Spring 2025

Photography by Carolina Baldomá

 

Dear Solstice Readers,

In my introduction to the Winter 2024 issue I wrote about the importance of memory for writers. However, currently in the public sphere much of our communal memory, our history, is being obliterated. Or rewritten. Whole swaths of people are disappearing from the public record: women, Blacks, Native Americans – anyone who is not white and male. And some are bringing back the practice of honoring traitors who took up arms against our country to preserve their heinous right to own other humans.

There are now words that have earned official public disapprobation and condemnation. In some cases, what passes for governmental voices at the national level have called the use of these words illegal and programs based on the concepts behind these words as fraudulent. One is reminded of Orwell’s 1984, where ownership and distortion of language predicates the servitude of the people.

Now there are words that are banished or that will evoke calls of fraudulence and illegality, among them: advocacy, BIPOC, diversity and inclusion and equity (in any form of these words), marginalized, underserved, underrepresented.

If you take a look, Solstice’s mission is littered with a lot of these forbidden words (https://solsticelitmag.org/our-mission/). The movement of the moment, the official dictum from our government on high, is the eradication of factions of society they do not like, but one faction in particular. They call it “wokeness,” but if one had the choice to either sleepwalk through life with nary any consciousness and nary any conscience, I’d pick a thousand times over being alive and awake. There is no other way to experience life’s joys as well as life’s pains but by being fully cognizant. That’s the basis of being alive. That’s the whole purpose of life. The alternative is to be asleep, to be comfortably numb, to be everything more similar to being a rock than a human.

Solstice stands behind its belief that “probing into diversity can promote unity” and that we will not shirk from presenting “colliding, diverse, sometimes controversial, points of view.” We are a community of writers, hoping to be as expansive and inclusive as we can to make the messiness of life come alive. We will not remove certain words, and the ideas behind them, from our vocabularies. This is who we are and we will not nullify our existence. We will remain steadfast. Non serviam. To remain silent is to remain complicit. Solstice will not remain silent.

Gian Lombardo
Editor-in-Chief

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Table of contents

Contributors

Masthead

Lee Hope

Fiction Editor and Founder

Richard Hoffman

Nonfiction Editor

Robbie Gamble

Poetry Editor

Barbara Siegel Carlson

Editor of Poetry in Translation

William Betcher

Photography Editor

Drai Whitted

Graphic Lit Editor

Lee Hope

Board President

Jill Frances Johnson

Associate Editor in Nonfiction

Karen Halil

Associate Editor in Fiction

Gian Lombardo

Editor in Chief

Richard Cambridge

Associate Editor of Reviews & Interviews

Annaka Saari

Managing Editor
Readers
Jennifer Gentile, Meg Senuta, Angie Chatman,Jennifer DeBellis, Michelle S. Ramadan, Eileen Cleary, Cassandra Goldwater, Rebecca Faulkner, Linda Button, Amy Grier, Heather Labay, Jessica Martinez

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