A Literary Journal for Literary Journeymen

A big thanks to my three ADORABLE prop stylists, Jules, Simone & Demetrius.
Welcome to the Moby Dickinson, a literary journal for literary journeymen. Go ahead, take off your coat, stay awhile - and feel free to mosey on over to "The Library", containing every submission we've ever received, shelved and assembled for your viewing pleasure.
Prefer something a little more quirky, off-the-beaten path? Check out "The Hotbox" for interesting interviews with interesting people, guaranteed to be, well, interesting.
Or perhaps you'd like to take a peek at "Our Nightstand"? What we're reading and what are absolutely the most memorable sentences therein. Promised to be bursting with oodles of literary goodness.
And don't forget to submit! You're work could be featured in the inaugural issue of our free online literary journal, scheduled for release August 25th. Sharpen those pencils! Rip out that loose leaf! Stare at that computer screen! And - whatever your genre - remember to get those surefire classics in ASAP!
Prefer something a little more quirky, off-the-beaten path? Check out "The Hotbox" for interesting interviews with interesting people, guaranteed to be, well, interesting.
Or perhaps you'd like to take a peek at "Our Nightstand"? What we're reading and what are absolutely the most memorable sentences therein. Promised to be bursting with oodles of literary goodness.
And don't forget to submit! You're work could be featured in the inaugural issue of our free online literary journal, scheduled for release August 25th. Sharpen those pencils! Rip out that loose leaf! Stare at that computer screen! And - whatever your genre - remember to get those surefire classics in ASAP!
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-The Story of Moby Dickinson-
Once upon a time, in a kingdom far, far away, there lived a girl who happened to be a writer, who happened to be a teenager, who happened to write poetry and - now here's the catch - she happened to be perfectly content with the state of society. Sure, there were some things she wished she could change: poverty, hunger, persecution and a whole slew of others. And she did - volunteering, donating her spare change, hosting drives and bake sales - but her poetry wasn't to protest or condemn. It was to tell a story, make a statement, reveal an insight, describe something which, through any other means, would be indescribable. And she wanted a literary journal which reflected that.
That's not to say the Moby Dickinson is lacking in empathy and compassion - though I'm sure all you skimmers out there will disagree. And, just to prove it, we've started our own account on free rice, earning, as of July 10th, 2,000 grains for impoverished youths across the globe. Everyone deserves the chance to be a writer.
That's not to say the Moby Dickinson is lacking in empathy and compassion - though I'm sure all you skimmers out there will disagree. And, just to prove it, we've started our own account on free rice, earning, as of July 10th, 2,000 grains for impoverished youths across the globe. Everyone deserves the chance to be a writer.