On October 1, 2024, Hearth & Coffin Literary Journal published Julie Elise Landry's poems "Artemis Revealed at Gargaphië" and "Director of People & Operations" in the online journal's Vol. 4, No. 1 "Gossip Horror" issue.
Hearth & Coffin "places priority on provocative, exploratory, and accessible works that thrill and open the minds of readers." The "Gossip Horror" issue features poetry, fiction, and non-fiction "written as though you're sharing a freaky story you heard through the grapevine about your neighbor, the woods on the edge of town, the Oval Office - whatevs."
Landry's poem "Artemis Revealed at Gargaphië" imagines the transformation and death of the mythological figure Actaeon from the perspective of the goddess Artemis. The poem was directly inspired by the essay "The Gender of Sound" by Anne Carson in her collection Glass, Irony, and God.
"Director of People & Operations" likewise focuses on a surreal transformation—one that befalls an office employee, as related by her manager.
Hearth & Coffin "places priority on provocative, exploratory, and accessible works that thrill and open the minds of readers." The "Gossip Horror" issue features poetry, fiction, and non-fiction "written as though you're sharing a freaky story you heard through the grapevine about your neighbor, the woods on the edge of town, the Oval Office - whatevs."
Landry's poem "Artemis Revealed at Gargaphië" imagines the transformation and death of the mythological figure Actaeon from the perspective of the goddess Artemis. The poem was directly inspired by the essay "The Gender of Sound" by Anne Carson in her collection Glass, Irony, and God.
"Director of People & Operations" likewise focuses on a surreal transformation—one that befalls an office employee, as related by her manager.