What Most Vividly is a hot new online journal of sexy-smart, gorgeous new poetry of attention and ambition. We publish issues in the fall and spring—our first fab issue is coming soon! Keep reading for more on our aesthetic and guidelines. Subscribe to our Substack for announcements, infrequent missives, and reminders of submission windows and our Vividly Lit! reading series dates.
Submissions

"Rex Cloud" (2011) by Gina Phillips
We are not currently open for unsolicited submissions, but we will be soon! Subscribe to our newsletter for announcements.
We want
poems that that embody and enact the thinking and perceiving, the feeling and desiring that the poet experiences and wants the reader to experience.
Form is an extension of content is an extension of form is…
We aim to provide a space for aesthetically diverse writing from poets of diverse bodies, id-dented-entities, cultural hy/stories, and socio-psychic inheritances.
We want rich music and imagery. We want you to (re)shape and/or explode the language to reveal y/our (or hint at some other possible) way of being.
Seduce us—stun us—leave us
lost in the poem’s world—we want blood
pulsing the line—
Don’t just talk at us; hum our nerve buzz us into song.
We want language that is searingly gorgeous-intelligent emotionally ugly-expansive—
go for Bacon for Braque, go Bach going for broke—
We want to wake in the poem to a way
to awake
in this world differently—
We want too much
We want you
to make us feel how much we want—
Guidelines
Submit one .docx Word file containing at least three and no more than ten poems, together totaling no more than 20 pages. If your poems are field compositions or visual poems, submit a PDF against which I can check the form/atting. We're open to both single-author and collaborative work. We encourage explorations in the artform of poetry (refer back to What We Want above).
Unsolicited submissions are only accepted through Submittable.
While we are primarily interested only in previously unpublished poems (including via social media posts), we may consider poems once published in a journal or book that is out of print and not available anywhere online, including through academic databases such as JSTOR, and didn't receive wide publication to begin with. If you have amazing poems that have disappeared from the face of the Earth and you very much would love to make available to readers again, please submit 1 to 5 of them through the "Lost Earrings" category of Submittable with the poems' full publication history.
We do not consider work that has used AI in any way or stage of the writing process.
Thank you for trusting us with your work!
~ Tod Edgerton, Editor
Tod [at] WhatMostVividly.com
Michael Tod Edgerton (he/they) is a Queer poet of lyrically fluid gender and genre alike. Author of the poetry collection Vitreous Hide (Lavender Ink), Tod’s poems have appeared in Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, Interim, New American Writing, Posit, and VOLT, among other journals. Tod holds an MFA from Brown, a PhD from UGA, and has received fellowships from Bread Loaf and MacDowell. He also serves on the editing teams of Conjunctions and Seneca Review, where he is the Book Reviews Editor. You’ll find him swishing along the streets of San Francisco and online at MTodEdge.com. He has recently finished a book of poems long in the making, “Yet Sensate Light” (you can read the whole story in Maw Shein Win’s “Process Notes” series in rob mclennan’s online Periodicity journal); his current manuscript-in-progress, “This Wilderness of Inhabitation,” is a book of poetry from the perspective of an adopted, “sissy” queer boy of working-class Kentucky house painters that mines childhood memories—including some denied by the speaker’s parents—to stage investigations into psychic inheritance; issues of identity and belonging; and the constellation of language, the unconscious, and signifiers in/forming the body.