Ink Sweat & Tears is a UK based webzine which publishes and reviews poetry, prose, prose-poetry, word & image pieces and everything in between. Our tastes are eclectic and magpie-like and we aim to publish something new every day.
We try to keep waiting-time short, but because of increased submissions, the current waiting time between submission and publication is around twelve weeks.
If you have come here looking for more information on our ‘Uprising & Resistance’ Project in conjunction with Spread the Word and Black Beyond Data, please go here.
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Featured Poetry/Prose of the Day
Previously featured
Kate Horsley
The alien cries into my hair. I wonder if he remembers doing the things that put me in
hospital; his body caging mine against the bed until I couldn’t breathe.
Christopher M James
She’d had the two of us, had learnt
how children bury their riddles, how love
unearths them
Recent Prose
Recent Haiku
News
Cheltenham Poetry Festival Feature
‘I used to have a romantic notion that my best material had to be handwritten, but with the demands of life, in reality I edit most of my poetry on my phone’
– Holly Winter-Hughes
Cheltenham Poetry Festival Logo credit: Jon Tarrant
Word & Image
Lorraine Caputo
I.
What? I ask my self …
Will I find the peace I so
desire, the healing?
(4 Jl 2021)
Filmpoems
Filmpoems from the Archives: ‘Golden Hour’ by Celestine Stilwell.
Golden Hour Over great absences speckled with birds wings, a spell is lifted – dusk like a...
Featured Poetry/Prose of the Day
News

Cheltenham Poetry Festival Feature
‘I used to have a romantic notion that my best material had to be handwritten, but with the demands of life, in reality I edit most of my poetry on my phone’
– Holly Winter-Hughes
Cheltenham Poetry Festival Logo credit: Jon Tarrant
Word & Image

Lorraine Caputo
I.
What? I ask my self …
Will I find the peace I so
desire, the healing?
(4 Jl 2021)
Filmpoems

Filmpoems from the Archives: ‘Golden Hour’ by Celestine Stilwell.
Golden Hour Over great absences speckled with birds wings, a spell is lifted – dusk like a...
Previously featured
Kate Horsley
The alien cries into my hair. I wonder if he remembers doing the things that put me in
hospital; his body caging mine against the bed until I couldn’t breathe.
Christopher M James
She’d had the two of us, had learnt
how children bury their riddles, how love
unearths them
Recent Prose
Recent Haiku
Picks of the Month
The Votes are in and the Pick of the Month for March 2020 is ‘A Factory of Feelings’ by Sanjeev Sethi
It is perhaps no surprise during this seismic period that our March 2020 Pick of the Month should focus on that technology which holds us all together even when it drives us apart. Voters found...
Hannah Hodgson’s poem ‘Death Rattle’ is the Pick of the Month for February 2020
We live in uncertain times, and that voters chose 'Death Rattle' by Hannah Hodgson as the Ink Sweat & Tears Pick of the Month for February 2020 not only indicates their overwhelming admiration...
Your First Pick of the Month for 2020 is ‘Realisation about a friend’ by Alexandra Corrin-Tachibana
When we launched January's Pick of the Month, we noted that the poems were extraordinary and they truly are. But 'Realisation about a friend' by Alexandra Corrin-Tachibana tops the list in this...
Reviews
Lynn Woollacott reviews ‘FOREST moor or less’ by Dawn Bauling and Ronnie Goodyer
A joint collection from two widely published poets opens with, ‘Crescent Moon Over Cookworthy Forest’ which introduces their personal love story – hidden for most of their lives – like...
Antony Owen reviews ‘I, Ursula’ by Ruth Stacey
Ernest Hemingway once said “There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed”. This quote comes to mind when reading I Ursula which comes...
Deborah Harvey reviews ‘Two Girls and a Beehive : Poems about the art and lives of Stanley Spencer and Hilda Carline Spencer’ Rosie Jackson and Graham Burchell
I confess to having a personal interest in the art and the life of Stanley Spencer that is entirely fanciful, born of the fact that he and my grandmother, Hilda, both worked in war hospitals...