Founded in 1996, Five Points: A Journal of Literature and Art has achieved an international following and attracted some of today’s most distinguished poets and fiction writers.

Published three times a year by the Department of English at Georgia State University in Atlanta, the magazine has established a reputation for the diversity and quality of the writers, artists, essayists, and interviewers it publishes.

Founded by poet and novelist David Bottoms and fiction writer Pam Durban, Five Points offers artists and writers a forum, its editors say, for “the convergence of ideas and genres, photograph and text, north and south, east and west, young and old.” According to coeditor Megan Sexton, such a convergence creates a sense of each genre’s potential, often by juxtaposition as much as by variety. “One of the major impacts a literary magazine can have,” she says, “is the way in which it illuminates genre. When a story runs next to a poem and an essay runs next to a story,… questions of form are raised—how one form may offer different challenges for the language and various experiences for the reader.” The journal’s philosophy of convergence is reflected in its name, which is taken from an area of downtown Atlanta that marks the traditional center of the city.

Five Points, Vol. 1 No. 1
Five Points, Vol. 1 No. 1

At its start, Five Points was available only in print editions. However, since 1998, an online edition has made available selections from the print edition and provides information about the magazine. The online presence also underscores the journal’s commitment to being more than a regional publication, an aspiration reflected in the diversity of writers it publishes.

In 1998 Five Points received a Best New Journal Award from the Council of Literary Magazines. The journal celebrated its tenth anniversary in 2006 with the publication of High 5ive (2007), an anthology featuring nineteen of the best short stories published in the magazine since its inception. In 2010 the journal published its first international issue, Belfast Imagined, and in 2016 Five Points marked its twentieth anniversary with a special issue of flash fiction.

Works first published in Five Points have reappeared in Best American Short Stories, Best American PoetryHarper’s magazine, The O’Henry Prize Stories, Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses, and Utne Reader, and on the website Poetry Daily. Prominent contributors include Richard Bausch, Ann Beattie, Barbara Hamby, Edward Hirsch, Ha Jin, Philip Levine, W. S. Merwin, Naomi Shihab Nye, Joyce Carol Oates, Christine Stewart, Ellen Bryant Voigt, Martin Walls, and Charles Wright.

Each year the journal awards the James Dickey Prize for Poetry, named in honor of Georgia poet James Dickey.

Share Snippet Copy Copy with Citation

Updated Recently

Bernie Marcus

Bernie Marcus

7 years ago
Third Day

Third Day

11 years ago

A More Perfect Union

The New Georgia Encyclopedia is supported by funding from A More Perfect Union, a special initiative of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Image

Five Points, Vol. 1 No. 1

Five Points, Vol. 1 No. 1

Founded by poet and novelist David Bottoms and fiction writer Pam Durban, Five Points printed their first issue in the fall of 1996.