Masthead
Editors-in-Chief
Dana Blatte ‘26
Dana Blatte is a senior from Sharon, MA studying Anthropology and Creative Writing. Her poetry aand short fiction is published in The Adroit Journal, Redivider, and Beaver Magazine, and elsewhere. She loves fairytales, unnecessarily long walks, and daily sweet treats.
Sydney Lee ‘27
Sydney is a sophomore at Hamilton College majoring in Government and minoring in Creative Writing and Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Justice. She enjoys writing short stories, flash fiction, and poetry centered around themes of absurdity and surrealism. She has been featured in Writing South Carolina and her work has been recognized by the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards, the South Carolina Council on the Holocaust, and the Jewish Historical Society of South Carolina. Additionally, she has also been published in the Post and Courier. In her free time, Sydney enjoys exploring the outdoors and going on long walks.
2025-2026 Editorial Board
Art
Head: Lindsey White 26
Ely Silverman 26, Caitlin Blanksteen 27, Jessica Corbett 27, Anna Totilca 27, Violet Bohen 29, Pedro Hernandez 29, Sarah Aaron 29, Djuensie Cherfils 29
Poetry
Head: Gabrielle Brihn 26
Brendan Byrne 26, Dylan Buckser-Schulz 27, Jackson Smith 27, Mirix Robertson-Leich 27, Cayden Chng 28, Grace Fogarty 28, Sadie Anderson 29, Helen Gass 29
Prose
Head: Haley Sharpe 27
Morgan Hodorowski 26, Lucy Leness 26, Luke Davis 28, Campbell Greene 28, Charlotte Tsekerides 29, Beatriz Dos Santos Yoshino 29, Sophia Robertson 29
Click here to meet our members!
Past Editorial Boards
2025-2026 Editorial Board
Editors Emeritus
Christina stoll ‘25
Spring 23 - Spring 25
Christina is a senior from Orlando, Florida majoring in Philosophy and Art History. She enjoys loitering in Fojo South, loitering in the Wellin, hunting on Facebook marketplace, going on long train rides, and annoying her roommates and friends. She's always liked looking at art far more than making art and believes that the role of the critic is the easiest. When she's not arbitrarily judging people's creative outlets, she likes to walk around campus coyly waving at passing acquaintances.
LUCY SEWARD ‘24
(Spring 23- Spring 24)
Lucy is a Literature major and Women and Gender Studies/Hispanic Studies double minor. She has worked with Red Weather since her freshman year, starting on the poetry board. She also has experience as a reader for the New England Review and as an intern for the Bellevue Literary Review. She loves to make art, from painting and drawing to writing poetry and fiction. Her work has been published in Amethyst Magazine and BLR. She spends time at hamilton going on glen walks, hosting two radio shows, and working at fojo.
Eva Glassman ‘23
(Fall -Spring 2023)
Eva majored in Creative Writing and double-minored in Art and Classical Studies. From music to painting to poetry, she's always been an artist at heart, although writing is her favorite outlet. In addition to her poems appearing in Red Weather in Fall 2021, she has been published in Suture, Hamilton’s humanities-based academic journal, in 2023. She is also the 2022 recipient of the John V.A. Weaver Prize in Poetry and the 2023 recipient of the Doris M. and Ralph E. Hansmann Poetry Prize awarded by the Academy of American Poets. Her senior thesis, “Disaster Pegasus,” is a collection of poetry that explores the commodification of art, the body, and the self as it relates to the ubiquitous cloud of late-stage capitalism. If she isn’t writing, she is thinking about ghosts, civilizational collapse, or, most importantly, what she should cook for dinner.
Rachel Lu ‘22
(Fall 2019-Spring 2022)
Rachel Lu is a Chinese American writer from the San Francisco Bay Area. She is the Managing Editor at COUNTERCLOCK Journal, and the co-founder of Counterclock Arts Collective, an interdisciplinary summer fellowship program. She is a two-time recipient of both the George A. Watrous Literary Prize for Poetry and the Kellogg Essay Prize. As a 2021 Levitt Research Winter Fellow, Rachel's researched 19th-century Gothic fiction and queer theory in order to understand the discursive, normalizing techniques that construct our contemporary understanding of homosexuality. Over the summer, Rachel researched the history of Asian Americans at Hamilton. An impenitent Goodreads addict, she will, perhaps too enthusiastically, proselytize its benefits to anyone within a five-mile radius of her.
Hunter Lewinski ‘20
(Fall 2018-Spring 2020)
Hunter Lewinski is a poet and musician from Sheboygan, WI. His poetry has appeared in The Mantle, Riggwelter, Fourth & Sycamore, and By&By Poetry. In 2018, his poem “Usufruct” was nominated for the Pushcart Prize. Hunter was also a recipient of the 2018 Emerson Summer Collaboration Grant, which he fulfilled by authoring a collection of poetry about the history of Milwaukee, WI, entitled Exit Wound.