About Writers Resist
Writers Resist is a feminist literary collective born of the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election. We publish creative expressions of resistance by diverse writers and artists from around the globe.
We’re dedicated to challenging all things that diminish our collective quest for social justice and a healthy planet for all, while having a bit of fun.
Because we originally committed to publishing until the Trump administration was no longer, our last biweekly issue launched on Thursday 21 January 2021—yippee!
However, we are now publishing Writers Resist quarterly because there’s an obvious need for ongoing resistance. And we have other things in the works, so stay tuned by subscribing to receive calls for submissions, event announcements, and other writerly news.
A peedy bit more about us:
Because Writers Resist is an intersectional feminist journal, our team members have been and continue to be intentionally diverse, including Asian, Black, Indian, Jewish, LGBTQ+, Mexican, and white representation. The more diversity the merrier.
You’ll find the latest Writers Resist news scrolling on the homepage, and all of our previous issues are available via the Contents page.
If you like what you see, subscribe to Writers Resist—it’s free!—and follow us on Facebook, Instagram and X.
Meet the Writers Resist Team
Kit-Bacon Gressitt
Prose editor and publisher
Spawned by a Southern Baptist creationist and a liberal social worker, K-B inherited the requisite sense of humor to survive family dinner-table debates and the imagination to avoid them. She has an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of California, Riverside/Palm Desert, and teaches Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies in the Cal State University system. Her website is KBGressitt.com.
K-B’s narrative nonfiction, commentary, political fiction, book reviews and author features have been published in Hard Crackers, Evening Street Review and Evening Street Press, Not My President: The Anthology of Dissent (Thoughtcrime Press, 2017), Ducts magazine, Publishers Weekly, The Missing Slate, Trivia: Feminist Voices, Ms. Magazine , the former Gay San Diego and North County Times, and others. She’s the publisher and a founding editor of Writers Resist.
Debbie Hall
Poetry and photo editor
Debbie Hall is a psychologist and writer whose poetry has appeared in a number of literary journals and anthologies, including the San Diego Poetry Annual, Serving House Journal, Sixfold, Poets Reading the News, Poetry24, Bird’s Thumb, Califragile, Gyroscope Review, and Hawaii Pacific Review. Her essays have appeared on NPR (This I Believe series), in USD Magazine, and in the San Diego Union Tribune. She completed her MFA in 2017 at Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon.
Debbie received honorable mentions in the 2016 and 2021 Steve Kowit Poetry Prize competition and won second place in the 2018 Poetry Super Highway contest. She is the author of two poetry collections: In the Jaguar’s House (The Poetry Box, 2022) and What Light I Have (Main Street Rag Books, 2018), a finalist in the 2019 San Diego Book Awards, and an award-winning chapbook, Falling Into the River (The Poetry Box, 2020).
In addition to writing, Debbie’s passions include photography and world travel. She and her partner, both native Southern Californians, live in north San Diego County.
L.A. Hunt
Prose editor
L. A. Hunt is passionate about lots of things. Her latest online search obsessions include books, coffee, zombies, outdoor living spaces, wireless bras, lip balm, zodiac signs as boba drinks, best wine patios, screenwriting hacks, doomsday prepping, urban gardening, Tokyo Owl Café, and Texas BBQ.
Her protagonists are almost always women, on the verge of all that life has to offer—the love, the loss, the conflict, and the heartbreak—all part and parcel of coming of age, at any age.
She is an educator with more than twenty years of experience teaching high school English, four of those as a high school Assistant Principal. Along with an MA in Educational Leadership, she has an MFA in Creative Writing from the UCR Palm Desert Low Residency Program (UCRPD) where her main genre was fiction, and her cross-genre was screenwriting. She is also a TV writer, having recently completed UCLA’s Professional Certificate Program in TV Writing.
She served as the fiction editor for the The Coachella Review Winter 2021 Issue, UCRPD’s literary magazine. Her nonfiction has been published by You Might Need To Hear This, GXRL, and The Coachella Review, among others. More about Lori and her writing can be found on her website: writerlahunt.carrd.co.
René Marzuk
Poetry and prose editor
René is a graduate student of English and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Born in Ukraine, he grew up in Cuba and has lived in the United States since 2009.
René is interested in exploring continuities across languages and cultures. He is particularly intrigued by literary articulations of marginalized identities and by literary instances of emergence, widely defined. He is also drawn to intertextual approaches that reveal the production of knowledge as a collective endeavor spanning times, cultures, and disciplines. Since 2021, he has been a contributing editor of The Envious Lobster, a collection of nineteenth-century U.S. nature writing and environmental writing for children. He runs, writes poetry, takes pictures, and dabbles in drawing and illustration.
He lives in North Carolina.
Lonav Ojha
Social Media Manager
Lonav Ojha is a Master’s student at EFLU, Hyderabad, India. His works have appeared in Writers Resist, ASAP Art, Agents of Ishq, Open Dosa and LiveWire. He’s won the 2024 SJU Mother Tongues Essay Contest and has been longlisted for the TOTO Award for Creative Writing. He’s also the Founding Editor of Sagar Square, a student-run creative writing journal.
He blogs at Stories Under My Bed, which abridges (or lengthens) his definitely funny jokes and his profound desire and inability to write children’s fiction. He is anti-many things, but nothing hurts more than badly done momos.
Lonav enjoys Andrea Gibson, Carmen Maria Machado, Hanif Abdurraqib, Fredrik Backman and very recently Terry Pratchett. Reading The Thing Is by Ellen Bass is a monthly ritual.
He designs to not feel bored and occasionally to help his fellow agitators spread the word.