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Volume 2
Issue 1

Spring 2010


Read the review in NewPages




CONSEQUENCE Magazine Announces
The 2010 Consequence Prize in Poetry

The prize will be awarded for the best poem addressing the culture and consequences of war.

The winner will receive $200, have the selected poem published in both print and online editions of CONSEQUENCE, and be invited to read at the launch of CONSEQUENCE Magazine's next issue and receive a three year subscription to the magazine.

All poems submitted will be considered for publication in both print and online editions.

Our Judge this year is poet Joyce Peseroff who will also present the award.

Submission Guidelines
  • No entry fee is required.
  • Entry deadline is September 30, 2010.
  • All poems must be in English: no translations please.
  • Submit up to three original and unpublished poems.
  • The total number of pages submitted should not exceed six pages.
  • Submissions must be accompanied by a cover letter with biographical information, address, phone number, and email address.
Email Submissions
  • Send to: Poetry Editor, consequence.magazine@gmail.com
  • Email submissions should be in the form of a Microsoft Word document.
Mailed Submissions
  • Send to: Poetry Editor, Consequence Magazine, P. O. Box 323, Cohasset, MA 02025-0323.
  • Please include a SASE for notification of resultes and returns.

Visit our website at  www.CONSEQUENCEmagazine.org


CONSEQUENCE is a non-profit magazine. Donations are tax deductible.



Editor's Note

The United Nations International Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-violence for the Children of the World has quietly run its course. Without ceremony or retrospection, the UN has moved on: Welcome to The Decade for Deserts and the Fight against Desertification. We wish the UN well. We don't anticipate General Assembly subcommittee to audit the success of the last ten years.

A culture of peace will be a long time coming. It's unfair, but only a little, to take a swing at good intentions. Where, if not to ourselves, should we look for the doers and problem solvers? Cultural attitudes can change, but not without the critical mass needed to halt the momentum of powerful forces. We've got work to do. CONSEQUENCE magazine exists because poetry does make something happen, because art and literature inspire us to look askance at the world and our assumptions.

The works of our contributors challenge us to question everything we know and think about war. We're fortunate to be able to present provocative work by artists, poets and writers deeply concerned about the consequences of war. We are also delighted that a few of these distinguished writers have given us some lighter subjects to think about—a welcome counterpoint.

In this issue we present a new section—Discourse—to stimulate discussions of war, society and the arts. We want you to rethink these subjects in the context of our young but wounded century, and we invite you to write to the address on our masthead, or send email responses to editor@consequencemagazine.org. We will post on our website letters selected for their engagement with the work appearing in Discourse, and the author will respond to them on line. We hope that you will follow this exchange of ideas at www.consequencemagazine.org.

In 2009 we inaugurated the Consequence Prize in Poetry, an annual award given for an outstanding poem on the subject of war. Kevin Bowen selected the winning poem and presented the award at War and Poetry, an event sponsored by CONSEQUENCE, at the Massachusetts Poetry Festival. Andreas Morgner's winning poem, "N'Djamena Chad," and those of our seven finalists are published in this issue. Entry guidelines for the 2010 contest can be found on our website.

As CONSEQUENCE enters its second year, I'm pleased to welcome Catherine Parnell, our new Associate Editor, and Contributing Editors Kevin Bowen, Martha Collins, Askold Melnyczuk and Fred Marchant, who need no introductions. All of them have work in this issue.

—George Kovach






Andreas Morgner
Winner of the 2009 CONSEQUENCE Prize in Poetry
for his poem, N'Djamena Chad


Andreas Morgner is currently stationed at the US African Command (AFRICOM) in Stuttgart, Germany. N'Djamena Chad is from his forthcoming chapbook, When You Come Again, You Will Never Go.