Help
RSS
API
Feed
Maltego
Contact
Domain > jerseyworks.com
×
Welcome!
Right click nodes and scroll the mouse to navigate the graph.
×
More information on this domain is in
AlienVault OTX
Is this malicious?
Yes
No
DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2013-07-06
208.79.200.26
(
ClassC
)
2024-09-20
208.79.200.199
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Fri, 20 Sep 2024 23:30:40 GMTServer: Apache/2.0.52 (CentOS)Last-Modified: Tue, 04 Feb 2014 05:21:12 GMTETag: 7561bb1-5a61-cef9c200Accept-Ranges: bytesContent-Length: 23137X-Powered-By: PleskLinConnection: closeContent-Type: text/html !DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN>html>head> meta namegoogle-site-verification contentOYv8FAY9JRiutuQL7Hl4d05Y7qiVK-3GwWyPgubUco4 /> title>jerseyworks/title> meta namekeywords content online literary magazines, literary magazines, online arts magazines, art magazines, arts magazines, online magazines, online art, literature online, new jersey magazines> style> a:hover {color: blue;}/style> SCRIPT LANGUAGEJAVASCRIPT TYPETEXT/JAVASCRIPT> coverPics new Array(jan14/brightcove.jpg,jan14/mandock.jpg,jan14/dolphin3.jpg,jan14/rusty.jpg,jan14/green.jpg,jan14/fence.jpg,jan14/24.jpg,jan14/prop.jpg,jan14/blue.jpg,jan14/yachtbridge.jpg,jan14/seaweed.jpg,jan14/wood.jpg,jan14/boyshore.jpg,jan14/dock.jpg,jan14/stonecove.jpg,jan14/stones.jpg) !-- pan.jpg,paves.jpg,rivegauche.jpg,chambre.jpg)--> !--(village3.jpg,davis5.jpg,davis10.jpg,davis3.jpg, !--davis7.jpg,davis9.jpg,davis11.jpg,davis2.jpg,davis13.jpg,davis14.jpg, !--davis16.jpg,davis17.jpg,davis18.jpg,village4.jpg,village5.jpg,village6.jpg, !--village7.jpg,village14.jpg,village9.jpg,village10.jpg,village11.jpg,village12.jpg, !--village13.jpg,village1.jpg,village2.jpg) !--(peace2.jpg,forsythe1.jpg,forsythe2.jpg,forsythe3.jpg,forsythe4.jpg,forsythe5.jpg, !--forsythe6.jpg,forsythe7.jpg,forsythe8.jpg) !--chair-cafe.jpg,scaffold.jpg,sunflower.jpg,hummingbird.jpg,chair-picasso.jpg !--(fr07susan.jpg,fr07chartres.jpg,fr07eure.jpg, !--fr07artiste.jpg,fr07bench.jpg, !--fr07mandolin.jpg,fr07forsythia.jpg,fr07jardin.jpg, !--fr07chair.jpg,fr07panda.jpg,fr07revolution.jpg,fr07window.jpg,brooklynbridge1.jpg,brooklynbridge2.jpg,bargemusic.jpg) !--(bayside1.jpg,bayside18.jpg,bayside17.jpg,bayside16.jpg,bayside15.jpg, !--bayside13.jpg,bayside12.jpg,bayside11.jpg,bayside10.jpg,bayside9.jpg,bayside8.jpg,bayside7.jpg,bayside6.jpg, !--bayside5.jpg,bayside4.jpg,bayside3.jpg,bayside2.jpg) !--water.jpg,birds-no-person.jpg,birds-and-person.jpg,people-no-birds.jpg, !--birdsclose.jpg,kayak.jpg,gullshadow.jpg, !--hokeymike.jpg,hokeyfall1.jpg,hokeyfall2.jpg,hokeyfall3.jpg,hokeyfall5.jpg, !--townsends.jpg,townsends-walkers.jpg,egret.jpg,townsends-boys.jpg,townsends-fisherman.jpg, !--seastraight.jpg,foamone.jpg,foamclose.jpg,foampier.jpg,gullvee.jpg, !--gullsea.jpg,pierdistance.jpg,gullshadow.jpg, !--townsends-bridge.jpg,subway.jpg,sandyhook.jpg,hazmatmodine.jpg, !--annamarie.jpg,whaling-ship.jpg,susanflorida.jpg,barnacleprop.jpg, !--kite.jpg,beach-silhouettes.jpg,flag.jpg,ginsberg.jpg,verlaine.jpg, !--jason1.jpg, yellowsquash.jpg,canoetulips.jpg, !--snowcalligraphy.jpg,thepoint.jpg,redsandal.jpg,oystersundown.jpg, !--works.jpg,wayneart.jpg,corn.jpg,punkis.jpg,beachshadow.jpg,dolphindock.jpg,verlaine.jpg,seine.jpg, !--dogandsneakers.jpg,poetseye.jpg,brautigan.jpg,snead.jpg,billswindow.jpg, !--cheesecake-reflections.jpg,bayberry.jpg,waking.jpg, !--dogandpony.jpg,scordo2.jpg,gardenhose.jpg, !--butterflybush.jpg,corsonwave.jpg,bluebridge.jpg,ansonia.jpg, !--windowclock.jpg, !--iamthedoor.jpg,boomerang.jpg,cherryblossoms.jpg, !--birchgrovescene.jpg,peace.jpg,snowywindows.jpg, !--pampas1.jpg,pampas2.jpg,pampas3.jpg,pampas4.jpg,pampas5.jpg, !--housefront.jpg,crabshackv.jpg,olddock.jpg, !--magster.jpg,trainphil.jpg,olddock.jpg,trainno1.jpg,trainno1a.jpg,austin.jpg,portclyde.jpg, !--oystercreek.jpg,seahawk.jpg,oystercreek2.jpg,oystercreek3.jpg, !--rhododendron.jpg,purplelily.jpg,shedsue.jpg,therese.jpg,devatawhite.jpg, !--check.jpg,eubanks.jpg,koiro.jpg,oceanblue.jpg,batona.jpg,colinjosie.jpg, !--yellowcurve.jpg,duneblossoms.jpg,cypress.jpg,bayberry.jpg,crabshackv.jpg, !--bert.jpg,tomatoes.jpg, !--poetrybooks.jpg,poetrycase.jpg,poetrybert.jpg) !--students.jpg,bricks.jpg,polebird.jpg,ropeandribbon.jpg,la-plage.jpg,kimtree.jpg,peacelights.jpg,--> !--rollonweb.jpg,rollonweb.jpg,cloisterswall.jpg,--> thisPic 0 imgCt coverPics.length function rotate() { if (document.images) { thisPic++ if (thisPic imgCt) { thisPic 0 } document.coverPics.src coverPicsthisPic setTimeout(rotate(), 30 * 200) } } /SCRIPT> /head>body onLoadrotate() text#006633 bgcolor#E0DFE0 link#800080 vlink#800080 alink#008080>center>table width700 bgcolore6ebe3 border1 framevsides,above>tr>td>table width700 border0 cellspacing0 cellpadding0 border0>tr>td colspan2 valignbottom bgcolor8c94a6>img srcbannerblue-big.jpg width700 height175 alt border0>/td>/tr>tr>td valigntop bgcolore6ebe3>img srcsnowywindows.jpg width300 height448 NAMEcoverPics>table width300 height448 valignmiddle aligncenter border1>tr>td aligncenter>font size2>!--COVERPIC TITLE GOES HERE-->The bay is the bay. Joe Kapusta br>photos by Charles Raglund. !--When the drawbridge goes up, get out of your car and breathe...br>Susan Cavanaugh,br> Like it where you live now, from her chapbookem>The Good Sense of a Bird,/em> published by Still Waters Press.br>Townsends Inlet photos by Charles Raglund. /font>--> font color#3333ff>p>center> p>INSIDE JERSEYWORKS: br>a hrefcontents.html>COMPLETE CONTENTS OF POETRY, PROSE, ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY./a> p>MASTHEAD br>a hrefpage2.html>Updated November 2011: Who we are and where were going / Contact, submissions, and payment guide. Jerseyworks to stay at home while expanding internationally... /a>p>ALL THINGS JERSEY br> Tee shirts (silk screened original art), books, and more to come. Visit Jerseyworks commercial side: br>a hrefhttp://www.stateimin.com>State Im In. Com/a>p>_____________________________________p> JERSEYWORKS BOOK PUBLICATION. Cover design, formatting, editing, placement on sales channels.We can do it all. Beautiful and perfectwork.Query first; include three selected poems. p>a hrefmailto: jerseyworks@gmail.com>Communicate/a> with Jerseyworks. _____________________________________ P>JERSEYWORKS CLASSICSp>a hrefprizes2008.html>2008 Poetry Prize Winners./a> Prize page contains links to further collections by winning poets John Grey, Angela Mankiewicz, Sheema Kalbasi.p>Poem by a hrefpoetrypage1.html>Shirley Lake./a> Shirley was the editor of Stillwaters Press, publisher of a series of chapbooks representing many of Southern New Jerseys best poets.p>a hrefbelgium.html>Sypniewski visits Belgium, the 12th century-- Photos and text./a>p>Dale Tushmans 2007 prize winning poem is accompanied by the poetry of a hrefBarrett-Grandstaff-Ahmed-Tushman.html>Svea Barrett, Sari Grandstaff, and Erum Ahmed./a>p> a hreffall2010/fall2010poems.html>POETRY BY ZOE GABRIEL, THERESE HALSCHEID, JOHN GREY./a>p>a hrefmlpage.html>Four poems by Marylisa W. DeDomenicis./a> br>Marylisa also maintains her own beautiful website at a hrefhttp://www.notherpoet.com>notherpoet.com/a>p>a hrefplazas of barcelona.html>THE PLAZAS OF BARCELONA/a> br>Photography by Carlos Catalán, Ignasi Ferrer, Alex Llopis; poetry by Pilar Benito, Javi Inglés, Elena Vilallonga, with English translations and an a hrefpfister-intro.html>introduction by Patrick Pfister./a>p>a hreffall2010/ignacio/pyrenees.html>Ignasi Ferrer / Nine photos of the Pyrenees./a> p>Sterling Brown, short story: a hrefski.html>Ski the Beach./a>.P>Photography not to be missed: Brenton Rossows beautiful a hrefrossow.html>portraiture from Southeast Asia,/a> where he has been living for the past nine years. Photographer Bernard Sypniewskis collection has been updated with ten newa hrefportraits.html> South Jersey portraits,/a> faces of Cumberland and Cape May Counties.p>More poetry: a hrefsummer10/summer10poems.htm> Hugh Fox, Abigale Louise LeCavalier, Linda Ann Strang, and Sandy Green./a>p>Jerseyworks is a cummulative collection of poetry, prose, photography, and art. In our twelfth year, we have regularreaders in over forty countries, yet we maintain a local flavor. As Northfield poet Susan Canvanaugh has written, When the drawbridge goes up, get out of your carand breathe...!--RIGHT SIDE COLUMN.................--> /td>/tr>/table>/td>td valigntop alignleft width400> table cellpadding10 alignleft valigntop> tr>td>font color#000066>p> font size3>p>Jerseyworks first went online in August, 2001. Now Jerseyworks editors will take time out in order to pursue our own writing and reading of poetryfor the next several months. We look forward to reading submissions again in the fall of 2014. In the meantime, we invite you to explore the poetry,stories, and art that have been published here during the past twelve and a half years. With few exceptions, all that we have published remains on our pages. We thank our contributors for their excellent work and hopethat all of you reach even further for the best that is in you and that we will be seeing some of your new accomplishments at the end of the year.p>POEMS OF JUNE 2013: a hrefspring13/spring13.html>Therèse Halscheid, John Grey, Luke M. Armstrong./a>We feel that we are encountering the human being behind the words.—Review of Anne Whitehouses most recent collection,a hrefspring13/therefrain.html> em>The Refrain./em>/a> More poetry coming soon.p>a hreffall2012/fallpoems2012.html>NINE POETS, FALL 2012,/a> SOME NEW, SOME OLD: Anne Whitehouse, TC Powell, John Grey,John McKernan, Jnana Hodson, KC Wilder, Susan Cavanaugh, Marylisa Dedomenicis, Luke M. Armstrong.!-- p>Does philosophy matter? What goes through the mind of a man in pursuit of a woman? Are love and honest work possible? Can sex lead to reality? Is gambling good? Read Jerseyworks editor Ron Gaskills latest novel,a hrefhttp://www.amazon.com/All-Bets-Down-Ron-Gaskill/dp/1482532409/refsr_1_1?sbooks&ieUTF8&qid1362840655&sr1-1&keywordsall+bets+down#_> ALL BETS DOWN./a> Available on Amazon, Kindle, some local bookstores. -->p>For many reasons, the value of poetry can be questioned, but there is at least one good and constant answer to that question: Poetry is the most private of the arts. It takes no more than two people to make it and read it; and if you write it yourself it takes only one. Poetry doesnt come looking for you, you have to find it yourself, you can go to it anytime anywhere night or day. It can be memorized and recited in the dark. Although poetry invites participation in readings and gatherings, it can also be the least social of arts, and it is certainly the cheapest. A poet needs nothing more than a sharpened pencil and a drugstore notebook and in fact does not even need that.p>After reading Anne Whitehouses chapbook em>One Sunday Morning,/em> what is the best thing that can be said about it? That a poet was here, but something more: a person was here. It is certain that these poems portray exactly what they intend to portray, true feelings and a quest to understand our physical and spiritual existence. a hrefspring2012/whitehouse.html>Review continued: The poetry of Anne Whitehouse./a> p>NEW POETRY, SPRING 2012: a hrefspring2012/Pobovlaspolos.html>Dennis Vannatta, Dianalee Velie, John Grey, Anca Vlasopolos, Kenneth Pobo./a> !--a hreffall2011/richards.html>SURPRISE SEASONAL VERSE BY WAYNE RICHARDS/a>-->P>FALL 2011: Somebody is out there reading and writing good poems and sending them our way. a hreffall2011/greywilder.html>John Grey, KC Wilder/a> and a hreffall2011/raucraigwhitehouse.html>Christina M. Rau/a> return to Jerseyworks,accompanied by a hreffall2011/raucraigwhitehouse.html>Hannah Craig and Anne Whitehouse/a> and by the photography of Keith Moul. For more of KC Wilder and his FauxBrow poetry, try a hrefhttp://www.frankmedia.com>The Decadence Channel./a>center>p>br>img srcfall2011/steptoelink.jpg aligncenter alt width300> /center>p>Photographer a hreffall2011/moul.html> Keith Moul /a> of Blaine, Washington, is also a poet whose work has been published for forty years. His chapbook, em>The Grammar of Mind/em> was released in November 2010 by Blue and Yellow Dog Press.p>POETRY OF SPRING 2011: p> a href2011/ruggieri-lamar.htm>Helen Ruggieri, Paul Lamar, Don Bloch./a> p> a href2011/sutherland.html>D.H. Sutherland, Andrew Merton, br>Jen Karetnick, Jennifer Hollie Bowles./a> p> a href2011/rilke-petermann.html>Rainer Maria Rilke: five translations by Susanne Petermann./a>!-- p>a hrefhttps://www.createspace.com/3484751>em> At School and Other Poems,/em>/a> dramatic and lyrical poems by Jerseyworks editor Ron Gaskill, available now in beautiful paperback directly from the publisher. -->!--p>Editors word or two: A month ago, when I began an ambitious poetry reading schedule in order to develop thoughts about what constitutes great poetry, Wallace Stevens was initially placed as a benchmark at the top of the scale, but yesterday Rilke replaced Stevens at the apex of my poetic heap — or mountain, for those who would prefer a more dignified metaphor. A friend mentioned Rilke in an email, which sent me back to my copy of em>Duino Elegies/em> and then to Amazon.com to order a comprehensive edition of Rilkes work. Two days later, I found at my doorstep a book that is beautiful to both hold and read, em>The Poetry of Rilke/em>, translated by Edward Snow. The translator does not sacrifice the vocabulary of the poet, and so I felt immediately in touch with Rilkes meanings. em>If only we too could find a pure, carved out, narrow / human place, our own small strip of fertile soil..../em> I am always asking, what can poetry do? Does poetry have a place in the creation of my consciousness? Or is poetry a metaphor contest played in literary journals? The poetry of Rilke gives a welcome answer to that question.br> I am also reading with pleasure two books by Anne Whitehouse, em>Bear in Mind/em> and em>Blessings and Curses./em> More thoughts on these will follow soon. In the meantime, hit the link at the top of this page to read a selection of Whitehouses poetry.!--Inem> Les Fleurs du Mal,/em> a swan beating its wings in dust is a symbol of Baudelaires alienation from a changing Paris. In my mind, it is one of the most persistent imagesin all of poetry, as strong and lasting as Stevens green freedom of a cockatoo upon a rug, Frosts woods on a snowy evening, or Mayakovsky writing, So I, in graying evening haze, humbly set foot on Brooklyn Bridge. Isnt it enough that a few lines can make a picture to last a lifetime? My answer is yes, and poetry can do many other things; I am setting out to readand in some instances to reread in the next year a thousand poets and decide which poems are the greatest and why I think so.Will it be their language, the depth of their thought, the beauty of their imagery, the power of their feeling? Their humor? Probably seven hundred poets is a more realistic goal, just a sample of their work, a handful of poems each. I am setting a number in order to keep the project moving, and I am beginning with Wallace Stevens as the benchmark, because he is possibly a ten in both language and idea. In human feeling there are greater poets, but I am starting with Stevens on top and will revise the scale if others top him. Whitman and Rilke are pretty high up there, too. I will keepJerseyworks up to date as my reading progresses.--> !--p>SATURDAY OCTOBER 1, 2011, Jerseyworks editors Susan Cavanaugh and Ron Gaskill hosted the open mic portion of the 9th annual b>Collingswood Book Fair./b>Six hours of events starting at 10 AM included workshops, jazz and poetry, a childrensreading contest hosted by Anna Evans, a teen slam mcd by Brother Daoud Bey, and an all-day haiku-wall. Featured readers were Harlem Renaissancepoet Sandra Turner Barnes, Quick and Dirty Poets, Jersey Fresh, BJ Ward, Charles Johnson, andRafey Habib. -->p>Kal Wagenheim, memoir: a hrefsummer10/siblings.htm>Siblings./a>, Wagenheims novel, em>The Secret Life of Walter Mott,/em> is available from All Things That Matter Press.p>a href2010/April2010poetry.html>From our April 2010 poetry collection:/a> KJs anthem for employment seekers, em>will blank for blank,/em> as well as works by Goerge Moore, Melissa Carroll, Susan Cavanaugh, and Wayne Richards. p>Michele LaRoche reflects on her 14th of July celebration during a summers visit to her childhood home in the south of France. a href2010/Un Jour Ferie.html>Un jour férié à la française/a> is accompanied by an English translation. !-- p>font size2>Jerseyworks sometimes uses A HREFhttp://javascriptsource.com> -->!--The JavaScript Source/a>/font>--> !--p>em>Jerseyworks/em> began its seventh year August 13. Total readers (one computer logging in multiple times counts as one reader) : 39,247. Total pages read: 388,966. Increase in number of readers during the past year: approximately 10,000. Not only are we growing every year, but every year we are growing faster. Shall we compare us to a summers day? Perhaps to the venerable magazine em>Poetry/em>? We read recently that under its new editor and with new money, em>Poetry/em> has increased the number of its subscribers from 10,000 to nearly 30,000. em>Poetry/em> received a $200 million grant from Ruth Lilly in 2003. em>Jerseyworks/em> budget for our fifth year was $295. We have readers and contributors from five continents. We shall leave interpretation of these numbers up to someone else. Other statistics of interest: More people read poetry in the winter months, but winter readers log in at night, sometimes late at night, and in the summertime poetry is read more often in the early afternoon. Year round, weekends are slack. --> /center> !--p>SHAVING AND DRINKING A COKEPEOPLE DRIVING BY STARING AT ME p>Funny how we always thinkbr>the other guy is weird the other guysbr>the asshole when here I am drivingbr>along the Jersey Turnpikebr>with this damn hangover from havingbr>too many brandy Alexandersbr>with Cousin Sandy & her clunkheadbr>of a husband & Im drinking a cokebr>hoping the caffeine will perk me upbr>& I have my sunglasses onbr>& my Indiana Jones hatbr>& also Im shaving with an electric razorbr>& singing out-loud to my favoritebr>Maria Callas tape so whosbr>the weird one here whos the asshole?--> !--p>And please dont missa hreftrentonstate.html> the writers of Trenton State Prison./a>Wagenheim ( jerseyworks 2003 first place a hrefdecember7.html>poetry winner/a> and author of the short story a hrefwebeatstory(1).html>We Beat Whitey Ford/a> ) leads a creative writing group at Trenton State and for the past several months has been sending us both prose and poetry. In this issue, we bring our readers poetry by Marvin Ali Mays, Anthony Leahey, Eugene Thomas, and Jamal Muhammad. Writers to appear soon include, among others, Richard DAgostino, Sammy Moore, Desi Ricardo Sykes, and Christopher Flynn. --> !--p>Your jerseyworks editor has accumulated a few insights lately and therefore will go out on a limb and briefly summarize his esthetics of poetry, not claiming to have anything deep to add to the subject, but hoping to have something mildly interesting to say to potential contributors and fellow idlers who have time to read this. Actually, three other people had the mentioned insights and found me in a condition willing to listen to them. The first person was my friend Eddie, the second was my friend Bill, and the third was my wife Susan. Eddie said courage. Bill said a poem should be like the sound of one hand clapping, and Susan said a poem should be in your face. Eddies contribution, spoken at the bar in the Tuckahoe Inn as little more than that single gravel-voiced word, courage, is the easiest idea to understand, which I believe is related to--> !--p>Cinema, verité & otherwise: a hrefprofprozac.html>Professor Prozac/a> keeps jerseyworks readers up to date, cinematically speaking, with his latest review: b>King Arthur./b> Our esteemed curmudgeon (partially reformed) also reviews em>Spiderman 2/em> and em>The Day After Tomorrow/em>--> center> !--br>In the Manhattan collage, the night view of the Empire State Building was shot by Noreen Braman, as were the globe at the UN Plaza, the view from the 12th floor of the Helmsley Hotel, and the sculpture Peace Form One, a 50 steel obelisk by Daniel Larue. The upper West Side brownstones were photographed by Charles Raglund, and the street scenes and people were taken by jerseyworks editor Ron Gaskill. The Cloisters photos are also by Gaskill, and the digital work on the a hrefcloisters.html>Cloisters/a> page belongs to Bernard Sypniewski. hr width50%>--> !--If you can tolerate it, are interested in it, or think hypertext is cool, try a hrefhttp://www.uiowa.edu/~iareview>em>Iowa Review./em>/a> And we liked the experimental poetry in a hrefhttp://www.slope.org>em>Slope./em>/a> Other online mags weve dug include a hrefhttp://www.danforthreview.com>em>The Danforth Review/em>/a> (Toronto), and a hrefhttp://www.thepedestalmagazine.com>em>The Pedestal Review/em>/a>.--> !--p>Self-Recognition Department: jerseyworks has recently been named WEB SITE OF THE MONTH by the Pale Horse Press Newsletter-- PLEASE FORWARD. Pale Horse Press recognizes jerseyworks poetry and prose accompanied by sumptuous photography, and comments: While on the surface the emphasis may seem to be on New Jersey writers and writing, the perspective is broad and universal. Our thanks to Pale Horse Press, which may be contacted at PalHorPr@aol.com. a hrefhttp://www.smartishpace.com/home/erskinej/2001_3rd.html> em>Smartish Pace/em>/a> website. p> --> /td>/tr>/table> /td>/tr>/table> /center>/body>/html>
View on OTX
|
View on ThreatMiner
Please enable JavaScript to view the
comments powered by Disqus.
Data with thanks to
AlienVault OTX
,
VirusTotal
,
Malwr
and
others
. [
Sitemap
]