ journal. The current Swamphen editorial collective are: Hana Pera Aoake, Adam Grener, Raewyn Martyn, Julieanna Preston, Janine Randerson, and Jessica Wilson.

Submission Guidelines

  • Approaches that foreground Māori, Pasifika, Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, or other knowledges and practices of the wider Moana-Nui-a-kiwa (Pacific) are strongly encouraged.
  • We encourage short and focused submissions/essays of 3,000 words (or equivalent), with a maximum of 5,000 words;
  • The submission deadline reflects a planned publication date before the end of 2026; questions regarding the CFP or the timeline can be sent to adam.grener@vuw.ac.nz;
  • The journal is able to support the publication of diverse forms of scholarly and creative work and may publish some work on the ASLEC-ANZ website if this is appropriate;
  • With the exception of review essays, all submissions, regardless of form, will be double-blind peer reviewed;
  • Each issue of Swamphen provides space for reviews. If you would like to review a scholarly book or creative work, please email adam.grener@vuw.ac.nz first to submit an expression of interest to review;
  • If accepted, contributors will be asked to resubmit using Swamphen‘s stylesheet; authors are encouraged to use the Swamphen stylesheet in drafting submissions.

Poetry Shelf Noticeboard: Blackmail Press submissions

Dear friends and colleagues,

A gentle reminder of the invitation to submit works – Deadline 30th June 2026 – extended to 15th July 2026.

blackmail press is proud to be celebrating 25 years this coming June 2026. To mark this milestone, we are curating a special anniversary issue featuring work from past contributors, editors, and members of our wider whānau. We would be honoured to include a piece from you.

This commemorative issue will also be produced as a printed publication — self‑funded and printed by INCproductions, with additional support from Creative New Zealand (pending the outcome of our application). By submitting work, you are granting us permission to include it in both the online and printed editions of this special issue.

We warmly invite you to submit:

  • Poetry, prose, or short fiction — up to 5 pieces, in Word (.doc) format
  • Recorded spoken word — up to 2 MP3 files
  • Links to video performances — recorded or live readings welcome

Please send submissions to dougpoole3@gmail.com with the subject line: Blackmail Press Submission.

We will begin assembling the issue in late May, with publication planned for mid July 2026. All submissions will receive a response, and acceptance notifications will be sent by 15 June 2026.

Please feel free to share this invitation with your networks — especially with emerging, unpublished, or nui voices who may wish to be part of this celebration.

We look forward to reading your work and celebrating 25 years of Blackmail Press together.

Ngā mihi nui,

Doug Poole

Founding Editor and e-publisher

 —

blackmail press

poetry e-journal

Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: Jo McNeice

Aro Valley

I want to take
your picture.
The silver blue
mist moving
over the pine trees,
the Edwardian houses
running backwards
up the hillside,
the road running
slower than myself.
The sky a kind of
silver screen,
the moon is out tonight.
A neon TV.
A noticeboard.
The buttery light
melting out of the chip shop
into the indigo air.
The weeds tripping up
the fences, the flowers
tripping up the weeds.
The night about to settle
in for the night.
But pausing before
it closes the door.
relax. I think you look
just wonderful.
I imagine you can tell
I want to take your picture.

This summer

What you notice most about
this summer
are the dandelions.

There are dandelions
everywhere
outside the dental clinic,
lining the hills
of the Aro Valley
with tiny yellow bricks.

Millions of stars
in the emerald sky.

Jo McNeice
from Blue Hour, Otago University Press, 2024

Jo McNeice is a poet based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington. She completed a Master of Arts in Creative Writing at the International Institute of Modern Letters, Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington, in 2013, and her poems have been published in Turbine | Kapohau, Sport, JAAM and Mayhem. In 2023, she won the prestigious Kathleen Grattan Poetry Award for her manuscript Blue Hour, which was published by Otago University Press.

The Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: A place to enter and pause and take a long slow breath and then another, as you absorb the beauty movement joy stillness wonder movement of a poem.

Poetry Shelf Noticeboard: Book launch and call for submissions

BOOK LAUNCH Anticipation by Piet Nieuwland Friday 22 May, May Bain Room, Whangarei Central Library, 12-1pm ($20 per copy)

The next POETS@ONEONESIX gathering is on Wednesday May 27 from 5.30-7.30pm koha appreciated for venue hire.

Submissions to FAST FIBRES POETRY 13 are due by 29 May. 2 or 3 poems on “Happiness” plus 2line bio statement to fastfibres@live.com

Poetry Shelf Noticeboard: Submissions invited for new anthology

Details here

M A Y D A Y

An Aotearoa call to action

The world is in trouble.
A state of emergency.
This is a call to action.

Submissions open May 1 – May 31. Seeking previously unpublished contemporary works with a submission period of one month beginning on May Day, May 1st.

This anthology aims to express a collective sense of immediacy and urgency about our times: the climate crisis, the forever wars, the stoked-up technological threats, the intense disregard for diversity and human rights, and more – our anxieties about the present and the future, the precariousness of now.

Sometimes what’s happening may feel almost unbearable, so let’s celebrate, too, hope, empathy and belief in the power of creatives and creativity to undo and ameliorate global conflict. Get up, stand up. Celebrate our common humanity.

We’re speaking out from Aotearoa. Join the mission. We welcome your submissions:

  • poetry up to 60 lines
  • flash fiction/ creative nonfiction / prose poems up to 400 words
  • short non-fiction (political or personal protest themes) and topical essays up to 2000 words
  • visual artworks, black and white: visually stunning drawings, graphics, woodblocks, cartoons, photographs, etc. – pdfs or jpegs for art submissions
  • Submit up to 2 pieces; include your name, location and email contact

Who can submit:

  • All citizens and residents of Aotearoa New Zealand.
  • Only humans. Absolutely no AI-generated or AI-adjacent submissions. This volume is for artistic voices that, even if crying out against the worst parts of humanity, are holding up the best parts of humanity. By the people, for the people.

How to submit:

  • Email 1-2 works to At the Bay | I te Kokoru: aotearoastories@gmail.com
  • Word docs, please – no pdfs (except if needed to show layout/ design)
  • Email your original work between May 1 and May 31, midnight.

Contributors will be paid: it takes all of us to make this work.
Edited by David Eggleton, Michelle Elvy & Siobhan Harvey

Let’s make some noise!