.WRITERS.ON.WRITING.
Kapua Iao Kapua Iao

.Writers.on.Writing.

Get to know our authors, the foundation and heart of Yellow Arrow Journal, and what writing means to them through our monthly series.


W.o.W. #50

Al Kelly

What is the first book that made you cry?

The first book that made me cry was probably this children’s book called Some Things go Together. It’s a book my mom used to read to me all the time! It’s a rhyming book about a child and their mom. And every stanza builds up to the line “and you with me.” It is simple and sweet and as a child growing up with a single mother, the imagery of the two main characters really hit home! Even to this day I get really emotional reading it! I still have a copy on my bookshelf and actually wrote a poem about my mom in dedication to the book, the poem is called “And You With Me.”

What does your inner writing voice tell you?

My inner writing voice is calling me to be vulnerable and courageous. She is desperate for me to take risks, she wants to shine, she wants to show me how powerful she is, she wants me to trust in her capabilities. My writing voice is really my intuition and she wants to be acknowledged, exalted, and full of joy. She wants me to know that she’s ready and she’s waiting on me.

If you could tell your younger writing self anything, what would it be?

Al! I love you! While you’re traveling, write about everything! Stop what you’re doing and write what you feel, what you see, what you think! Those moments of experiencing something for the first time are magical. They ask your brain to think in new ways. They ask your body to adjust to new terrains. They ask that your eyes remain open and that your heart remains curious. They demand your uninterrupted presence. So be present and then write it all down so you can remember over and over again!

What are you currently working on?

Currently working on a writing project that incorporates monologues and poetry into video vignettes. The collection will explore how we talk about Black women and how we define strength in reference to Black women. My hope is to eventually record the vignettes!

 
 

Al Kelly grew up in Los Angeles, California, with her mama. She lives her life in the sunshine writing poetry, singing, and acting. She has lived in a lot of cool places (Los Angeles, New York, Budapest, Chicago!) and has seen bits and pieces of the world that she thinks are dope. Throughout her life, she has continued to write poetry because it is the most magical way of communicating. She hopes to one day publish a collection of poetry and run away to a country cottage perfectly situated on a Parisian city street where she’ll write, laugh, rest, explore, make love and dance forever.

You can find Al’s poem “Inheritance” in Yellow Arrow Journal, Vol. VIII, No. 1 KINDLING. Al participated in the reading for the issue, Scorching, Speaking: A KINDLING reading, on June 1. The reading is now available on YouTube at https://youtu.be/GEygfG8v2XI. You can see more about Al on Instagram @alkellypoetry.

Read More
Kapua Iao Kapua Iao

.Writers.on.Writing.

Get to know our authors, the foundation and heart of Yellow Arrow Journal, and what writing means to them through our monthly series.


W.o.W. #49

Violeta Garza

What book is on the top of your to-be-read pile?

I’m reading Moriana Delgado’s Peces de pelea, and it’s so intoxicating that I can only read one poem a day, several times, before I go to bed with my palm over my sternum.

Where do you go to find out about writing submissions opportunities?

At times it’s Submittable, and other times it’s word-of-mouth through my networks. Occasionally, it’s my Muses making sure certain emails surface in my inbox out of nowhere.

If you could tell your younger writing self anything, what would it be?

The words and the discipline will come when you think there is no reason to go on, with no one behind you. That’s when you will see that the exact opposite is actually the truth.

What does your inner writing voice tell you?

You got this, baby gurl.

 
 

Violeta Garza (she/they/ella) is a Latinx poet, weaver, and artist from the Historic West Side of San Antonio, Texas. She has performed original poems and stories for Texas Public Radio, The Alamo Chapter for Human Rights, and The Curtain Up Cancer Foundation.

She is currently editing a poetry manuscript and getting their loom Josephine ready for their next tapestry—all while falling in love with their new feline soul sister, Mina Luz de la Rosa.

Find their poem “A Cringe-Worthy Slice of Wasted Energy, Denying My Queerness” in Yellow Arrow Journal, Vol. VIII, No. 1 KINDLING. Violeta’s beautiful tapestry “Doña Sedona (a gradual elevation),” wool, acrylic, and cotton, was also chosen as the cover of KINDLING. According to Violeta, “In the case of ‘Doña Sedona,’ we stared at each other for quite some time until we were on the same wavelength. The day she and I really gelled was the day we both listened to ‘The Ballrooms of Mars’ by T.Rex, and before we knew it, we were both overlooking electric landscapes.”

You can peruse their work at violetagarza.com or see more about them on Instagram @violeta.poeta. Make sure to join Violeta and other KINDLING authors for the reading (Scorching, Speaking: A KINDLING reading) June 1, 8 pm EST on Zoom.

Read More
Kapua Iao Kapua Iao

.Writers.on.Writing.

Get to know our authors, the foundation and heart of Yellow Arrow Journal, and what writing means to them through our monthly series.


W.o.W. #48

Diann Leo-Omine

What is the first book that made you cry?

I couldn’t tell you the first book that made me cry, but I was most recently moved by the cookbook Mister Jiu’s in Chinatown by chef Brandon Jew and writer Tienlon Ho. I haven’t yet cooked any of the recipes, but I felt my childhood and family life really spring to life from the history about San Francisco’s Chinatown and the Toisanese (Southern Chinese) diaspora. Even the choice to include the main collaborators’ Chinese names in their bios at the back nearly brought me to tears.

What does your inner writing voice tell you?

What stories are begging to be told? Tell them.

What period of your life do you find you write about most often?

It’s been a mixed bag about my early 20s and false starts entering the “working world” during the Great Recession spliced up with growing up in San Francisco in the 1990s.

What is a good writing habit you have picked up?

This isn’t so much a personal habit so much as it is realizing the importance of building writing community. I’ve met a lot of inspiring creatives from my Rooted and Written fellowship but also from Food Media Lab (a conference held by San Francisco Cooking School where I met my collaborators for Lunchbox Moments Zine, featured in the Yellow Arrow blog in 2021) and Golden Trout (a local writers group based where I live in Sacramento).

Diann Leo-Omine (she/her) is a creative nonfiction writer born and raised in San Francisco (Ramaytush Ohlone land) and the colorfully boisterous Southern Chinese-Toisanese diaspora. Her creative nonfiction piece “The Hawk” was included in Yellow Arrow Journal PEREGRINE (Vol. VII, No. 2). We nominated “The Hawk” for a 2023 Pushcart Prize.

To combat the recent swell of hate crimes against Asian Americans, Diann cocurated and edited the charity food zine Lunchbox Moments. A grateful alum of Tin House and Rooted & Written, she is currently devising a manuscript centering her maternal grandmother.

You can find Diann reading part of the “Hawk” with other PEREGRINE authors in Fly to Me, Speak to Me: A PEREGRINE Reading on the Yellow Arrow YouTube Channel. Learn more about her on Instagram and Twitter @sweetleoomine or at her website sweetleoomine.com.

Read More
Kapua Iao Kapua Iao

.Writers.on.Writing.

Get to know our authors, the foundation and heart of Yellow Arrow Journal, and what writing means to them through our monthly series.


W.o.W. #47

Kaili Y. Turner

What is the first book that made you cry?

The Autobiography of Assatta Shakur definitely. I had so many different feelings reading that book. She was a woman with a mission to help better her people like so many and was put through so much, even today, She’s a freedom fighter and I look up to her.

What period of your life do you find you write about most often?

I probably write about my upbringing most because its so full of cultures and conflict. As a Black Indian who grew up in Mashpee, Massachusetts, there was Native American tradition everywhere but I was also Black and have that background and upbringing and knowledge of the deep south, Florida, collard greens, etc., from my grandmother on my dad’s side. When I look back, it was a euphoric time riddled with chaos inner and external.

What word do you find yourself using most often in your writing?

I don’t know that I often use a specific word, maybe I should ask that in my Instagram stories. A major theme though that is in my work is it’s edgy, topical, and often a reflection of what is going on in my communities.

What does your inner writing voice tell you?

To always be true to myself, my feelings, and my goals. To take every challenge and success as they come and to celebrate the effort of both. Never be afraid to ruffle a few feathers when your speaking your truth and continue to pay it forward.

Kaili Y. Turner is a Black Indian (Nipmuc) comedian, actress, writer, producer, and puppeteer who received her MFA from the Actors Studio Drama School. Kaili’s pilot “Fk’d Up & Fabulous” is streaming on the Tenoir TV app and her play “Indian Country” was a semifinalist for the Eugene O’Neill playwrights conference. She’s also the creator of Rock the Bells Comedy, a variety show that is a platform for BIPOC comics and musicians. She was a participant of the Walt Disney/ABC Pilot Prep Program for Native Americans and a recipient of the SNL/Second City Scholarship.

Her fiery poem, “Amerikkka the Beautiful,” was included in RENASCENCE, Vol. VI, No. 1. Kaili sat with the guest editor of RENASCENCE, Taína, for a chat before its release and was kind enough to participate in Renascence: A Reading in 2021, now available on the Yellow Arrow YouTube channel.

You can find Kaili on Instagram @mdamstarlight, Facebook @kailiturner, and Twitter @kailiyturner and learn about her current projects at kailiyturner.com.

Read More
Kapua Iao Kapua Iao

.Writers.on.Writing.

Get to know our authors, the foundation and heart of Yellow Arrow Journal, and what writing means to them through our monthly series.


W.o.W. #46

Leticia Priebe Rocha

Describe an early experience where you learned that language has power.

When my family immigrated to the United States when I was 9 years old, I learned English by reading fiction. To be transported into entirely different universes during a time of such challenging personal transition was transformational.

What is a book you wish someone would write?

A poetry collection centering on Brazilian folklore.

What word do you find yourself using most often in your writing?

I am currently gravitating toward the word “unspool.”

What does your inner writing voice tell you?

Go deeper.

 
 

Leticia Priebe Rocha’s poem “Lost In” was included in Yellow Arrow Journal PEREGRINE (Vol. VII, No. 2). Leticia received her bachelor’s from Tufts University, where she was awarded the 2020 Academy of American Poets University & College Poetry Prize. Born in São Paulo, Brazil, she immigrated to Miami, Florida, at nine and currently resides in the Greater Boston area. Find her on Instagram @letiprieberochapoems, Twitter @LetiPriebeRocha, or Facebook @leticiaprieberocha and online at leticiaprieberocha.com.

Leticia participated in “Fly to Me, Speak to Me: A PEREGRINE Reading” from December 2022. Support Leticia and the rest of the authors by watching the reading on the Yellow Arrow YouTube channel.

Read More