Since its founding 15 years ago 3rd Wednesday has been a quarterly literary and visual arts journal in print. For the first twelve of those it was available only in print to subscribers and contributors. Two years ago, we started offering an electronic version of each issue free to anyone who wanted to read it. With that change, readership increased substantially.
Now it’s time for the next step. With the Winter issue we become a true hybrid of electronic and print publishing. We have always operated by offering no-fee submissions on a rolling basis and will continue to do so, but in our new hybrid model we will publish accepted work online at the time of acceptance. This means our website will be continually updated with new material and our print and electronic editions will be a compendium of pieces selected over the previous quarter.
Entries in the annual fiction and poetry contests will, of course, not be published online prior to release of the print edition of the magazine.
For contributors this means that published work will be immediately available to share with friends, family, on social media platforms, and on author websites using the link to the 3rd Wednesday website. This drives traffic to the website and, while guests may come to read a specific piece, many will stay to read another and another, leading them to download a free issue or two.
Be sure to follow our blog by email to receive a notice each time a new piece is published.
Each accepted piece will appear on the website at the top of a menu on the right side of the screen. As new pieces are added, previous ones will move down one position on the menu. The most recent 10 posts will show on the menu and once a piece finally moves off the front-page menu, it will continue to be viewable by clicking on the 3W Blog button in the top menu of the home page. These posts are sortable by category to make posts easier to find.
The submission forms at Submittable now include a box for a 100-word 3rd person bio and an upload space for an author photo. Both are optional and will only be used on the website when provided.
Nothing will change in the number of pieces or in the way that pieces are selected. Publishing standards will not change.
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Nancy Jo Allen proudly announces the release (March 20, 2021) of her first collection of poetry through her publisher 

Third Wednesday contributor Buff Whitman-Bradley’s new book, At the Driveway Guitar Sale: Poems on Aging, Memory, Mortality, is available from Main Street Rag Publishing Company. A few of the poems in the book were originally published in Third Wednesday. He podcasts at thirdactpoems.podbean.com
A Zen master of my acquaintance


Paperback: 58 pages
Paul Bernstein is a self-taught poet who began writing seriously after a varied career as a library worker/weekend hippie, anti-war activist, radical journalist, medical editor, and managing editor. His work now appears regularly in journals and anthologies. He is also a prizewinning amateur country music lyricist and a published photographer. Recent work has appeared or is forthcoming in Front Porch Review, Muddy River Poetry Review, New Plains Review, Third Wednesday, and U.S. 1 Worksheets. Paul currently lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He suffers from an addiction to Michigan sports contracted as an undergraduate but is otherwise functional.
Spindrift suggests stuff blown onto beaches, beaches of discovery in one’s mind. When these poems show a squirrel, a fish, birds, a beggar, an Irish pub, or a dish we see these as metaphors which conjure up ideas or feelings from our own familiarity with them. A poem that begins as an abstraction, like an enemy or peace or patience, becomes objectified. Spindrift is comprised of whatever little gems might be found along the shore, examined closely to become part of the reader’s experience. These jottings of spindrift take off from that experience like going to an airport when you want to be someplace else – or like poems which say one thing when they mean another.
Laurence W. Thomas is the founding editor of