In
the first few years after
the CityLit Project was founded in Baltimore in 2003, the nonprofit was
primarily focused on establishing not only an annual literary event (the
CityLit Festival
takes place every April), but also a series of
well-attended
writing workshops (Write Here, Write Now) and a youth program (CityLit
Teens),
in an effort to get the people of Maryland excited about the literary
arts and
to connect its community of readers and writers. It was only a matter of
time
before the nonprofit launched a publishing imprint. CityLit Press [3] extends
the organization's mission by providing a venue for writers—from the
Baltimore
area and beyond—who might otherwise be ignored by larger independent or
commercial publishers. The press's first book, published this month, is City Sages: Baltimore,
an
anthology of short prose by writers who have called the city home, from
Edgar
Allan Poe to Alice McDermott. CityLit also sponsors two annual poetry
chapbook
contests—the Clarinda Harriss Poetry Prize; and Black Infinity, the
Adele V.
Holden Prize for New African American Poets—and publisher Gregg Wilhelm
says
the press plans to release three stand-alone titles per year. Writers
can find
submission guidelines, as well as some pretty handy writers resources,
on
CityLit's Web site.

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