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Oak Morse is a poet, speaker, and teacher who has traveled across the Southeast as a performance poet as well as a teacher of literary poetry. He has a Bachelor of Journalism from Georgia State University. He is the winner of the 2017 Magpie Award for Poetry for the poem “Garbage Disposal” in Issue 16 of Pulp Literature. Other work of his has appeared in the UndergroundPage and Spine, Fourth & Sycamore, DrylandUniversity of Canberra, and Patch. Oak currently lives in Houston, Texas, where he works on his poetry collection titled When the Tongue Goes Bad, a themed set of work aimed to bring attention to a contemporary speech disorder diagnosis known as “cluttering,” a diagnosis which Oak has worked tirelessly to overcome. You can find more of his work at www.oakmorse.com.


Current Issue
17 Nov 2025

We thought it was a miracle, though not a very useful one, and she got to be on TV
“Emptiness,” says the monster, “feels like a monster / is wearing / your face,”
In this episode of Strange Horizons at 25, Podcast Editor Kat Kourbeti sits down with long-time Strange Horizons contributor RB Lemberg to talk about everything from using poetry as a tool to refine short and long-form fiction, to writing about the diaspora experience, and the comfort one can find in stories from perspectives outside one's own. Oh, and Ursula K LeGuin, of course.
Wednesday: Dementia 21 volumes 1 and 2 by Shintaro Kago 
Friday: We Like It Cherry by Jacy Morris 
Issue 10 Nov 2025
By: B. Pladek
Podcast read by: Arden Fitzroy
Issue 3 Nov 2025
Issue 20 Oct 2025
By: miriam
Issue 13 Oct 2025
By: Diana Dima
Podcast read by: Emmie Christie
Issue 6 Oct 2025
Strange Horizons
Issue 29 Sep 2025
Issue 22 Sep 2025
Issue 15 Sep 2025
Issue 8 Sep 2025
By: Malda Marlys
Podcast read by: Emmie Christie
Issue 1 Sep 2025
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