I have 6 poems up in the Winter 2011 issue of  FRiGG Magazine: Poem for My First Cigarette; The Story of a Weathered Woman; Sleep Walking Through Another Morning Commute; The Best Clean; Before We Bed Down into Loves We Won't Keep Long; and What Love Must Mean to You, Father. 

http://www.friggmagazine.com/issuethirtyone/splashpages/StevieEdwards.htm


Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz also has 5 poems in this issue that you might want to /probably should check out: 

http://www.friggmagazine.com/issuethirtyone/splashpages/CristinOKeefeAptowicz.htm


"The Best Clean" was a poem from early September--- which if you know me, you will probably remember was kind of the beginning of my latest hotmess streak. The other 5 poems all came out of last April's 30/30 (April is National Poetry Month, and a bunch of fools write a poem a day for the entire month, or at least try to). April was an interesting time-- I had just moved into the Real Talk Ave. basement as a Writer-in -Residence with Vox Ferus and out of the Uptown apartment of doom. It's crazy for me to look back at the work I was writing then and to realize just how much my writing has changed in the past 8-9 months. I think I'm usually terrified of stagnancy, but taking a step back I can see that there's definitely been a lot of change happening in my writing, hopefully progress. 

From best I can tell, FRiGG seems to like confessional, narrative work quite a bit. They also seem to like the whole sex, drugs, and rock n' roll scene. They might be a good fit for a lot of poets from the slam community. They also published some hotness from Jeanann Verlee  in their Summer 2010 issue (who I might have a mini poet-crush on). 

Their submission guidelines: 
http://www.friggmagazine.com/editors/editors31.htm

Something interesting about their guidelines: they will accept reprint submissions of poetry that's only been published in print
= I might be sending some of my print publications their way because I like being able to link to my work online. 

 
 

My poem "What's Needed" is up at Thieves Jargon: http://www.thievesjargon.com/workview.php?work=1479
On a side note, the chapbook I'm working on (that should be printed and pretty and such in about a month) is kind of centered around this piece, and takes its title from the last line, Pain Needs to Remember. 

Thieves Jargon is a slick magazine and you should probably send them some poems (no simultaneous submissions though). From what I can tell, they tend to favor the weird and quirky--- experimental work with a bit of grit and sting. They don't seem very into "pretty."
For complete guidelines: http://www.thievesjargon.com/manifesto.php