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
Cal O’Reilly
I feel the sun, its love and anger,
a baked red brick rubbed
on the back of my calves.
Hiking in a binder was a shit idea,
My lungs reach to surface, come short.
Lucy Dixcart
It Starts Before Birth
Your tadpole-self, displayed to strangers for a thumbs-up.
Then childhood illnesses, faithfully documented.
Recent Prose
Recent Haiku
News
Word & Image
Roy Duffield on Holocaust Memorial Day
to return I want to be able to write poems that flow free that don't need to mean anything to you or to me if I were...
Filmpoems
Filmpoems From the Archives: ‘Surprise’ by Mariam Varsimashvili, with Illustrations and Animations by Holly Chant.
Surprise by Mariam Varsimashvili Open the rock. There, by the river where a streak of blood is so thin it...
Featured Poetry/Prose of the Day
News
Word & Image
Roy Duffield on Holocaust Memorial Day
to return I want to be able to write poems that flow free that don't need to mean anything to you or to me if I were...
Filmpoems
Filmpoems From the Archives: ‘Surprise’ by Mariam Varsimashvili, with Illustrations and Animations by Holly Chant.
Surprise by Mariam Varsimashvili Open the rock. There, by the river where a streak of blood is so thin it...
Previously featured
Cal O’Reilly
I feel the sun, its love and anger,
a baked red brick rubbed
on the back of my calves.
Hiking in a binder was a shit idea,
My lungs reach to surface, come short.
Lucy Dixcart
It Starts Before Birth
Your tadpole-self, displayed to strangers for a thumbs-up.
Then childhood illnesses, faithfully documented.
Recent Prose
Recent Haiku
Picks of the Month
‘Maungawhau’ by Camille McCawley is the August 2022 IS&T Pick of the Month. Read and hear it here!
Climber and volcano - the fusion of imagery. Power of grit and determination. You know when a work of art or literature takes you to another place, to the limits? Well Camille...
‘Dasheen’ by Lalah-Simone Springer is the IS&T Pick of the Month for July 2022. Read and hear it here!
Family. Food. Heritage. Continuity. Love A comment that says it all and, after a closely fought contest, was almost certainly the reason that Lalah-Simone Springer pipped her rivals at the post with...
Congratulations to the Joint Winners of the IS&T June 2022 Pick of the Month: Sanah Ahsan & Meg Pokrass. Read & hear their works here!
You as voters could not call it and, on reflection, neither could we, so for the first time since when we began our Picks of the Month in 2013, we have joint winners, a poem and a work of micro...
Reviews
Anna Saunders, In Praise of ‘Fool’s Paradise’ by Zoe Brooks
To craft poetry that remains impactful and affecting whilst avoiding emotive, didactic writing is a real art. And Fool’s Paradise by Zoe Brooks is a rare example of this type of artistry –a...
Anthony Salandy, In Praise of ‘Erebus’ by Elizabeth Lewis Williams
In 1958, geophysicist A. G. Lewis travelled to the Antarctic to investigate the landscapes and skies of that vast and icy continent. Now Elizabeth Lewis Williams traces her father’s journeys,...
Zannah Kearns, in praise of ‘The Plumb Line’ by Hélène Demetriades
Hélène Demetriades’ debut collection, The Plumb Line, charts a life in three sections. The act of ordering gives rise to measured reflection. Complicated experiences are held up to the...