Letter from the Guest Editor
Taryn White
__________
I’ve loved kaleidoscopes since I was young. They’ve inspired my writing and influenced my preferences in reading. I’ve heard from multiple sources that writing is often like a puzzle, that all of the pieces fall together as the plot is revealed. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy a riveting plot as much as the next person; I find that the marking of a good story—whether it’s a novel, short story, poem, piece of creative nonfiction, movie, song, any form of media under the sun— is found within its point of view.
When I engage with a form of media, I anticipate walking away from it changed and unable to ever find anything exactly like it again. I expect it to point out something I’ve never considered before, take me places I’ve never been, experience things I have never experienced, put me in the shoes of people I could never be. Though a plot will certainly keep me entertained, I long for something more than that. I want something that will make me jealous of the person who gets to take in that creation for the first time because I will never be able to replicate that first time experience for myself. What I look forward to reading, and hope to replicate in my own writing, is a kaleidoscope.
This month’s issue is full of such unique, kaleidoscopic pieces. As you read, I hope you linger in these designs. Though you may be able to find something with similar colors, patterns, shapes, designs—you will never be able to find this exact experience again.
__________

To learn more about submitting your work to Boudin or applying to McNeese State University’s Creative Writing MFA program, please visit Submissions for details.
Posted in Kaleidoscopes, Sep '25 and tagged in #boudin