Phase Gallery, Monday, March 31st, 2025, 7:00 pm
Phase Gallery presents an evening with Hanging Loose Press.
Gerald Fleming and Dan O'Brien will read from their Hanging Loose Press Book as well as their other work. The evening will start with an introduction to the press by Hanging Loose editor Joanna Fuhrman, and some samples from the new issue of the magazine.
Gerald Fleming
Gerald Fleming's most recent book is The Bastard and the Bishop, prose poems (Hanging Loose Press, Brooklyn). Earlier books are One, an experiment in monosyllabic prose poems (Hanging Loose), The Choreographer, prose poems (Sixteen Rivers, San Francisco), Night of Pure Breathing, prose poems (H.L.), and Swimmer Climbing onto Shore (16R). New work is forthcoming in On the Seawall, Best American Poetry 2025, and others. Fleming taught in San Francisco's public schools for thirty-seven years.
Dan O’Brien
Dan O’Brien is a poet, playwright, and nonfiction writer. He has published six collections of poetry—in the US with Acre Books, Hanging Loose Press, and Measure Press, and in the UK with Poetry London Editions and CB Editions. He lives in Los Angeles.
www.danobrien.org
Joanna Fuhrman
Joanna Fuhrman is an Assistant Teaching Professor in Creative Writing at Rutgers University and the author of seven books of poetry, including To a New Era (Hanging Loose Press, 2021) and Data Mind (Curbstone/Northwestern University Press, 2024). Fuhrman’s poems have appeared in Best American Poetry 2023 and 2025, The Pushcart Prize Anthology, The Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day, and The Slowdown podcast. She first published with Hanging Loose Press as a teenager and became a co-editor in 2022.
joannafuhrman.com https://nupress.northwestern.edu/9780810147744/data-mind/
Hanging Loose Magazine
Issue 116
Our 58th year of continuous publication, with covers and an art portfolio by Donna Pomponio. It features a supplement: “New Haitian Voices,” curated and translated by Milady Auguste, another large selection from Barbara Henning’s “Girlfriend” sequence and an exciting excerpt from a memoir by Marion Gillon. Others included in this issue are regulars such as Carole Bernstein, Debrah Cash, Gerald Fleming, R. Zamora Linmark, , Robert Terashima, and Terance Winch, plus many poets new to HL, among them: Kevin Bertolero, Gregory Crosby, Jakima Davis, Starr Davis, Katherine Edgren, Max Roland Ekstrom, Jordan E. Franklin, Gloria Frym, Boni Joi, Chris Martin, Juan Mobili, Earl Nobdy, Jim Papa, Jean-Paul Pecqueur, Pareesa Pourian, Vanesha Pravin, Stephen Roxborough, Stephen Ruffus, Lauren Russell, Helen Tzagoloff, Fred Voss; a translation of Natsume Soseki by Ryan Choi, and a collaborative poem by Sean Cole and David Kirschenbaum; and as always, work by outstanding poets of high school age.
About Hanging Loose Press
For more than half a century, Hanging Loose Press has championed the work of authors marginalized by mainstream publishing—work frequently less visible, whether because of gender, race, age, class or socioeconomic status.
We continue today, in pursuit of this mission, to look for ways of broadening our creative and cultural scope—for example:
We turn over one section of each magazine issue to a different guest editor— distinguished writers to whom we give free rein in their selection of writers to feature. They choose for the magazine the work of exciting writers, some of whom we may not even be aware of.
In collaboration with Queens College, CUNY, we offer the annual Loose Translation Prize—publication of a book translated by a student in the Creative Writing and Translation MFA program. This innovative program opens us and our reader to exciting international voices in new translations.
We have recently introduced our Founders Award, to recognize and publish annually a first book of poems, in honor of Emmett Jarrett, Ron Schreiber, and Robert Hershon, the three of our four founding editors now deceased, in honor of their dedication to HLP.
For fifty-four years, each issue of the magazine has incorporated a section devoted to the writing of talented high school writers. This feature has been widely celebrated: although young adults have many opportunities to be published in journals focused on their own age group, HLP is, as far as we know, the only magazine that regularly offers them wider exposure to poetry readers of all ages. This section has produced four highly praised anthologies of student work: Smart Like Me, Bullseye, Shooting the Rat and When We Were Countries.
History
The first issue of Hanging Loose magazine was published in 1966. The name was inspired by the format — mimeographed loose pages in a cover envelope — and that, in turn, was inspired by a very low budget. But the format was also meant to get across a point of view: that poetry is for now, not for the Ages, and that poetry is for everyone. If you liked a poem, you could pin it to the wall. If you didn’t like a poem, you could use it as a napkin.
The first issue of HLP contained work by Denise Levertov, John Gill, Jack Anderson, Victor Contoski and other poets who would remain close to the magazine. The editors agreed that they were not interested in begging poems from famous writers but that they wanted to stress work by underrepresented writers whose work deserved a larger audience.
Effective with the 25th issue, to the relief of many libraries and bookstores, the editors decided the loose-page format had served its purpose and revamped the format of the publication. The number of pages began to grow and the magazine was bound. The new format was friendlier to fiction and each issue began featuring portfolios of work by a single artist or photographer.
As a press, the editors are proud of having published many first books, including the first full collections by Sherman Alexie, Kimiko Hahn, D. Nurkse, Jack Agüeros, Cathy Park Hong, Eula Biss, Joanna Fuhrman, Hayan Charara, Maggie Nelson, Indran Amirthanayagam, R. Zamora Linmark, and Beth Bosworth, among others. And writers published over the years by HLP also include Harvey Shapiro, Elizabeth Swados, Joan Larkin, Gary Lenhart, Maureen Owen, Donna Brook, Ha Jin, Charles North, Paul Violi, Tony Towle, William Corbett, Ed Friedman, and Jayne Cortez. The young writers who first emerged from our high school section include Caroline Hagood, Joanna Fuhrman, Donovan Hohn, Meghan O’Rourke and Rebecca Wolff.
Hanging Loose has been grateful for support by many contributors over the years, chief among them the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council for the Arts, and the Fund for Poetry. HLP books have won such honors as the Theodore Roethke Memorial Prize, The Poetry Society of America’s Norma Farber First Book Award and the Paterson Poetry Prize. Hanging Loose has published more than 240 books and 116 issues — well over 10,000 pages of poetry, prose, and art — of Hanging Loose magazine.