Wildhouse Blog

Wildhouse Publicity Internship

Wildhouse Publishing Publicity Intern The position Wildhouse Publishing’s publicity manager is seeking a part-time intern to assist with social media content generation, publicity campaign support, media landscape research, and project management assistance. This is an unpaid position, but eligible

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Our Spring 2026 Lineup

Wildhouse is gearing up for a busy Spring season with four new books on the way, starting May 2. This Spring calls on our Poetry and Nonfiction imprints to bring transformational stories and intentionally-strung poems to you, our readers. First out

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Three paths representing the three aspects of the steady-state economy of AI and human literary production.

AI and Book Publishing

Today is the three-year anniversary of a major event for indie publishers. On February 15, 2023, Neil Clarke, Award-Winning Editor of Clarkesworld Magazine, documented a flood of AI submissions, leading to the painful decision a few days later to

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I Could Ask You – An Easter Poem

I Could Ask You by Chris Anderson   I could ask you, how many of the gospels describe  the Resurrection itself, whatever really happened in that moment, inside the tomb, and there could be only one right answer,  whatever

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Wildhouse Poetry 2023 Chapbook Contest Winners

We are pleased to announce the forthcoming publication of Meridian by Julie Sumner (November 2023), winner of the inaugural Wildhouse Poetry chapbook contest. The 2023 chapbook contest, con/verge/nces, was judged by the award-winning poet Jane Hirshfield, whose work and

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Higher and Friendly Powers

Peg O’Connor, Higher and Friendly Powers

Peg O’Connor William James As a grad student at Harvard, I’ve walked by the towering William James Hall more times than I can count. I knew William James was an early giant in the study of human perception and

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Disruption is a Doorway to Creative Transformation

Disruption is a Doorway to Creative Transformation Ours is an uneasy age. Pandemic confusion and isolation, Facebook tribalism, rancorous political divisions and a general distrust of authority are stripping the rivets which have long held our civic life together.

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