Salvation South
Salvation South Readings
A feed of Salvation South contributors—poets, essayists, and others—reading their work. A service for our loyal readers whose reading time falls during their commutes.
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The Trees Say Bad Idea: Three Poems 10.07.2026 3:16
Hear Charles Livesay read three poems: “My Mother’s Son,” “Hawks Won’t Wait,” and “Crappie Season Again.“ Charles Richard Livesay is a teacher from Knoxville, Tennessee. He has been published in Strange Horizons , Oh Reader , Pictura Journal , Rat’s Ass Review , and oddball magazine , among others. He watches birds, reads books, and sometimes forgets to take out his earbuds before he falls asleep....
Between Sundays: Does God Really Have a Plan? 10.07.2026 3:58
Hear Diana Keough read her monthly "Between Sundays" column for July 2026: "Does God Really Have a Plan?" Diana Keough is an award-winning journalist and professor of journalism at the University of Georgia. She is the creator of Not From a Nice Family , a memoir podcast that will be released by Audible on September 17, 2026.
Rising Tide 10.07.2026 19:49
Heath Gibson reads his short story "Rising Tide." Heath Gibson is the author of young adult novels— Gigged (2010, Flux) and Burn (2012, Flux). His latest work, “ Not Much of a Choice ” appears in Deep South Magazine . Gibson holds an MFA from Hollins University in Roanoke, Virginia. He splits time between Atlanta and Oldmeldrum, Scotland, and fills his life with all his little obsessions—teaching...
There Are Stars in Mississippi 03.07.2026 0:51
A poem by Noreen Ocampo, read by the author. Noreen Ocampo is a Filipino American writer and poet from metro Atlanta. She is the author of the chapbooks There Are No Filipinos in Mississippi (Porkbelly Press, 2025) and Not Flowers (Variant Literature, 2022), and her work can also be found in Frontier Poetry , Baltimore Review , The Margins , and elsewhere. She holds an MFA from the University of M...
What All a Southern Woman Can See 25.06.2026 2:03
A sneaky daddy, a rescuer aunt, and a local woman who watches through the diner window turn into sharp looks at small-town Alabama life: a collection of three poems by Rachel Nix. Rachel Nix is a queer writer and editor for Screen Door Review . Her own work has appeared in such journals as Sundog Lit , Up the Staircase Quarterly , and The West Review , among others. She resides in Northwest Alabam...
Between Sundays: Learning to Sit at the Old Folks’ Table 25.06.2026 5:27
Watching a table of older friends across a restaurant, the author of Salvation South 's monthly "Between Sundays" column, Diana Keough, gets a jolt of fear about where time is taking her—and wonders how to grow old with open hands instead of a clenched jaw. Diana Keough is an award-winning journalist and professor of journalism at the University of Georgia. She is the creator of Not From a Nice Fa...
The Ledger Bleeds Red 25.06.2026 27:13
As our country prepares to mark 250 years, a son of Selma, Alabama, writer Tad Bartlett, audits the accounts his people kept in blood and cotton. He finds no entry that will ever balance the books. Tad Bartlett was born in Ankara, Turkey; grew up in Selma, Alabama; and married into New Orleans, where he earned a J.D. from Tulane Law School and an MFA in fiction from the Creative Writing Workshop a...
A Stag Bows to the Moon 24.06.2026 3:36
A poem by Lacy Snapp, read by the author. Lacy Snapp is a poet, professor, and woodworking artist in East Tennessee where they plan university and community-based literary events. They serve as poetry co-editor of Appalachian Places and a board member of the Johnson City Poets Collective. Their first chapbook, Shadows on Wood (Finishing Line Press), was published in 2021. Snapp’s poetry, nonfictio...
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