NewPages Magazine Stand Archive
Past New Issues of Literary & Alternative Magazines Received
Sponsored Literary Magazines
received September 12, 2011
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The American Poetry Review Volume 40 Number 5, September/October 2011
Featuring Alex Dimitrov’s “Darling,” the winner of the 2011 Stanley Kunitz Memorial Prize for Younger Poets. This issue also features Robert Bly, Ira Sadoff, Kim Addonizio, Carol Ann Davis, plus Dean Young, Jeffrey Skinner, A Special Feature on 12 Chicano/Latina Poets, Jennifer Grotz, Susan Stewart, Michael Broek, Joel Brouwer, Tony Hoagland, James Cihlar, Alexander Long, and more.
Basalt Volume 6 Number 1, 2011
Reminiscent of Chinese “scholars’ rocks,” check out the stunning photography portfolio of the inland Northwest by Terry Toedtemeier, who called his lifelong admiration of the craggy and textured geology of the Basin and Range “a thousand places I love.” Elegy for Toedtemeier by James Lavadour. New translations of Nobel laureate Harry Martinson’s prose, poetry translations of Rosa Alice Branco and Giacomo Leopardi. Featured poems by Carl Adamshick, Sid Miller, Jon Davis, Christopher Buckley, Simon Perchick, Henry Hughes, Ingrid Wendt, and others. 2010 Bunchgrass Poetry Prize winner Stacey Heiney’s “The Breaking Around Us Is Huge” headlines the issue.
Bayou Magazine Issue 55, 2011
Issue 55 features JoeAnn Hart, winner of the 2010 James Knudsen Fiction prize, and new work from John M. Anderson, Kevin Breen, Hans Burger, Jesse Patrick Ferguson, Dana Kroos, Aidan Lee, Michael Vincent Manalo, Danny Rendleman, Liz Robbins, Don Russ, Matt Schumacher, David Scronce, Kelley Shinn, Phebe Szatmari.
Cimarron Review Issues 175-76, Spring/Summer 2011
This double issue, in addition to featuring our new design and a special nonfiction section on work, includes all the Cimarron's usual provocative poetry, fiction and nonfiction by new and established writers, including Angela Narciso Torres, Daniel Tobin, Dan Pinkerton, and Jonathan Bohr Heinen. This issue also marks our first under the direction of our new editor in chief, Toni Graham.
Prairie Schooner Volume 85 Number 3, Fall 2011
This issue (85.3, Fall 2011) marks the first under the direction of Prairie Schooner’s new Editor-in-Chief, Kwame Dawes! Featured in its pages is lively poetry by Desirée Alvarez, Alice Friman, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Linda Pastan, Floyd Skloot, David Wagoner, and many others. Nancy McCabe’s poignant essay “Threads” examines the triumphs and struggles of child adoption, and an essay by Bethany Maile considers her love-hate relationship with guns. You don’t want to miss all of the surprises in Nancy Zafris’s story about a hotel staff worker. Plus, several reviews follow, including one of Vivian Shipley’s new book.
Other Literary Magazines
received September 12, 2011
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American Short Fiction Volume 14 Issue 52, Summer 2011
Asian American Literary Review Volume 2 Issue 1.5, Fall 2011
Flyway Volume 13 Number 2, 2011
Foliate Oak September 2011
Lines + Stars Volume 4 Issue 3, Fall 2011
Naugatuck River Review Issue 6, Summer 2011
Permafrost Volume 33, 2011
Potomac Review Issue 50, Fall 2011
Spittoon Issue 1, 2011
Alternative Magazines
received September 12, 2011
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Against The Current Number 154, September 2011
The American Scholar Volume 80 Number 4, August 2011
Communities Number 152, Fall 2011
GreenMoney Journal Volume 20 Issue 1, Fall 2011
Sing Out! Volume 54 Number 3, Summer 2011
Writers Ask Issue 53, Fall 2011
Sponsored Literary Magazines
received September 6, 2011
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Anderbo September 4, 2011
Read "Leaving Again" – an Anderbo.com "fact" by Melissa Cistaro. Also, the Poetry Foundation + the Library of American Present Seven Poems by Samuel Menashe (1925-2011). Plus new fiction from Rick Rofihe.
The Gettysburg Review Volume 24 Number 3, Autumn 2011
In the new autumn issue, you will find much bounty to sustain you through the harvest season…or at least until you pack the kids off to school. Highlights include Cynthia Dockrell’s “Power Play,” a reminiscence about a Christmas she spent watching her father officiate a hockey match; Ian McKenzie’s “The Late Interiors,” a story about a rudderless novitiate to the art world who resorts to larceny to make ends meet; as well as a cornucopia of poems by the likes of Linda Pastan, Amy Newman, and Michael Heffernan.
Michigan Quarterly Review Volume 50 Number 3, Summer 2011
A special issue devoted to the Great Lakes. Essays by Jerry Dennis, Anna Vodicka, Keith Taylor, John Knott, Alison Swan, Tiya Miles, Julia Gibson; Poetry by Albert Goldbarth, Margaret Noori, Holly Wren Spaulding, Ruth Joynton, M. Bartley Seigel, Terry Blackhawk, John Repp; Fiction by Steve Amick and Devin Murphy; Color portfolio: full-color photos of the Great Lakes basin selected from the exhibition "The Primacy of Water" curated by the River Gallery of Chelsea, Michigan.
Other Literary Magazines
received September 6, 2011
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The Antigonish Review Number 166, Summer 2011
matchbook August 29, 2011 [o]
Off the Coast Volume 17 Number 3, Summer 2011
Post Road Number 21, 2011
Prime Mincer Volume 1 Number 2, Summer 2011
Slipstream Number 31, 2011
Western American Literature Volume 46 Number 2, Summer 2011
ZYZZYVA Volume 27 Number 2, Fall 2011
Alternative Magazines
received September 6, 2011
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Conscience Volume 32 Number 2, 2011
Labor Notes Number 390, September 2011
Sponsor Literary Magazines
Received August 29, 2011
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New England Review Volume 32 Number 2, 2011
Fiction: Leslie Bazzett, Joel Fishbane, Scott Landers, Kate Petersen, Charles Lamar Phillips, Greg Pierce, Hoyt Rogers. Poetry: Aaron Baker, David Baker, Henrietta Goodman, Natalie Graham, Amy Glynn Greacen, James Allen Hall, William Logan, Cleopatra Mathis, Rose McLarney, Tomás Q. Morín, Patrick Phillips, Austin Segrest, Greg Wrenn. Nonfiction: Kathryn Kramer, Sydney Lea, Harriet Martineau, Hilda Werschkul, Nancy Zafris. Translations: Semyon Akimovich An-sky (trans. Michael R. Katz), Leconte de Lisle (trans. John Kinsella), Joachim Ringelnatz (trans. Catherine Riccio).
New Madrid Volume 6 Number 2, Summer 2011
This issue features cover art by Rosa Angélica Gómez; poetry by Aleksey Porvin (translated by Peter Golub), Grace Bauer, Corinna McClanahan Schroeder, Adrian C. Louis, Lee Upton, Eleanor Paynter, Susan Rich, and more; fiction by Michael Gills, Josh Gerald Wheeler, Kristin Lieberman, George Hovis, and Emily Howorth; a memoir by Dean Kostos; and essays by Gro Glatebo, Elena Passarello; plus new book reviews.
Poetry Volume 198 Number 3, September 2011
Poems by Mary Ruefle, Kevin Young, Sharon Olds, Peter Gizzi, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Scott Cairns, Robert Wrigley, Robin Robertson, Brenda Shaughnessy, and Dan Howell; a special portfolio on Anthony Hecht, with introduction by David Yezzi; Fanny Howe meditates on the life of a poet; Peter Campion on Robert Duncan’s The H.D. Book; Beverley Bie Brahic reviews Ashley Anna McHugh, Katherine Larson, and Kathleen Graber.
Tin House Volume 13 Number 1, Fall 2011
Tom Cruise jumping on Oprah’s couch. Archimedes running through the streets of Syracuse shouting ‘Eureka’ in his birthday suit. Moments like these are the result of an emotional experience so intense it borders on madness: ecstasy. This fall, Tin House embraces the challenge of putting ecstasy into words, and from the spiritual to the chemical, no stone of transcendence goes unturned. Fiction from Nikolai Grozni, Kelly Link, and Jamie Quatro. Essays about a kung fu master, a temporal lobe epileptic, and a drugged out seeker. Plus, poetry from François Villon, Matthew Zapruder, and Meghan O’Rourke.
Other Literary Magazines
Received August 29, 2011
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Bacopa 2011
Black Magnolias Volume 4 Number 2, Summer 2010
Grain Magazine Volume 38 Number 4, Summer 2011
Moonshot Number 2, Summer 2011
One Story Number 153, August 2011
Oxford American Number 74, 2011
Structo Issue 6, Summer/Autumn 2011
Sponsor Literary Magazines
Received August 22, 2011
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Beloit Poetry Journal
Volume 62 Number 1, Fall 2011
The BPJ’s Fall 2011 issue is devoted to a single extraordinary poem, Michael Broek’s “The Logic of Yoo,” which probes the moral logic of George W. Bush's legal counsel during the Iraq War from the perspective of a graduate student who supplements his income by writing academic papers for hire.
CALYX: A Journal of Art and Literature by Women
Volume 26 Number 3, Summer 2011
A forum for women’s creative work—including work by women of color, lesbian and bisexual women, young women, old women—CALYX Journal breaks new ground. Each issue is packed with new poetry, short stories, artwork, photography, essays, and reviews. This issue features prose by Katherine Malmo, new book reviews, and cover art by Amy Guidry.
Colorado Review
Volume 38 Number 2, Summer 2011
Summer has always been for me the most reflective of seasons—a period of downtime, a quiet and sometimes purposefully lazy stretch that allows us to consider (and reconsider) what looms so large the rest of the year and to imagine, perhaps, letting go of attachments that are no longer serving us and figuring out how to move forward. In keeping with that sense of the season, this issue features stories and essays that explore memory and forgiveness, letting go and moving forward. With work by Barry Pearce, Joe Hiland, Andre D. Cohen, James O’Brien, Caroline Arden, and more.
The Georgia Review
Volume 65 Number 2, Summer 2011
A special feature on Pulitzer Prize–winning poet Stephen Dunn offers five poems, a self-conducted “intraview,” an interview by Laura McCullough, and assessments by McCullough, Kathleen Graber, and George Looney. Two fiction writers are new to the magazine’s pages: Jacob Sullins, whose “12 Rounds” performs a nuanced turn on an American standard, the “cop story”; and Karen Laws, whose “Paolo’s Turn” shatters any and all clichés associated with the “nursing home story.” “Wagnerism: A Telephone from the Beyond,” is a sweeping, intriguing, and humorously illustrated examination of cultural history by Jed Rasula—while cultural history of a very different sort is foregrounded in the art of the Date Farmers. Poets are Alice Friman, Lola Haskins, Robert Cording, Sarah Gordon, Dave Smith, Sydney Lea, and Billy Collins.
Glimmer Train Stories
Issue 80, Fall 2011
Marking 20 years of publication, this issue features stories by Geoff Wyss, Jenny Zhang, Daniel Torday, Evan Kuhlman, Nona Caspers, Olufunke Grace Bankole (winner of the Short Story Award for New Writers for “26 Bones”), Daniel Wallace, and Ken Barris. There is also an interview with Debra Monroe (author of “On the Outskirts of Normal”) and an article on Turkish publisher Ragip Zarakolu.
Ploughshares
Volume 37 Numbers 2 & 3, Fall 2011
Special 40th anniversary issue edited by Ploughshares co-founder DeWitt Henry features new work from former guest editors like Alice Hoffman, Sue Miller, and Maxine Kumin; an interview with Richard Yates from the archives; and poems and stories from emerging writers like James Scott and Laura van den Berg, introduced by prominent authors.
World Literature Today
Volume 85 Number 5, September-October 2011
Poetry Untethered, the marquee section in WLT's September 2011 issue, features essays and poems by nine poets from the English-speaking world—including Jane Hirshfield, Ilya Kaminsky, and Maya Khosla—plus a compelling interview with Dana Gioia. Also, don’t miss new fiction by Ken N. Kamoche, Alexander Maksik on the romance and reality of Paris, a tribute to filmmaker Blake Edwards, and WLT’s usual abundance of book and author features.
Other Literary Magazines
Received August 22, 2011
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A Cappella Zoo Issue 7, Fall 2011
Anobium Volume 1, Summer 2011
Arc Poetry Magazine 66, Summer 2011
Confrontation Number 109, Spring 2011
Grasslimb Volume 8 Number 2, 2010
The Journal Volume 35 Number 1, Spring/Summer 2011
Mythium Number 3, 2010/2011
The New Quarterly 119, Summer 2011
Puerto Del Sol Volume 46 Numbers 1 & 2, Summer 2011
The Raintown Review Volume 9 Issue 2, January 2011
Sycamore Review Volume 23 Issue 2, Summer/Fall 2011
Voices de la Luna Volume 3 Number 4, July 2011
Alternative Magazines
Received August 22, 2011
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American Book Review Volume 32 Number 4, May/June 2011
In These Times September 2011
The Korean Quarterly Volume 14 Number 4, Summer 2011
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
Notices of Online Issues
Posted August 16, 2011
August 8, 2011/August 10, 2011
Read “A Dog Story” – Fiction by Elissa Schappell from her new book Blueprints for Building Better Girls. Also available, new poems by Lucas Hunt, James Valvis and Patricia George.
Volume 119 Number 3, Summer 2011
There are many mansions in this house of fiction, ranging from reviews of new work by Cynthia Ozick, John Banville, and Stewart O'Nan, to Merritt Moseley's annual scrutiny of the Booker Prize shortlist, to Laura Stevenson's erudite essay debunking the naivete of the first wave of bestselling writers for children, to Jeffrey Hart's dynamic argument that Wuthering Heights was one of the first Modernist fictions, all the way to D. H. Lawrence's discovery of American literature by A. Banerjee. New contributor, Philip Weinstein, weighs in on Jonathan Franzen's Freedom, while our occasional Revaluation series encourages readers to look beyond what's online, on Kindle, or even in print.
Other Print Literary Magazines Received &
New Online Literary Magazine Notices Received
Posted August 16, 2011
Volume 1, 2011
Catfish Creek is a new national undergraduate literary journal published annually by Loras College. Our inaugural issue features outstanding writing by undergraduate students around the country and internationally.
Volume 113 Number 2, Spring 2011
Volume 52 Number 2, Summer 2011
August 15, 2011
We're excited to have a piece by Eric Beeny up at matchbook, entitled “Bridge”. [o]
Issue Number 152, June 2011
“The Joy of Cooking” by Elissa Schappell
Volume 1 Number 1, Spring 2011
The Spring 2011 issue of PDR features work from both established and emerging writers and artists: fiction by Norah Piehl, Cat Ennis Sears, Christine Gentry, and Kate Racculia; visual art by Jarrod McCabe and Sean Flood; and poetry by Franz Wright, Kendra DeColo, Laura Cherry, Chris Hall, Mary Beth O’Connor, and Suzanne Frischkorn. [o]
Issue 37, August 2011
Featuring the new monthly column, "The Last Days of Los Angeles" by Luis Rivas, audio by DB Cox, J.B. Pravda and Dustin Michael, reviews, translations, poetry and prose from contributors Catfish McDaris, Josh Olsen, F.N. Wright, Philip Tinkler and many others. [o]
Number 1, Summer 2011
Presenting an eclectic mix of fresh fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and bold visual art from women artists from cities around the world. First issue includes interviews with critically acclaimed authors Abha Dawesar and Brinda Charry, and art and photography by artists like Diane Ponder and Suzanne Hilal.
Volume 65 Number 2, Summer 2011
Other Print Alternative Magazines Received &
New Online Literary Magazine Notices Received
Posted August 16, 2011
Corporate Responsibility Magazine May/June 2011
Labor Notes Number 389, August 2011
Provincetown Arts Volume 26, 2011-12
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
Notices of Online Issues
Posted August 1, 2011
Volume 16 Number 3, Summer 2011
Featuring Unfinished Projects: An Interview with Alice Osborn by Beth Browne
Number 175, Summer 2011
Featuring Dee Hobsbawn-Smith’s Dangerous Undercurrents, The Double Drowning of Kevin Leenders, John Flieger’s Final Transfer, and Long Poem Prize winners Julie Joosten and Maggie Schwed, plus much more.
Volume 23 Number 1, 2011
We are very happy to announce the summer 2011 issue of MANOA: Living Spirit: Literature & Resurgence in Okinawa. A companion volume to Voices from Okinawa (published in 2009), Living Spirit is a collection of compelling prose and poetry representative of the Okinawan renaissance that began in the 1960s. Katsunori Yamazato, who worked with us on Voices, again serves as guest editor. he authors include Kathy Foley, Kawamitsu Shinichi, Makiminato Tokuzo, Matayoshi Eiki, Medoruma Shun, Nagado Eikichi, Nakawaka Naoko, Nobuko Miyama Ochner, Oshiro Sadatoshi, Oshiro Tatsuhiro, Sakiyama Tami, Takara Ben, Tamagusuku Chokun, Unna Nabii, Yamanoguchi Baku, Yonaha Mikio, and Yushiya Chiruu.
Volume 34 Number 2, 2011
Our summer issue, “Significant Other,” has other worldly significance! The latest and greatest from the Midwest features Elisabeth Fairchild’s first published story, and new fiction by Amin Ahmad, Tom Barbash, Arna Bontemps Hemenway, and A.R. Rea. Also there are new essays by Daniel Anderson, John W. Evans, and Anthony Aycock, poetry by Diane Seuss, Steve Gehrke, and Peter Jay Shippy, and an interview with Brian Turner on the poetry of war. Visit our newly redesigned website to order your copy today!
Volume 36 Number 1, Winter/Spring 2011
Contemporary poetry from the U.S. and around the world in English translation. This issue includes an interview with featured poet Austin Smith; a review-essay by Judith Harris; a letter from the editor introducing SRPR's new logo; and poetry by Danielle Pafunda, Kristin Prevallet, Joseph O. Legaspi, Matthew J. Spireng, and Fiona Sze-Lorrain.
Other Print Literary Magazines Received &
New Online Literary Magazine Notices Received
Posted August 1, 2011
Summer 2011
The DMQ Review is pleased to announce the release of the Summer issue featuring the poetry of Joe Ahearn, Sherman Alexie, Alexio Antypas, Allen Braden, Thom Dawkins, David Harris Ebenbach, Kathleen Flenniken, Mark Halperin, Roy Mash, Britt Melewski, John O’Reilly, Allan Peterson, Carrie Purcell, and David Salner, with artwork by Aida Schneider. [o]
Number 40, 2011
Number 2, July 2011
Features four portfolios from accomplished artists (two painters, a photographer, and a lithographer) as well as insightful articles and poetry about art. This issue has received many compliments from readers. “It is in itself a thing of beauty,” a source of great inspiration to artists and art enthusiasts.
Volume 11 Number 1, Spring-Summer 2011
This issue offers a Southern flavor through poetry, two essays (one on the contemporary Mississippi poet and Pulitzer Prize winner Natasha Trethewey and one on the late famous poet James Dickey), two book reviews (one on The Southern Poetry Anthology, Volume II: Mississippi and one on Paper Anniversary).
Volume 31 Numbers 1 & 2, 2010
Other Print Alternative Magazines Received &
New Online Literary Magazine Notices Received
Posted August 1, 2011
Number 97, September/October 2011
The Politics of Post-Anarchism: How to Live without Dead Time
June/July 2011
What if Michelangelo was a Telemarketer?; The 10% Shopping Shift; Letter Carrier Letter; Regarding Gun Control; Talking about Organizing; Vale and the Roil Report; Radio Labour and Killer Jeans
September 2011
The path of life is love--from loving ourselves, to intimate relationships, to love that embraces all beings. Our annual all-teachings issue offers Buddhist wisdom on bringing more love into your life.
Volume 41 Number 2, Summer 2011
Vermont Breakthrough, Green Development in Buffalo, Reflections on Immigration Reform, Powerful Sister Cityhood, Lessons from Indian Women's Movement, Disillusion with Democracy in Brazil, Egyptian Edication Spurs Revolution
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
Notices of Online Issues
Posted July 18, 2011
July 15, 2011
New short story! “Unexpectancies” by Jody Madala [o]
Volume 69 Number 3, Summer 2011
The annual all fiction issue features fiction by Melanie Rae Thon, Asako Serizawa, Yascha Mounk, Brian Henry, Mark Wisneiwski, Don Waters, Jamie Quatro, Kent Nelson, Ihab Hassan, and Jason Leahey; with poetry by Debora Greger, Tyler Mills, Vanessa Place, Leslie Adrienne Miller, Hailey Leithauser, Jim Daniels, George White, and G. C. Waldrep.
Volume 38 Number 3, Summer 2011
Visual Literature. Essays on Animal subjects, Kyle Baker, Alison Bechdel, Color, Tamara Drewe, Will Eisner, Graphic Novel autobiography, Jonathan Lethem, Robert Morales, Harvey Pekar, plus book reviews.
Issue 6, 2011
Weave's sixth issue reveals the gray areas between pleasure and pain, joy and sadness, beauty and ugliness. You'll fine magic realism, realistic fiction, and fairy tales retold. This issue is also very socially current with pieces that speak to racism, sexism, war, and the price of fame. Poetry by Nin Andrews, J.P. Dancing Bear, Rebecca Dunham, and Sally Rosen Kindred. Fiction by Lauren Becker, Z.Z. Boone, Jane McCafferty and Mary O’Donnell. Artwork by Sarah Leavens, Andrew Knock and Deona Fish.
Other Print Literary Magazines Received &
New Online Literary Magazine Notices Received
Posted July 18, 2011
June 2011
This edition features stories by Kim Farleigh, Kevin Jay Hinaloc, Daniel Emlyn-Jones, and Sneha Subramanian Kanta. The stories discuss the conflict between work and travel in Sumatra; isolation and the familiarity of memories; coping with Singapore's wartime history; and lament over a land and people defeated by violent conflict. [o]
Volume 32, 2011
Blueline 32 continues its celebration of quality writing and art focused on the Adirondacks. Featuring more than fifty writers, the issue includes poetry by Lyn Lifshin and Todd Davis, fiction by Lou Gaglia, photography by Mark Kurtz, and non-fiction from Mike Freeman’s forthcoming book, Drifting: Two Weeks on the Hudson.
Volume 3, 2011
This issue of Elder Mountain features poetry by Claudia Emerson, Jane Hoogestraat, and Angie Macri. The issue also includes a novel excerpt from Steve Yates, as well as short fiction from James Fowler and Iris Shepard. Essayists include Lynn Morrow and Bonnie Stepenoff, and visual art is by Phillip Howerton.
Spring/Summer 2011
The Spring/ Summer issue of Epiphany is perfect summer reading. The issue includes Sallie Bingham, Edward Hirsch, Domingo Martinez, Oliver De La Paz, Rainer Maria Rilke, Phillip Schultz, and more. Special section guest edited by managing editor Martin Rock. Check the site for updates on our upcoming chapbook contest.
Volume 49 Number 1, 2011
Number 70/71, Fall 2010/Spring 2011
Our special double-edition is our last (scheduled) exploration in printed form. It is a compelling work with contributors such as Cornelius Eady, Rae Armantrout, Alissa Nutting, Adam McOmber and Susann Cokal. The chills and the warmth we've experienced in this collection is a fitting and stunning end to this chapter of Quarterly West. We look forward to our future online home.
Volume 2, Winter 2011
Number 1, 2011
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
Notices of Online Issues
Posted July 11, 2011
Issue 12, Summer 2011
Interview with James Beard winner, New York Times Editor, and Food52.com creator Amanda Hesser; Micheal Czyzniejewski’s story of a family wrestling with beef; Jon Irwin explores wine-inspired writing; Joanna Clapps Herman tests an Italian taboo; recipe ingredients bring to life Phillip Sterling’s personal history; D.R. Bartlette stocks up on low-tech kitchen gadgets of yore; Jennifer Justus’ Marriage in Meals; cover art by Marilyn Murphy (“The Jell-O Incident”) spot illustrations by James Dankert; poetry by Stephen Gibson, Catherine Freeling, Nancy Vienneau, Cynthia Gallaher... Plus: recipes for musicians, rock-solid sponge cake, the repast of Joyce Carol Oates, the Tuscan gelato diet, and much more...
Volume 40 Number 4, July/August 2011
Volume 3, Summer/Fall 2011
Issue 3 of the Camera Obscura Journal of Literature & Photography features short stories by Adam Peterson, Vincent Czyz, Leslie Pietrzyk, J. Caleb Winters, Gerri Brightwell, Chidelia Edochie, and Barret Baumgart along with the photography of twenty-two artists, including Chan Kwok Hung, Rafal Maleszyk, Claudio Allia, and Patrizia Burra.
Volume 3 Issue 7, Summer 2011
Cerise Press (Summer 2011, Vol. 3 Issue 7) features a cover photo by Tina Carr and Annemarie Schöne; poetry by Ray Gonzalez, Bob Hicok, Laura Mullen, Molly Peacock, Ravi Shankar, Lisa Russ Spaar, Judy Katz, Nance Van Winckel, Franz Wright, and others; fiction by Brendan Moore, James Reed, Richard Penna, Robert Vrbnjak; essays by Nina Cooper, Christine Hume, Ellen McGrath Smith, Mutsuo Takahashi; and interviews with Cara Benson, Carlota Caulfield, Chase Twichell, and Melissa Kwasny. [o]
Number 79, Spring 2011
Featuring fiction by Wayne Harrison and Laura Van Etten; an essay by Nancy McCabe; Poetry by Mary Ruefle, Michael Teig, Jehanne Dubrow, Tahir Harmut translated by Joshua Freeman, Cynthia Hogue, Richard Jackson, Katherine Soniat, Christopher Howell, Alexandra Teague, Albert Goldbarth, and more. Plus cover art by Eran Shakine courtesy of the Zemack Contemporary Art Gallery.
Issue 41, Spring 2011
A literary feast, full of new stories about food and our relationship to what we eat—from pork to lasagna, and from pomegranates to toasted grasshoppers. Plus, an Encounter with Ruth Reichl, a manifesto from John T. Edge, Robert Atwan on an element of E.B. White's style, and much more. Plus, Ruth Reichl talks about differences between men and women (in the kitchen and on the page) and how she's turning her Twitter feed into a book; Phillip Lopate shares an uncomfortable secret about teaching creative writing; CNF Editor Lee Gutkind breaks out of the English Department; Robert Atwan examines an element of E. B. White's style; and more.
Volume 13 Number 3, June 2011
Father's Day Issue 2011
Volume 50 Number 2, Spring 2011
Joanna Brooks on the Mormon apocalypse, Amy Butcher on living with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, Bryon Edwards and Jeffrey Meyers on Paul and Jane Bowles, Roger Porter on the return of the exile, William Miller on losing it, Pearl Abraham on Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Molly Patterson on culture, language, and belonging. Poetry by Thomas Lynch, Theodore Worozbyt, G. C. Waldrep, Janet Kauffman, and Georges Perros. Fiction by Kathy Flann and Karen Heuler.
Volume 37 Number 1, 2011
Issue 39, 2011-2012
85, 2011
River Styx #85 is a themed issue, Circles of Hell, and promises sinful reading pleasure, including poems by Walter Bargen, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Gaylord Brewer, Albert Goldbarth, William Greenway, Lynne Sharon Schwartz, A. E. Stallings, and others; stories by Richard Burgin and Maura Stanton; an essay by Jacob Newberry; art by Billy Renkl and Greg Sand; and winners of the 2011 River Styx Schlafly Beer Micro-Brew, Micro-Fiction Contest.
Issue 20, Summer 2011
The "Feasting" issue features poetry by Jenn Blair, Don Thompson, C.R. Resetarits, Lauren Schmidt, Barbara Crooker, Joseph Heithaus, Jeffrey G. Dodd, Laurie Lamon, Sharon Fish Mooney, Libby Falk Jones, and Natalie Minor; Nonfiction by Josh MacIvor-Andersen, Patty Kirk, and A.J. Kandathil; plus visual art by Laura Bruekelman, Stefani Rossi, Candace Keller, and Nicora Gangi.
Volume 41 Number 1, Spring 2011
This issue features POETRY by Esvie Coemish, Alice Miller, Bridgette Bates, Richard Bloom, Coralie Reed, Keith Alexander, Adam Day, Derek Gromadzki, Jesse Schweppe, Matthew Lippman, Virginia Konchan, Brandon Krieg, Peter Leight, Elizabeth Lindsey Rogers, Faith Shearin; ESSAYS by Julie Marie Wade, Gabriel Gudding, Donald Platt; TRANSLATIONS of Olvido García Valdés by Catherine Hammond, Pablo García by Victoria Livingstone, and Gregorz Wróblewski by Piotr Gwiazada
Summer 2011
Sleet Magazine is proud to announce the arrival of its 2011 Summer Supplement. This edition contains only previously published work, which fits in with our philosophy: Fine writing deserves to be read more than once. We are featuring beautiful retrospective work by poets Deborah Keenan and Jim Moore, as well as some gut-wrenching writing about war by Gerardo Mena and John Gifford and its effect on the many lives it touches. [o]
Volume 45 Number 2, Spring 2011
45.2, Spring 2011 features essays by Elizabeth Dodd on the mythical and historical connections between the modern Orkney and Hebrides islands and the long-ago Norsemen who invaded them, and by Bob Kunzinger on the temporary severing of connections between his work life and his private life; a long, evocative story by Stephanie Coyne DeGhett about the gentle magic of a traveling dog act in the 1930s; poems by Ginny MacKenzie, Ricardo Pau-Llosa, William Miller, Travis Mossotti, Errol Miller, D. L. Stein, William Kelley Woolfitt, Jim Daniels, and Mabel Yu; and a variety of book reviews. See excerpts at our website.
Volume 47 Number 3, Summer 2011
Travel to Burma, Russia, Japan, and the beaches of Captiva Island in the pages of The Southern Review’s summer 2011 issue, which brims with great new stories by Christine Sneed, Kristina Gorcheva-Newberry, David Yost, Quan Barry, and others. Essays include Scott Nadelson’s meditation on three writers who shaped his writing life and Peggy Shinner’s exploration of the cultural meaning of hair across space and time. New poetry by writers including Alice Friman, Jim Daniels, Ron De Maris, Laura Kasischke, Peter Marcus, Will Schutt, John Witte, and our own Jen McClanaghan accompanies exuberant artwork by Soren Vandegaard of New Orleans.
Volume 23 Number 2, Summer 2011
In THEMA’s summer 2011 issue, About Two Miles down the Road, authors explore what might be, or what was, just two miles down the road. These “two miles” cover a diversity of locales and situations, from an eclectic group of railway passengers forced to hike through the snow in Melinda Brasher’s short story, “On the Train to Warsaw,” to American tourists lost in the French countryside in Julian Zabalbeascoa’s creative nonfiction, “The Real France,” to a real life-changing experience in rural Mississippi of 1955, in Virginia McGee Butler’s “A Change in Plans.” And for goodness sake, watch out for the snake in Sarah M. Lewis’ “Hoop Snake”!
Number 7, 2011
upstreet number seven (2011) features Vivian Dorsel’s interview with Dani Shapiro, author of Family History and Devotion; poetry by Richard Jackson, Sydney Lea, Carol Muske-Dukes, Hannah Fries, D. Nurkse, Connie Wanek, and Bill Zavatsky; translations of three Emilio Prados poems by Jennifer Barber; creative nonfiction by Michael Martone and Robert Vivian; fiction by Sean Elder, Ellen Lesser, and Canadian author Tamas Dobozy, and much more.
Volume 1 Issue 3, Summer 2011
Paintings by Kristin Halldorsdottir Eyfells; poetry by Jackie Bartley, Ranjani Neriya, Sara Henning, Kim Triedman, Alessandra Simmons, and Cynthia Veach; fiction by Karla Greenleaf-MacEwan and Phyllis Carol Agins; an essay by Rosemary Harp; a music review of Alela Diane and Wild Divine; and an interview with musician Beth Bombara.
Volume 85 Number 4, July/August 2011
In the July 2011 issue of WLT, readers are invited to listen in on The Many Voices of Italian Literature, among them Dacia Maraini, Amara Lakhous, Tiziano Scarpa, Ermanno Cavazzoni, and ten poets. Also new to this issue: a special section devoted to novelist Han Shaogong, winner of the 2011 Newman Prize for Chinese Literature, plus additional contributions by Singapore’s O Thiam Chin (fiction) and Poland’s Julia Hartwig (poetry).
Issue 27, July 2011
The July issue of Zahir is now online with new short fiction by Sarena Ulibarri, Julie Stielstra, Tom Smith, Simon Kewin, Allen Kesten, William Kamowski, and Nick Jackson. Featuring artwork by John Pappas. [o]
Other Print Literary Magazines Received &
New Online Literary Magazine Notices Received
Posted July 11, 2011
Volume 3, Spring 2011
This issue includes an interview with Bay Area poet Forrest Hamer, fiction by Toni Graham and Nona Caspers, poetry by Chad Sweeney and Barbara Jane Reyes, and translations by Kaveh Bassiri.
Number 117, Fall 2011
BOMB Magazine publishes interviews, fiction, poetry, essays, photography, and original art. It’s a magazine about artists & writers, for artists & writers. The fall issue features work by Jonathan Lethem, Geoff Dyer, Harvey Shapiro, Craig Dworkin, Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge, Sanford Biggers, Linda Yuskavage, Clifford Owens, Neil Haggerty, Eve Sussman, and more.
Volume 14 Number 1, 2011
This issue of Five Points features new poems and an illuminating interview with Kim Addonizio with Susan Browne as well as new poems by Gary Fincke, Cleopatra Mathis, and Robert Bly; new stories by Jennifer Haigh and Will Boast; Translations of Chinese Poetry, and poetic photographs of summertime kids by Mark Steinmetz and plenty more.
Volume 17 Number 2, 2011
Volume 48 Number 3, June 2011
Volume 37 Number 1, Spring 2011
Modern and contemporary poetry translated from Mayan, Spanish, Portuguese, Hebrew and several other languages. A section of each issue is dedicated to poetry written in English.
“Shell and Yolk,” Spring 2011
Featuring writing from Chicago’s Albany Park, Bronzeville, Englewood, and Humboldt Park neighborhoods, this issue’s creative nonfiction and poetry is featured alongside images from photographer Jason Reblando’s Chicago collection, including a focus on the Lathrop Homes.
Light: A Quarterly of Light Verse
Numbers 70-71, Autumn-Winter 2011
July 4, 2011
A story by Mathias Svalina is published at matchbook. It is called “The Pregnant Couple.” [o]
Volume 76 Number 3, Summer 2009
Issue Number 151, June 2011
“Water Party” by Kristi Reilly
Issue 5, Spring 2011
Saw Palm issue 5 features new fiction from John Brandon, poetry from Terri Witek, art from Nicolás Leiva, four author interviews covering such topics as Satan's Fear of Mayors, an excerpt from Lola Haskins' new book on Florida cemeteries, and much more. Thanks for reading!
5, Spring 2011
Scythe V, the Spring 2011 issue, features work from poets such as Jo McDougall, Bob Hicok, Felino Soriano, Joel Allegretti, Jason Hardung, Chris McCreary, Kelly Boyker, Flower Conroy, Daniel Romo, Alan May, Jami Macarty, Cody Todd, Ryan Hurnevich, Radames Ortiz, and many more. [o]
SSummer 2011
The new issue of Sixth Finch brings together outstanding work from both poets and artists, including Ed Skoog, Paige Taggart, Matthew Lippman, Becca Jensen, Jason Bredle, Chris Jordan, Rachell Sumpter and Aaron Smith. [o]
Volume 39 Number 2, Spring 2011
July 2011, GAMES & PUZZLES
A genie, a knave, a bank teller, two art showcases, a puzzle and new music...in this month's issue of Status Hat ("Games") [o]
126, Summer 2011
Volume 5 Issue 1, 2011
Volume 99 Number 3, July 2011
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Number 388, July 2011
Can Big-Box Retail Be Organized?; Teamsters Convention; Hotel Scandals; Health Care Talks
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
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Posted June 27, 2011
Volume 39 Number 2, Spring 2011
Volume 25, Summer 2011
"The tremendous commotion in the Middle East has given rise to what some specialists call “post-Islamism”. They say it is a period in the history of the Northern African states that will affect the rest of the Islamic world as well as the global system in which we live. One of the deciding factors of this “revolution” is the new social media which suddenly made real the unknown demands for liberty in that region of the world. Literal: Latin American Voices offers three new approaches to this new reality from the perspectives of Muhsin al-Musawi, Ahdaf Soueif and Rogelio García-Contreras. These three experts are accompanied by an eminence in the world of international politics: Joseph Nye Jr.
Volume 8 Number 1, Spring/Summer 2011
Featuring new writing by Matthew Dickman, Naomi J. Williams, Kevin Wilson, B. J. Hollars, Kellie Wells, Jake Adam York, Ryan Van Meter, Maxine Scates, Jimmy Chen, and featured artists Carrie Dashow and Jesse Pearlman Karlsberg.
Volume 16 Number 2, Summer 2011
New poetry by Leslie McGrath, Julia Story, James Silas Rogers, Weston Cutter, Susan Rich, Jesseca Cornelson, Jenna Le, George Kalogeris, Carol Dine, Jeremy Allan Hawkins, Linda Zisquit, and many others. In Chad B. Anderson’s short story “The Kelley Street Disappearances” a neighborhood reels from an unsolved crime; in Allison Alsup’s “Another Man’s Clothes” we enter the mind of a Chinatown laundry work in early twentieth-century San Francisco. Books reviewed in this issue include Seamus Heaney’s Human Chain; Adam Zagajewski’s Unseen Hand; and three fiction debuts by C. D. Collins, Siobhan Fallon; and Anne Germanacos.
68, Fall 2011
Issue 68 of Willow Springs features poetry and prose by Matthew Dickman, Jill Christman, Beckian Fritz Goldberg, Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum, and Nance Van Winckel. In an interview, Richard Russo talks about working on a set with Paul Newman and the relationship between humor and suffering in fiction: “Most of the time, if you think about them in adjacent rooms, the door adjoining suffering and humor is very often wide open, but as we get closer and closer to suffering, the doorway gets smaller and smaller, because you just can’t stand it otherwise.”
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Summer 2011
Illumination
Absinthe: New European Writing
Number 15, 2011
Absinthe #15 features Birgitta Stenberg, Jan Sonnergaard, Menno Wigman, Muharem Bazdulj, Pedja Kojovic, Pierre Peuchmaurd, Simon Fruelund, and Tabish Khair. In addition, drawings by Chloe Piene appear on the cover and in an 8-page portfolio.
6, 2011
Number 1, June 2011
Adanna includes CNN named hero Robin Lim’s work, award winning poets Jennifer Arin, Patricia Fargnoli, Maria Mazziotti Gillan, Liesl Jobson, Judy Kronenfeld, Christine Stewart-Nunez among others, a book review by Moria Richards for Tamam Kahn’s Untold: A History of the Wives of Prophet Muhammad, several short stories and creative non-fiction.
Number 11, 2011
June 20, 2011
New work by Catherine Campbell at matchbook right now! A story called “The Window,” with accompanying thought from the writer. [o]
Number 26, 2011
Issue 26 of Neon features the work of Grant Loveys, Gregory Dunn, L.E. Butler, Amy Schreibman Walter, Ashley Maser, Nemone Thornes, and C.J. Opperthauser.
Volume 5 Number 1, May 2011
Issue 2, Summer 2011
Richard Thomas leads us through the streets of Chicago; Vaughan Chapman sketches café habitués in Kitsilano, Vancouver; Morelle Smith offers a sensory stroll through Tirana, Albania and Elizabeth Swados navigates the Moroccan city of Fes, accompanied by her enigmatic guide, Kalid. Our second issue also features a striking cover shot by the acclaimed American photographer, Roger Minick. [o]
Sponsor Print Alternative Magazines Received &
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Volume 35 Number 7, July 2011
Malcolm's X-Factor, Zelaya Returns, Unions Without Borders, Living Color in Naperville, This Land is Our Land, plus Chris Lehmann on Oprah's celebrity pyramid scheme
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Issue 40, Summer 2011
Can Picnicface save Canadian comedy?
Volume 16 Number 2, Summer 2011
The issue features interviews with Gary Snyder, Sigrid Nunez, and Shin Yu Pai, a riveting look at The Zine Apothecary, and reviews of Jaimy Gordon, Tadeusz Różewicz, Daniel Clowes, Robert Duncan, Susie Bright, Rikki Ducornet, Kazim Ali, Antonio Negri, Robinson Jeffers, Nada Gordon, Gwyneth Jones, Jonathan Evison, and more!
Volume 75 Number 3, July 2011
This issue contains two articles on envisioning socialist, or post-capitalist, society: "Disposable Time, Freedom and Care," by Paul Leduc Browne, and "Markets on a (Computer) Chip? New Perspectives on Economic Calculation," by Mark Jablonowski. An editorial review, "Science & Society at 75," celebrates the first three quarter centuries of publication of the journal, which specializes in first-order Marxist scholarship.
July/August 2011
Thoreau was Wrong
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Posted June 20, 2011
Volume 34 Issue 63, Spring 2011
Number 87, Summer 2011
Brick 87 features, among other delights: interviews with Edmund de Waal, Joseph Brodsky, James Salter, and Ken Babstock; poetry by Sharon Olds, Czesław Miłosz, and Robin Robertson; essays from Juan Gabriel Vásquez, Don Paterson, Zbigniew Herbert, Christine Pountney, and Jim Harrison; the products of Elizabeth Bishop’s first photo shoot, and a Latin ode to Canadian curler Kevin Martin.
Number 24, 2011
Number 8, 2011
Volume 38 Number 3, Spring 2011
With a small nod to Pantone’s 2011 Color of the Year, Honeysuckle touches on things design-related and marks the lengthening of days. Includes a dazzling collection of work replete with both creatures of nature and objects manufactured for living rooms (from Herman Miller chairs to American Pelicans!). Features brilliant artwork by Chris Kuzma, Jonathan Ball’s popular Haiku Horoscopes, and new writing by Trevor Corkum, Marilyn Bowering, Sara Heinonen, Michael Trussler, Ronna Bloom, Alpay Ulku, Corinna Chong, and more…
Volume 24 Number 1, 2011
Poetry by Sherman Alexie, Megan Alpert, Jene Erick Beardsley, Anselm Berrigan, Matt Bialer, Louis Bourgeois, David Cavanagh, Lisa Cihlar, Olena Kalytiak Davis, Mónica de la Torre, Noah Falck, Mary Beth Ferda, Dobby Gibson, Marie Harris, Anna Maria Hong, Stephanie Levin, Bess Malson-Huddle, James May, Mary Ann McFadden, Sahar Muradi, Marge Piercy; Nonfiction by Adrienne Mantegna, Allison Vrbova; Marc Nieson; Fiction by Alethea Black, Nona Caspers, Kaitlyn Greenidge, David Huddle, Norman Lock, Josip Novakovich, David Nutt, Richard Robbins, Catherine Tudish, Charles Wyatt, Silas Dent Zobal; plus book reviews, translations, and art.
Volume 33 Number 3, Summer 2011
Featuring fiction by Ron Carlson, Vladimir Makanin, E.B. Vandiver, Jennifer duBois, Rachel Cantor and Robert Pope; nonfiction by Matt Donovan, Rod Mengham and Jeffrey Meyers; and poetry by Alice Fulton, Bruce Beasley, Katy Didden, Maureen McLane, Jennifer Militello, Adam Zagajewski, David Bottoms, Rodney Jones, Stanley Plumly, Grace Shluman, and Frank X. Gaspar.
Number 33, Summer-Fall 2011
At 300 pages, The Ledge, No. 33, is our largest issue to date, featuring cutting-edge contemporary poetry and fiction by 31 emerging and established poets and writers, including Philip Dacey, Rebecca Foust, Harry Humes, Leslie Anne Mcilroy, Jennifer Perrine, Jon E. Seaman and Michael Thompson. No. 33 also features the winners of The Ledge 2009 Poetry and Fiction Competitions. The Ledge is published annually and edited by Timothy Monaghan.
Issue 12, Summer 2011
Featuring "Cantina" by Melissa Carroll, "Before You Go" by Deborah Diemont, new york craigslist > personals > missed connections> by Megan Falley, "Siesta" by Tim Hawkins, "Peacocks (excerpt)" by Sarah Kay, "Key West or Bust" by Jean L. Kreiling, Two Poems by Andrew Kuhn, "A Tufted Titmouse" by Michele Lesko, "Prairie Sure" by Carol Light, "Hot, or Why I Boogie" by Edmond Menchavez, Two Poems by Sarah J. Sloat, Two Poems by Janice D. Soderling, and Two Poems by Kendall L. Witherspoon. [o]
Volume 198 Number 4, July/August 2011
Poems by Valzhyna Mort, Spencer Reece, Amanda Jernigan, Susan Stewart, David St. John, Calvin Forbes, Liz Waldner, and Linda Gregerson; a special poetry portfolio from Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize recipient David Ferry; photographs by Thomas Sayers Ellis; essays by Nikki Giovanni, Ange Mlinko, Michael Hofmann, A.E. Stallings, W.S. Di Piero, and Kristin Naca; book reviews by Daisy Fried; Joshua Mehigan reflects on the “mad” poet; Plutarch’s Laconic Women, translated by A.E. Stallings.
Volume 12, 2010
Featuring Maureen Seaton, Jon Pineda, and Betty Heredia.
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Volume 6 Issue 1, 2011
Summer 2011
This issue includes an interview with Justin Scott, features on Rea Irvin and Edith Wharton's home The Mount, columns by Julie Stern and Wendy Wipprecht, Youth Expressions, pieces by inmates at Garner Correctional Institution, and new work by Allan Farbman, Truth Thomas, Chris Belden, and William Akin.
Issue Number 150, May 2011
"Tiger" by Nalini Jones
Volume 13 Issue 1, Spring 2011
Volume 31 Number 2, 2011
Poetry by J. Allyn Rosser, Martha Collins, G. C. Waldrep, Rusty Morrison, Sam Witt and David Dodd Lee; fiction by Amina Gautier and Richard Burgin; essays by Melissa Kwasny and Sarah Gorham; contemporary Arabic poetry feature with translations by Fady Joudah and Khaled Mattawa; the Pleiades Book Review.
Issue 13, 2011
Introducing Miroslav Penkov. Plus a novella by Stuart Dybek, Robert Sullivan on public art and the city, Denis Donoghue on Shakespeare v. Dante, Nora Krug's illustrated Kamikaze, John Ashbery's Rimbaud translation, new fiction from Tash Aw and Martha Cooley, new poetry from Anne Carson, Alain Mabanckou, and Nick Twemlow, and Amy Leach at a hootenanny.
Issue 35, June 2011
Red Fez Publications Issue 35, June 2011 Featuring "F.N. Wright Interviewed" by Jason Behrends, photography, art, reviews, translations, poetry and prose from contributors William Taylor Jr., Judy L. Brekke, Ben John Smith, Bradley Mason Hamlin, Newamba Flamingo and many others. [o]
Issue 27, 2011
Poetry by Arlene Ang, Simeon Berry, Sean Bishop, Victoria Chang, Elisa Gabbert, Miriam Bird Greenberg, Carrie Hohmann, Amy King, Lily Ladewig, Sarah Messer, Carl Phillips, Kathleen Rooney, Christopher Salerno, Eric Weinstein, Raúl Zurita; fiction by Ryan Cannon, Patrick Dacey, Brian Evenson, Angela Woodward Sharon White; interviews of Sam Lipsyte, Dawn Raffel, Ryan Ridge; and art by Kim Asendorf.
Volume 48 Issue 4, Winter 2010
Volume 3 Issue 4, Spring 2011
A special Symposium on Form, including participation by David J. Rothman, Julie Kane, David Sanders, Kate Northrop, Deborah Warren, James Matthew Wilson, Ernest Hilbert, Timothy Steele, Marilyn Taylor, Thomas Cable and Simon Jarvis. This symposium is one of the first to bring together poets, critics, scholars, and linguists in quite some time.
Sponsor Print Alternative Magazines Received &
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Volume 37 Number 1, Spring 2011
Conjugality and Sexual Economics in India
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
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Posted June 13, 2011
Number 10, 2011
Featuring French poetry & poetics in translation guest edited by Cole Swensen
98, 2011
Now in its 45th consecutive year. HL98 features art by Louise Hamlin, poetry and prose by Sharon Mesmer, David Kirby, Joel Lewis, Joanna Fuhrman, Breyten Breytenbach, Michael Cirelli, Cathy Park Hong, Elizabeth Swados, and R. Zamora Linmark, among many others. Plus a great section of high school writing.
2011
This issue features an interview with Alyson Hagy regarding her short story collection, Ghosts of Wyoming, excellent poetry by Maya Jewell Zeller, Suzanne Roberts, Gary Metras, Nathan Graziano, Alan King, Karen A. Terrey, Andrei Guruianu, and prose by Scott Tucker, Bipin Aurora, and Angelo Perez as well as others. The full online version will be posted soon.
Issue 8, 2011
Featuring the winners of the Memoir (and) contests, plus poetry by David A. Prodell, Carol V. Davis, Karen Nueber, Matthew Burns; prose by Elizabeth Alsop, Marko Fong, Stefanos Kotsanis, Holly Jacobson, and more.
Volume 32 Number 1, 2011
Drama: Snoo Wilson. Poetry: Jeremy Bass, Traci Brimhall, Mark Doty, Linda Greger, Kimberly Johnson, Luke Johnson, Carl Phillips, Melissa Range, David Roderick, Anne Pierson Wiese. Fiction: S.L. Ferarro, Samar Farah Fitzgerald, Castle Freeman Jr., Thomas Gough, Melinda Moustakis, Luigi Pirandello (trans. David Castronuovo), Glen Pourciau, Debbie Urbanski. Nonfiction: Rachel Hadas, James Longenbach, Henry Sumner Maine, Dominique Aury (trans. Francis-Noël Thomas).
Volume 36 Issue 1, 2011
Action & Rest
9, 2011
Antoinette Nausikaä’s striking art piece “I am happy” opens the 140-page issue. Versal 9 also includes a special section dedicated to the opening pages of a new work by Alice Notley, our first-ever insert (an art piece by Paris-based UK artist Francene), and new writing from a myriad of today’s most exciting voices, including Tony Mancus (USA), Maya Sarishvili (Georgia), Heather Hartley (USA), Louis Armand (Australia), Yago Cura (Argentina-USA), Lizzi Thistlethwayte (UK), and Stacy Kidd (USA). Like its predecessors, Versal 9 is a calmly crafted yet filled-to-the-brim journal that redefines the literary in print. It is available at select bookshops and online at www.versaljournal.org.
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165, Spring 2011
TAR #165 includes poetry by Evelyn Lau, Tom Wayman, Jesse Patrick Ferguson, and others. Stories about Mean Flats, Why Things Happen, and more. Also included: Shane Neilson on Carmine Starnino; Reflections on Iraq and Anne Carson's "Nox."
Issue 61, 2011
Features an assortment of poetry, fiction, and essays that thrive on the keen perspectives of over 20 award winning and up-and-coming contributors, including: Mark Wagenaar, Terry Godbey, Katherine Tracy, and Bonnie Armstrong. This latest issue includes reviews on Moonflower, by two-time Pushcart Prize winner, Gianna Russo; and many more!
Summer 2011
Volume 24 Number 1, 2011
Featuring an interview with Mark Doty, fiction prize winner Hal Ackerman, poems by Dorianne Laux, Todd Davis & many others.
Volume 1 Issue 1
Issue 2, June 2011
inter|rupture has released its second issue, which features new poems by Noelle Kocot, Peter Davis, Traci Brimhall, Bob Hicok, Ray Gonzalez, Melissa Broder, Brad Liening, and many more; fiction by Sarah Malone; and mesmerizing artwork from Fernando Chamarelli. Get your summer read on! [o]
Volume 2 Issue 1, Spring 2011
This issue centers on the theme "Connect/Disconnect." This theme draws from the work of author Kim Barnes, who we interviewed for this issue and whose essay "Almost Paradise" is featured. Contributors of poetry, essays, short fiction, and visual art were asked to consider the theme when creating work for this issue.
Issue 9, Spring 2011
Featuring two author interviews, with Amy Chua and Jessica Hagedorn. Also, Asian American writers touch on topics of immigrant assimilation, the model minority stereotype, the contributions of Korean Americans, the haunting presence of the WWII Japanese Internment camps experience on current generations of Japanese Americans, Chinese Sunday school, and much more. [o]
Volume 42 Number 2, Summer 2011
Essays that comprise a mini-memorial for long-time editor Robert Spiess; the best of contemporary haiku, senryu, and haibun; four full-color pages of haiga and “haibunga”; annual haiku contest results; book reviews; readers’ letters; and much more!
82, Spring 2011
Volume 46 Number 1, Spring 2011
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Volume 80 Number 3, Summer 2011
Medicine for Sale
Number 151, Summer 2011
Intimacy. We explore the various forms that intimacy can take and what it means to be intimate with others, with oneself, with the world. How do we develop honesty, transparency, trust, caring, support, presence, and closeness, whether as individuals, couples, families, close-knit groups, or within wider circles of community?
Number 387, June 2011
Democrats Join the Raid on Union Bargaining Rights; GE: Not Rich Enough; Teamsters Reformer; SEIU Call Centers; Guestworkers
Issue 63 Volume 16, Spring 2011
Topics in this issue include Biodynamics as an antidote for radiation, Anxiety and the world soul, Emergency preparedness, and much more
April/May 2011
Tax Fairness & Public Services
Volume 19 Number 6, July 2011
The Second Annual Guide to Mindful Living
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
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Volume 33 Number 1, Summer 2011
This issue features outstanding poetry by Vievee Francis, Kevin Prufer, and Eric Weinstein; compelling nonfiction by Brian Doyle and Jackson Blair; and innovative fiction by Edward Kelsey Moore, Leslie Parry, and others, including the winner of our 2011 Indiana Review Fiction Prize, judged by Dan Chaon.
Number 69, Spring 2011
Featuring poetry by Jack Ridl, Joe Survant, Stacy Kidd, Judy Bebelaar, Barbara Sabol, Melissa Morphew, Priscilla Atkins, Diane LeBlanc, Connie Abston, Jason Harmon, Richard Taylor, Barry George, Romayne Rubinas, Barbara Rockman, Sue Terry Driskell, Gail Carson Levine, Shelley Puhak, Cole A. Bellamy, Kimberly Long Cockroft, Adam Houle, Mary Makofske; fiction by Drema Drudge, Mary Clyde, Erin Reid, Billy Thompson, Kirstin Allio, Eric Mulder, Daly Walker, K. L. Cook; nonfiction by Kathleen Flenniken, Jennifer Ronsman, Ellen O’Connell, Rebecca Rine-Stone; and drama by Heather L. Jones.
Volume 40 Number 2, Fall 2011
Featuring our annual contest winners: Winter Fiction Contest winner Aja Gabel and honorable mention Dwight Holing; Greg Grummer Poetry Award winner Mark Wagenaar and honorable mention Grace Curtis; Inaugural Nonfiction Contest winner R.B. Moreno and honorable mention Jessica McCaughey. Plus, poetry by Jason Bredle, Matthew Gagnon, Matt Hart, Luke Johnson, Iris A. Law, David Dodd Lee, Jill Magi, Kurt Olsson, and Abraham Smith. Fiction from Leon Baham and Andy Mozina. Photographs by Erik Pennebaker.
Volume 85 Number 2, Summer 2011
This issue features new poetry by David Kirby, Adrienne Su, Floyd Skloot, Jeanne Murray Walker, Donald Platt, and more. There's a treat from Terese Svoboda: an excerpt from her forthcoming novel (look for it soon from the University of Nebraska Press). Other fiction includes Owen King's story on a day that accelerates from bad to worse, and book prize winner K. L. Cook's story of two brothers coming together after their own horrible day. An essay by Dr. Vanda celebrates giving children second chances. And several reviews suggest books to keep you reading all summer long!
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Volume 56 Number 1, Spring 2011
Volume 8 Number 1, Summer 2011
Issue 8.1 of The Cincinnati Review features our 2010 contest winners alongside an exciting selection of poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and artwork. Bonus material includes translations of internationally acclaimed Peruvian poet Eduardo Chirinos and a special National Book Award feature, where noted fiction writers rejudge the finalists from fifty years ago.
Volume 40 Number 1, Spring/Summer 2011
Number 86, Summer 2011
Issue 4.1, Spring 2011
Featuring one of Canada's greatest Art Historians: Jim Burant. Also, work by John Terpstra, J. S. Porter, Travis Kurowski, Endre Szkarosi, with regular features by Mark Mavrinac and Peter Stevens. We look at the German Expressionist collection at the McMaster Museum of Art. [o]
Volume 54 Number 3, Spring 2011
Emo, Meet Hole": brooding and devastating poems; bold and interesting fiction; A stone soup mixture of "harsh flowers, alienating love, remorseful pirates, some bloodshed, and Las Vegas.
June 6, 2011
New work by Tristan Davies [o]
Issue 73, 2011
This year's Best of the South Issue shares the joy with great writing on dating, dangerous expeditions, hillbilly Shakespeare, and more, including: Hal Crowther takes on the Radical Right...from the Middle East to the Bible Belt. Bronwen Dickey dives into a town's murky past. Bikes, bosoms, and backroads: Diane Roberts's wild ride with artist Jim Roche. Teen hobos: The freight-train photography of Mike Brodie. The Buddha smile: Was Barry Hannah Asian? New fiction by three Southern superstars.
Volume 43 Number 2, Spring 2011
Volume 10 Number 1, 2011
featuring: Art from Guinotte Wise, prose from Laurence Klavan and poetry from Brad Buchanan • Laura Carter • Chris Crittenden • Ann Hostetler • Lucas Jacob • Kathleen Jones • Jed Myers [o]
Volume 26 Number 1, Spring 2011
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June 2011
Featuring MEMORIAL: Hazel Dickens by John Pietaro; FROM THE WEB: Net Briefs 06-11 by Various Contributors; FOG WATCH: U.S. Counterrevolution by Edward Herman; HEALTH CARE: Misguided Plans by Margaret Flowers; BIZARRE POLITICS: Buy Cable, Free Gun by Don Monkerud; SOCIAL ORDER: Assault on Civil Liberties by Fred Nagel; COURT WATCH: SC Lets DA Off by Stephen Bergstein, plus more.
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Number 275, 2011
Seminole turbans, Salteau Beadwork, Northern Men's Traditional outfits, powwow dates, music & book reviews.
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Volume 13 Number 2, April 2011
NaPoMo Issue 2011
Volume 27 Number 3, Spring-Summer 2011
The Spring-Summer 2011 issue of The MacGuffin (V. 27, No. 3) features the poetry of the late ann…E (M.) Horvath and Pat Smith. It also highlights poetry from Bart Edelman, Richard Spilman, B.C. Mitchell, Derek N. Otsuji, and Steven Winn; stories from Sarah Kuntz Jones, Michael Humfrey, Bernard Boswell, Dixon Hearne, Susan Duke, and Hunter Liguore; an essay by Bert Harris; and the photography of Christopher Woods, Mark Graf, Jeffrey Slebodnick, and Ali Wisch.
Number 35, Summer 2011
RATTLE #35 travels north to explore the vast expanse of Canadian Poetry. Canada is a population smaller than that of California, spread across one of the largest and most geographically diverse countries on earth. The resulting poetry is a symphony of movements, both regional and stylistic, and a group of writers that are as vibrant and varied as the landscape itself. This is easily the most eclectic tribute we’ve ever put together—and with 33 poets spanning 50 pages, it’s also the largest. The open section features the work of 41 poets, plus interviews with B.H. Fairchild and Brian Turner.
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Number 11, Summer 2011
FEATURED ARTIST — Eleanor Leonne Bennett; FEATURED POET — Catharine Savage Brosman (interviewed by Timothy Murphy). With poems, fiction, book reviews, interviews and essays from John Drury, Rachel Hadas, David Mason, Leslie Monsour, Len Krisak, Emily Leithauser, Joanna Pearson, Reagan Upshaw, John Savoie, Andrew Waterman, Deborah P. Bloch and several others.
Issue 9, Spring 2011
Fiction Fix's Creative Nonfiction Issue is guest edited by author and award winning teacher Mark Ari. It features 12 authors, including Editor's Choice Award winner Kate Kaiser ("Dessert and Sudden Death") and Readers' Choice Award winner Lis Anna ("Roommates"). [o]
May 2011
In his short story “I Know Where Your Pigeon Is,” Stephen Moles takes a look at a disturbing scenario involving unethical practices of doctors. Also in this issue: An alcoholic psychiatrist reveals how she drank her way through medical school and lost her best friend—and recovered, plus much more. [o]
Issue 13, Spring 2011
Number 69, Spring 2011
May 25, 2011
Better late than never: Trent England has a new story at matchbook entitled Roman Road. Also, we finished running our first set of ad stories on Google. Check out the five than ran for a week on our Volumes page. [o]
Volume 17 Number 2, Spring 2011
Issue 14, Spring 2011: The Good Books
Over 50 writers—including Yiyun Li, Anne Fadiman, Karen Russell, Gary Shteyngart, David Shields—choose the works in translation they’d bring to a great global book swap. Also featured: previously unpublished talks by Kurt Vonnegut, Toni Morrison, Susan Sontag, Norman Mailer, and other participants in the 1986 PEN Congress.
Issue 13, 2011
Prism Review has arrived -- interviews with Lucy Corin and Craig Santos Perez. A guide to the legendary Inland Empire. Meet the Beats. From the lit trove, wonderful stories from Bipin Aurora and Becky Margolis, poetry that hurts from Mary Ann Davis and Kelly Moffett. Y mucho, mucho mas.
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Volume 14 Number 3, Spring 2011
Featuring: Mayda - The New Minneapolis Sound: Mayda Miller rocks out with imagination and attitude; In pursuit of a completed war: The people of the burned-in memory versus the society of the eternal present—The (Unending) Korean War conference at NYU; Dual Citizenship, GOA'L makes it happen; Hubert H. Humphrey III: New Honorary Consul General for the Minnesota Korean American community; Free in name only: The Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement; Talking out loud about race: A profile of author/professor/adoptee John Palmer; Managing a change of cultures: InKAS can help adoptees get work or an education in Korea. Support KQ by subscribing today! visit: www.koreanquarterly.org
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Number 96, July/August 2011
Issue 52, Summer 2011
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
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Posted May 23, 2011
Volume 61 Number 4, Summer 2011
The electrifying Summer 2011 issue of the BPJ features poems by Fady Joudah, Margaret Aho, Ranjani Neriya, Alex Quinlan, and Susan Tichy, very contemporary sonnet sequences by Jenny Johnson and Tracy Zeman, and a symposium on gay poetry, politics, and poetics that continues online in June on our Poet’s Forum.
Volume 23, 2011
Cover art: Christina Narwicz’s painting, Ebb, is featured on our cover. In this year’s issue we have our prize-winning poem,”Nets” by Sarah Sousa, our prize winning short story, “Drift River” by Leslie Barnard and our prize winning essay, “The Archeology of Secrets” by Christine Steward-Nunez. In our Siouxland section we feature Kathleen Kruckenberg’s Riverside Park: From Social Experiment to Recreational Hub.
Volume 40, Winter/Spring 2011
Issue 40 of Fugue is designed to show how writers beautifully and smartly play with genre, form, content and idea. Lyric essay, collage, prose poem, micro fiction, the panharmonicon and the experiment are not new terms, but the evolution of these terms, relevant to the evolution of our culture, has caused writers to create new forms of writing that are as inventive as they are accessible. We're excited to showcase work by Alexandra Ghaly, Marvin Bell, Kyle Dargan, Michael Martone, Rebecca McClanahan, Dinty Moore, and many more.
Volume 24 Number 2, Summer 2011
The flowers and trees are in bloom, and the warm weather is upon us. The Summer 2011 issue offers a bouquet of a literary sort that we hope you will find just as captivating. It features paintings by Catherine Tuttle, as well as essays, poems, and stories by Kathryn Starbuck, John Nelson, Timothy Hedges, M. C. Armstrong, Stanley Plumly, and Brian Swann.
Issue 48, Spring/Summer 2011
Featuring poetry by Mary Angelino, Evan Harrison, Janine Joseph, Jacques J. Rancourt; fiction by Naomi Benaron, Anne Valente, Meagan Cass, Luke Geddess; short forms by Jamison Crabtree, Chidelia Edochie, Emma Hine, Kevin McIlvoy; plus an interview of Eula Biss and art by Scott Alan Cox, Christian Houge, and Harvey Stein. Plus, much, much more.
Volume 54 Number 2, Spring 2011
Is there anything new that one can say about spring? Or, for that matter, about any growing season? Nimrod’s answer is yes. In Growing Season, you’ll find poems, stories, and essays that illuminate the theme sometimes figuratively, sometimes literally, while still avoiding stereotype and platitude. They elicit the complexity and challenge implicit in the notion of growth, in the periodicity implied by the word “season”—season, a time of year, a measure of a life span, a spice for life. There are lessons in gardens in these pages, and fields of knowledge yet to explore.
Volume 198 Number 3, June 2011
The Translation Issue
Spring/Summer 2011
Interviews: "What's Natural? Peter Temin in Conversation with The Straddler"; "Setting the Rules: in Conversation with Dean Baker"; Essays: "Words Have Always Taken Over: Foraging Among the Memories of Sylvia Plath" by Sarah Schwartz; "Nothing's Been Authenticated: The Double Hustle of Rick Ross" by Marty Brown; "Coal-Getting" by The Straddler; Art: "Union by Design" by Atosha McCaw; Fiction: "Treatment" by Peter Davis (Academy Award-winning director of Hearts and Minds); Poetry: Quinn White, Leonard Gontarek, Katherine Holmes; Plus: The Cerebral Variety Circus & "Trousers" by Dan Monaco. [o]
Spring 2011
YMR is a platform for indigenous voices and artwork on the international scale. The cover of the journal has become a coveted platform for indigenous artists. It publishes high quality fiction, poetry, and nonfiction by well-known and emerging writers. It's one of the most respected indigenous publications available to date. The Spring 2011 issue features the work of 43 writers and scholars, including Duane Niatum, Honoree Fanonne Jeffers, Ralph Salisbury, John D. Berry, Travis Hedge Coke, Richard Walker, Kimberly Becker, Janet Rogers, Howard W. Robertson and Joanne Arnott. The cover is graced with Contemporary Northwest Coast Indian Art.
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Number 23, April 2011
Volume 14 Issue 51, Spring 2011
May 2011
The May 2011 issue of Brevity begins with a tribute to Tuscaloosa. Michael Martone's essay was written just days after a massive tornado cut a brutal swath through the college town, leaving many, town and gown alike, homeless; And then, it is onto sixteen new essays. [o]
Issue 56, 2011
This is an issue of "voyaging, journeying, migrating," a collection of "secret passageways and trapdoors ... territories that stretch the normal into the liminal and from there into worlds that are essentially and only dreamed about—mind trips." [From the Editor's Note.] Table of contents and ordering information at www.conjunctions.com/justout.htm.
Volume 48 Number 2, April 2011
Number 29, Spring 2011
19, 2011
jubilat 19 features poems by Nick Flynn, Afaa M. Weaver, LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs, and Karla Kelsey; an essay on Paul Celan by Joanna Klink; art work by Jennifer Scappettone and Jen Liu; and an interview with John Yau.
Monkey Business: New Writing from Japan
Volume 1, 2011
This is the first annual English-language edition of the Japanese quarterly of the same name. The issue includes stories by Hideo Furukawa and Hiromi Kawakami; poems by Shion Mizuhara and Minoru Ozawa; a manga by the Brother and Sister Nishioka based on a Franz Kafka story; and “Pursuing ‘Growth,’” an interview with Haruki Murakami— and much more!
Number 25, Spring 2011
Spring 2011
featuring Poetry by Djelloul Marbrook, Margaret Gilbert, Jane Rosenberg LaForge, Michael Diebert. Fiction by Kristy Feltenberger Gilespie. Collage by Nancy Scott. [o]
Number 70, Spring 2011
Volume 1 Issue 1, Spring 2011
Our Spring issue features poetry by JP Dancing Bear, Rusty Barnes, Michael Meyerhofer, Jon Tribble and Wendy Taylor Carlisle. Fiction from Paul Kavanagh, Jared Yates Sexton, Jackson Lassiter, Eleanor Levine and Hobie Anthony, and nonfiction from Stephanie Dickinson. We are also pleased to announce our 2011 Poetry Contest judge— Rodney Jones.
Volume 5 Issue 1, Spring 2011
This issue's stories, essays, and poems bounce between isolation and communion, loneliness and fellowship. Taken together, they show the common struggle of balancing the 'life of the mind' with the life all around us.
Volume 3, Spring/Summer 2011
Our most dynamic issue yet: Anne Caston, Rob Cook, Matthew Cooperman, Rafael Campo, Steve Langan, Jeffrey McDaniel, Greg Pape, Alison Pelegrin, Charles Harper Webb, Joshua Marie Wilkinson and more. Plus book reviews.
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Volume 35 Number 6, June 2011
Despair Not
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Summer 2011
Finding Freedom from Our Negative Patterns
Volume 31 Number 4, June/July 2011
Science and Religion: Confrontation or Accommodation?
Number 23, Spring/Summer 2011
Everything is Connected: Variations on the theme
Volume 14 Number 2, May 2011
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Posted May 16, 2011
73, Spring 2011
Tethers of mind, tethers of heart: a lyric inventory of the ties that bind, and constrain. Cover and portfolio by Ethan Murrow create the vibration, sustained and amplified in fiction by Ihab Hassan, Mark Slouka, Sigrid Nunez, Tom Whalen, and many others; poetry by Amy Beeder, Tom Sleigh, Patricia Lockwood, and Ed Ochester; and nonfiction by Nin Andrews and Matt Donovan. Translations of Robert Walser, Giulio Mozzi, Paul Celan, and Horace.
Issue 174, Winter 2011
Our Issue #174 features the outstanding poetry of Cathleen Calbert, Eric Pankey, Peter Cooley, and Kristin Robertson. We're also very pleased to feature fiction by Suzanne Greenberg, Richard Schmitt, Lisa Alexander, and Tony Tulathimutte, as well as nonfiction by Zac Walsh and Phillip Hurst. The front and back covers feature the dynamic sculpture of Joe Thompson. Inside, you'll find a funny photograph of an iguana. (And that's in addition to all the fine writing).
Issue 8, Spring 2011
In the Spring 2011 issue Stephen Dixon Takes the Fifth, the first in the soon-to-be-iconic interview series where writers lay it all out for Fifth Wednesday Journal. This issue features poetry and an interview with Elise Paschen. Also included: new poetry by Chrles Wright, Marvin Bell, Alice Fulton, Lea Graham, Diane Wakoski, and Keith and Rosmarie Waldrop, and strong new fiction by Charles Dickinson, Gina Frangello, and Charles Phillips.Guest editors for this issue are Michale Anania and Carolyn Alessio.
Issue 79, Summer 2011
Stories by: Terrence Cheng, Vauhini Vara, Adam Theron-Lee Rensch, Selena Anderson (winner of Glimmer Train’s Short Story Award for New Writers), John Stazinski, Amy S. Gottfried, Sam Ruddick, Michael Schiavone, Gabriel Brownstein, and Diane Chang. Interview with Lebanese writer, Rawi Hage.
Issue 72, Spring 2011
Volume 77 Number 2, 2011
Vol. 77 no. 2 of New Letters discusses the theme of power in relation to the enduring nature of art and its ability to lend us a reprieve from the forward momentum of time. The 200-page issue includes poetry, fiction and an essay by the New Letters Literary Award winners, poetry by Kim Addonizio, an interview with Walter Cummins, and an essay and photo spread of Paris, France’s, legendary George Whitman on his 97th birthday. The cover art for the edition is by Lisa Grossman.
Volume 119 Number 2, Spring 2011
Our spring issue revolves around the stories behind our best storytellers. Essays and reviews abound on Tennessee Williams, Alice Thomas Ellis, Hugh Trevor-Roper, Allen Tate, E. M. Forster, Lucretius, Julian Barnes, Ian McEwan, Ernest Hemingway, John Berryman, Ty Cobb(!), theater critic Richard Gilman, and historian R. G. Collingwood. Poets muse on Sir Walter Raleigh, Emily Dickinson, and Geoffrey Chaucer. We catch glimpses into the always-interesting lives of some of our regular contributors: Russell Fraser, Stephen Miller, and Sam Pickering. Don't miss a featured story by Elizabeth Hynes or Fred C. Robinson's latest installment in our occasional series "The State of the Language."
Volume 96 Number 2, 2011
Celebrating 96 years of publication, the second issue for 2011 contains pieces by Floyd Skloot, Barbara Lefcowitz, Kathryn Starbuck, Sandra M. Gilbert, Jacob M. Appel, George Bradley, Amina Gautier, Robert Kostuck, Sabina Murray, Katharine Coles, Stephen Cushman, Albert Goldbarth, Joseph Harrison, Bobby C. Rogers, Dorothea Tanning, Jim Tilley, Lisa Williams, and Stephen Yenser.
Volume 12 Number 4, Summer 2011
Stave off that case of the summer bummers with new stories by Walter Mosley, Gary Lutz, Karen Shepard, and Jodi Angel; an interview with the french phenom, Jean-Philippe Toussaint, as well as a sneak peak of his new novel, The Truth about Marie; a conversation with Ann Patchett, the inimitable; and a depth-defying essay by Maggie Nelson. All that and new poetry from National Book Award winner, Terrance Hayes, Dorianne Laux, and Charlie Smith. There's so much good stuff packed in here the covers barely close!
Number 68, Spring/Summer 2011
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Spring 2011
This spring issue of Amoskeag features past US Poet Laureate, Donald Hall, and current National Geographic explorer, Craig Childs. They join 40 other poets, essayists, photographers and short-story writers in "Facing the Storm"--all of them writing of their journey in facing their fears. Come, and witness these works!
Volume 6, 2011
Contributors include Jon Lasser, Howie Good, Jenny Wales Steele,Kyle Moreno, Michelle Menting, Kevin Keating, Richard Radford, Joy Allen, Nulty Lynch, and Kathryn McKenna. With guest poetry editor Grrie Rosencook.
Volume 42 Number 1, April 2011
Issue 2, Spring 2011
The Spring issue of ASYMPTOTE, just out, features new translations of José Saramago, Ingrid Winterbach, Imre Kertész, Fernando Pessoa, César Vallejo and Max Lichtenstein along with new original English language work by Bharati Mukherjee, Dominic Pettman and Justin Taylor, the photos of Yevgeniy Fiks, a Q&A with video artist Jao Chia-En, an interview with Susan Bassnett and more. [o]
Number 1, 2010
Issue 9, Spring 2011
The Sex, Drugs, and Rock Edition includes work about huffing gas, Dylan's beard, bad sex, Nick Cave, and Night Ranger, fiction from Colin Bassett, Nick Ekkizogly, Susan McCarty, poetry from Jac Jemc, David Keplinger, Jessica Piazza, the illustrated story, "On Tubes," by Bryan Furuness and Kevin Thomas, and much more.
Number 3, 2011
A celebration of George Hitchcock, who died in August of 2010 at the age of 96, featuring a portfolio of his artwork and late poems, an interview with Marjorie Simon, and contributions from Robert Bly, Wanda Coleman, Ricardo Pau-Llosa, John Digby, Nancy Willard, Charles Bernstein, Ray Gonzalez, Jim Hair, Christine Kuhn, and many more. [o]
Number 22, Spring 2011
Deep Water: You, Me, and the Sea is our twenty-second dive into the world of poetry, art, and ideas. Mary Jo Bang, Laird Hunt, Noelle Kocot, Mary Ruefle, and Dean Young captain our crew of poets. Interviews with Philippe Cousteau, Jr. and David Gessner add facts to our exploratory voyage.
2011
Mandala Journal, an online student-run multicultural journal, announces the 2011 issue, Reconciliation. Words and works from emerging and established poets, writers, artists, and thinkers including Kara Walker, Sonya Sanchez, Ed Pavlic, Betye Saar, Yashua Klos, Dahlma LLanos-Figueroa, Sean Hill, LeAnn Howe, and Charlayne Hunter-Gault. [o]
May 9, 2011
The trees finally have buds. In fact, many have full leaves. This is good news. Other good news: a story by Sara Jaffe entitled “A Good Way to Get to Know Me” is now up at matchbook. [o]
Issue Number 149, 2011
“Partisans” by Karl Taro Greenfeld
Volume 32 Numbers 1 & 2, 2011
Issue 34, May 2011
Featuring "Dispatches from Atlantis", the column by Paul Corman-Roberts, video, photography, art, reviews, poetry and prose from contributors Matt Amott, Julie Valin, Luis Rivas, Justin Hyde, Jeff Chon, Bill Ectric, George Sparling and many others. [o]
Volume 48 Number 3, Fall 2010
Sweet: A Literary Confection
Volume 3 Number 3, 2011
We've got a great line-up of poetry, creative nonfiction and graphic nonfiction in this issue, including work by Marcia Aldrich, Margot Schilpp, Michael Hettich, Liz Robbins, Shane Seely and more. [o]
Issue 2, Spring 2011
Issue 2 features multiple translations of a collaborative French poem by Montreal poets Renée Gagnon and Steve Savage. Among others, the poets/translators include Mark Bibbins, Dorothea Lasky, David Lehman, Cole Swensen, Joe Wenderoth, and Joshua Marie Wilkinson.
Volume 1 Number 1, Winter/Spring 2011
Vol. 1.1 features new work by Adrian C. Louis, Alex Kuo, Francisco Alarcon, Meg Files, Afaa Michael Weaver; poems by David Ignatow and Yaedi Ignatow; an artist's portfolio by Chuck Fox; and more. Excerpts can be previewed: www.threecoyotes.net
Volume 7, 2011
Issue 7, Spring/Summer 2011
Issue 7, April 2011
This issue contains stories and poems from the legal worker's point of view.
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Volume 32 Number 1, 2011
The Obama Administration
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Volume 32 Number 3, March/April 2011
Mexican American Book Review
Corporate Responsibility Magazine
March/April 2011
The Importance of Being Listed
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Posted May 9, 2011
Volume 40 Number 3, May/June 2011
May 8, 2011
New! Read “Cojimar” – a short story by Ana Menendez from her forthcoming Grove/Atlantic collection Adios, Happy Homeland, plus a new memoir excerpt, “The Perfect Groupie” by Robin Maltz. [o]
Volume 16 Number 1, Spring/Summer 2011
Launching its 16th year of publication as an independent poetry journal, the current issue of the Aurorean celebrates the seasons and New England. Featured poets are Roger Desy and Dennis Ross. Other selected contributors: Martha Christina, Kirk Glaser, Nancy A. Henry, Lauren McBride, David Radavich, Brooks Robards, Bonny Barry Sanders, David Sullivan and Mitchell Untch. 61 pages of poetry including a haiku section; 70 pages total. See why Small Press Review has said: “a journal that has both high production values and quality poetry...perfect to elevate you from the dark night of the soul.”
Volume 1 Number 2, Winter/Spring 2011
The Winter/Spring 2011 issue of Chinese Literature Today features the return of Shi Zhi—his poetry and legacy. Our critical section focuses on the question of whether Chinese literature is "garbage or gold," as famous literary critics debate the need for greater cosmopolitanism in contemporary Chinese literature. Featured scholar Michelle Yeh discusses her new approach to the study of modern Chinese poetry, and our special section explores the rise of migrant working-class poetry. Also included are an interview with Yu Hua, a look at the work of Yan Lianke, and the second part of our exploration of the body-writing genre.
Issue 1, 2011
The Common publishes short stories, poetry, and essays that evoke a strong sense of place, both real and imagined: from deserts to teeming ports; from Winnipeg to Beijing; from Earth to the Moon: work powerful enough to reach from there to here. Highlights from debut Issue 01 include work by Rafael Campo, Lauren Groff, Ted Conover, and Mary Jo Salter.
Number 247, Spring 2011
This issue features the prize-winning stories and poems from our 20th annual contest. The best story is Will Johnson’s “Sea to Sky” and the Ralph Gustafson Best Poem is Susan Steudel’s “Of Pursuits.” You will also find the four poems and stories that received honourable mentions along with new offerings from Cory Brown, Ricardo Pau-Llosa, and Diana Swennes Smith among others. There are also reviews of books by Robert Bringhurst, Chris Hutchinson, Vanessa Moeller, Michael Eden Reynolds, and Terence Young. The cover artwork is from Glenn Priestley’s “The Hill.” Pick up a copy today and join our contest celebration!
Volume 24, Spring 2011
We are all aware of the violence in Ciudad Juarez and how it has escalated over the past years since the rise of the maquiladoras and the establishment of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994. As violence towards women in general has increased dramatically, these femicides have attracted both national and international attention. In this issue is an analysis of how the presence of the army and the federal police has altered the challenging realities of Mexico and what the repercussions will be for the United States. Three prominent journalists address different aspects of border violence: Cecilia Belli, Charles Bowen and Alfredo Corchado. In addition, we offer a reflection on how the social media has damaged deep thought and a conversation with Jay Kennedy, who recently unveiled Plato’s code.
Number 174, Spring 2011
The Malahat Review’s Spring issue features the winners of our 2011 Open Season Awards in poetry (Cynthia Woodman Kerkham), fiction (Philip Huynh), and creative nonfiction (Jessica Hiemstra-van der Horst). This issue also contains fiction by Michael Larson and Hal Walling; as well as a hauntingly timely piece of creative nonfiction by Toshiro Saito, translated by his granddaughter, Sally Ito, “At War’s End in Indonesia.” There is also plenty of poetry by Patrick Friesen, John Pass, Tim Bowling, Elizabeth Ross, Anne Marie Todkill, and many more.
Volume 85 Number 3, May/June 2011
WLT's May 2011 issue features not one but two special sections: German-language crime fiction, with short stories by Lisa Lercher and Nina George plus surveys from Austria, Germany, Luxembourg, and Switzerland; and women's soccer literature, featuring Mona Nicole Sfeir, Ana María Moix, Sandra Kingery, Yrsa Roca Fannberg, Jennifer Doyle, Elísabet Jökulsdóttir, and Clarice Lispector. Also, don't miss the fascinating interview with Danish novelist Carsten Jensen and poetry by Raquel Chalfi.
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Volume 42 Number 1, April 2011
May 2011
The Foliate Oak final issue is now up. If you're a poetry, art or short story lover, make sure to check out our last issue. You won't be disappointed. [o]
Volume 12 Number 1, Spring/Summer 2011
Journal of New Jersey Poets
Issue 48, 2011
May 2011
Welcome to Status Hat’s May issue, in which Nature is questioned, despised, accepted, revered. Poetry by Nellie Bellows, Jill McDonough and Deanna Benjamin; art by LeRoy Lottmann and Kari Meyer. Plus new music! [o]
Issue 4, Spring 2011
Tottenville Review is a new review of books focused on debuts, translations, and all works that would otherwise go undetected. This issue features of Tea Obreht, David Bezmogis, Karen Russell, Sarah Braunstein, Alan Heathcock, and more. Plus interviews with Peter Mountford and Minal Hajratwala. [o]
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Number 152, May/June 2011
Wisconsin and Beyond: A feature article by Kim Moody plus reports from Madison, Ohio, Michigan and Tennessee; Sherie M. Randolph on the legacy of Black feminist fighter Florynce Kennedy; Nathaniel Mills reviewing Barbara Foley's pathbreaking reconsideration of Ralph Ellison's INVISIBLE MAN; much more!
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Volume 54 Number 2, Spring 2011
Celebrating 60 Years of Sharing Songs!
Volume 41 Number 1, Spring 2011
Organizing for Social & Economic Justice
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Posted May 2, 2011
Volume 69 Number 2, Spring 2011
This issue features essays capturing a time (St. Louis, the1950s), a personality (a turbaned man), a place, (a town once famous and now passed by), and much more. Short fiction and poetry follow, along with Poetry Today columnist discussing Swiss poetry and the Archives essay by the late Daniel Bell, “Crime as an American Way of Life.”
Volume 7 Number 1, 2011
Burnside Review's Whiskey Edition features poems, short stories, non-fiction and illustrations all centered around our favorite distilled beverage. Contributors include Dorianne Laux, Alberto Rios, Larissa Szporluk, Lee Upton and Emily Kendal Frey.
Volume 23 Issue 2, Summer/Fall 2011
Gulf Coast's 25th Anniversary issue features poetry and prose from Bret Anthony Johnston, Yusef Komunyakaa, Dorthea Lasky, Philip Lopate, Anthony Madrid, Valzhyna Mort, Michael Parker, D.A. Powell, Quintan Ana Wikswo, and others; interviews with Matt Bell and Ben Mirov; visual art from Michael Bise, Rackstraw Downes, Robyn O'Neil, Dario Robleto, and others; plus reviews of books by Robin Ekiss, Amelia Gray, Benjamin Percy, Hannah Pittard, and others.
Volume 64 Number 1, Spring 2011
Volume 16 Number 2, Spring 2011
Volume 38 Number 3, 2011
Volume 198 Number 2, May 2011
Poems by Kay Ryan, Dana Gioia, Sasha Dugdale, Franz Wright, James Arthur, Fanny Howe, Stephen Yenser, Josh Wild, Sophie Cabot Black, Tess Taylor, Malachi Black, Wendy Videlock, Sarah Lindsay and Mark Irwin; Clive James on product placement in modern poetry; Robert Archambeau reviews books by Marjorie Perloff and Reginald Shepherd; an essay by Carolyn Forché, followed by a Q&A; letters.
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Spring 2011
We have a new physical location, a new logo for the press, a whole new website, a new blog and a new store. The current issue features Mary Kasimor, Adam Field, Adam Katz, Michael Fix, Andrea Scott, Jared Demick, Thomas Fink, Atom Ariola, and more. [o]
Volume 21 Number 1, Spring/Summer 2011
Number 35, 2011
Volume 52 Number 3, Spring 2011
Issue 49, Spring 2011
Volume 50 Number 2, Spring 2011
Volume 3 Issue 3, Winter 2011
The first perfect-bound issue of Think includes poetry by Mark Dawson (feature), Jill Alexander Essbaum, J. Allyn Rosser, David Yezzi, Adam Kirsch, translations of Housman and Rilke by Len Krisak, and more. Also, James Matthew Wilson interviews Helen Pinkerton.
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Number 386, May 2011
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April 21-23, 2011
Read an excerpt of Sarah Gardner Borden’s new novel Games to Play After Dark, and check out Amy Bonnaffons’s “The Wrong Heaven,” winner of the 2010 OPEN CITY RRofihe Trophy Short Story Contest. [o]
Volume 37 Number 2, Spring/Summer 2011
BWR's NUDITY issue re-investigates an age-old condition of bareness and exposure—physical, emotional, psychic, conceptual. Featuring work by Bhanu Kapil, Sarah Gridley, Aaron Kunin, Joshua Cohen and others, our 2010 contest winners, and spooky communal ritual in the art of Joseph McVetty.
Volume 30 Issue 4, Winter 2010-2011
Number 84, Spring 2011
Volume 41 Number 1, Spring 2011
It's spring at The Iowa Review! Our new issue's got Tibetan air funerals, chicken husbandry, where to park your bulldozer, a dogsbody for Travolta, 3-D Edward Hopper, and an interview with Wells Tower. Featuring new work by Ben Lerner, Lee Posna, Pam Houston, Stuart Dybek, and Fred Sasaki.
Volume 34 Number 1, Spring 2011
The spring issue of The Missouri Review is here! This issue, “Peril,” features the winners of the 20th annual Editors’ Prize: Anna Solomon (fiction), George Looney (poetry), and John Hales (essay). We also have an essay by Patricia Bjorklund taking a peek at the John Birch society in the Cold War era, an interview with Jo Ann Beard, an omnibus review of vampire novels, and fresh work by Sarah Cornwell, Nadine Sabra Meyer, Josh Booton, Jennifer duBois, Erin Flanagan, Molly Schultz, and Amy Yelin. Visit us online and say “Yo!”
Number 20, 2011
Volume 106 Number 1/2, Spring/Summer 2011
Volume 35 Number 1, Spring 2011
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Volume 14 Issue 2, Winter 2010-2011
Volume 12 Number 1, 2010
2010
Issue 80, Spring 2011
This issue features an in-depth profile of Don Stewart, one of Canada's most interesting antiquarian booksellers; a photo essay from the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games; and a story about a Vancouver hot dog vendor who was a schoolteacher in Iran until 1982, when he escaped Khomenei’s Revolutionary Guard.
April 25, 2011
A first for matchbook…John Dermot Woods has a piece entitled “Guilt” up now. It includes drawing by Woods too. [o]
Volume 4 Issue 9, April 2011
Featuring Japanese short forms; translations; and poetry by Alex Grant; Aimee Nezhukumatathil; Yu-Han Chao, George Bishop, Hedy Habra, Lyn Lifshin, Bruce Majors, and many more. [o]
Issue Number 7, April 2011
Our biggest issue yet, including fiction by Daniel Meltzer, Jessica Hollander, and Paul Hetzler, among others, poetry by Naomi Benaron, Emilie Lindemann, and others, essays, book reviews and interviews, including one with the poet Naoshi Koriyama and an audio interview with Harper Lee's biographer, Charles Shields. [o]
Spring 2011
The new issue of Sixth Finch brings together outstanding work from both poets and artists, including Sawako Nakayasu, Mark Leidner, Molly Gaudry, Leigh Stein, Julia Story, Yumiko Kayukawa, Cristopher Cichocki and Sze Tsung Leong. [o]
Issue 8, Spring/Summer 2011
Discover new stories, poems, articles and interviews with some of today’s rising stars and literary legends (featuring Ray Bradbury, Isabel Allende, and Joshua Ferris, among others) within the pages of this issue, which celebrates the theme of “Lies & Make Believe.”
3, 2011
With work by Anselm Berrigan, Will Cordeiro, Karen Donovan, Lauren Leslie, Robert Hill Long, Christopher Nelson, Don Pomerantz, Sridala Swami, Norma Liliana Valdez, Samuel Day Wharton, Joshua Jennings Wood, Changming Yuan, and an opening poem composted from fragments of each of the poems in the issue, Spiral Orb Three has launched! [o]
Spring 2011
Spring 2011
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Spring 2011
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Posted April 18, 2011
Numbers 170-171, Spring-Summer 2011
Volume 45 Number 1, Winter 2011
Features Gary Fincke’s ruminations on physical and emotional self-defense and Claudio Magris’s ruminations on the work of Robert Musil; two coming-of-age stories, one nostalgic (by Stan Lee Werlin) and one very modern indeed (by Matt Baker); poems by Faith Shearin, Alexander Lumans, Melissa Morphew, Ishion Hutchinson, Warren Slesinger, John Hart, Tim Suermondt, Sankar Roy, and Avery Slater; and reviews both scholarly and lyrical of books both scholarly and lyrical. See excerpts at our website.
Volume 47 Number 2, Spring 2011
Our resident scholar Jen McClanaghan wanted “roller rinks, beauty salons, carnival shows, magician’s assistants, and small-town dioramas” to fill our Americana issue. Here, you’ll find all that and more. Prose includes new fiction from Brian Buckbee, Bonnie Jo Campbell, and Michael Garriga; and essays from Amy Lee Scott, Alexis Schaitkin, and Abe Streep. New poetry includes Emily Louise Smith, Rodney Jones, Jane Springer, David Kirby, Jake Adam York, Anne Pierson Wiese, and Tomás Q. Morín. The Americana gallery features the photography of Pulitzer Prize–winning artist and journalist Edward Keating, who says, “It’s not the destination—it’s the journey.”
Volume 23 Number 1, Spring 2011
THEMA’s spring 2011 issue, The Trip Not Taken, poses some questions. More curious than trips taken are the ones not taken… Where was the protagonist going? Why was the trip not taken? What happened as a consequence? When our authors’ imaginations worked on these questions, they came up with some surprising answers. Some stories, such as Arthur Plotnik’s “Dwell Time,” will startle you. Others, such as Judy Bartlett Creekmore’s heartfelt “Erasing the Wall,” will surely bring tears to your eyes.
Volume 1 Issue 2, Spring 2011
The multicultural spring issue of WomenArts Quarterly Journal features photos by Angie Keller; an essay by Jacqueline Kolosov; fiction by Jodi Varon and Julie Innis; poetry by Jenn Blair, Angie Macri, Susan Meyers, Anne Whitehouse, and Leonore Wilson. Get your copy here
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Asian American Literary Review Volume 2 Issue 1, Winter/Spring 2011
Chtenia: Readings from Russia Issue 14, Spring 2011 This collection of stories, poems and photos offers an offbeat, intimate view of provincial town life in Russia. Featuring contributions by classic and modern writers, including recent award winners. Anton Chekhov, Vasily Grossman, Mikhail Lermontov, Marina Tsvetaeva, Sasha Chyorny, Denis Osokin, Mark Kharitonov and the Brothers Strugatsky.
Dragnet Magazine Issue 1 Literary fiction that pushes boundaries. Issue One includes work by Sheila Heti, J.R. Carpenter, Jacob Wren, Claire Battershill, and Erica Schmidt. Read the magazine on your phone, tablet, e-reader, or computer. [o]
Gemini Magazine April 2011 We invite you to enjoy new fiction, poetry, satire and stunning cover art by Debra Hurd at www.gemini-magazine.com. Featuring "Stranger on the Bus" by Tony Magistrale; "You Say You Will" by Daniel Rios; "My Lunch with Tony Hoagland" by Paul Hostovsky; "Schopenhauer Ties the Knot" by Philip Bernhardt; and much more. [o]
Louisiana Literature Volume 28 Number 1, Spring 2011 Louisiana Literature 28.1 features poetry by Katie Bowler, Catharine Savage Brosman, Kevin Meaux, and Heather Ross Miller. The issue also contains fine short fiction by Thomas Aiello, Vincent Czyz, and G.D. McFetridge, as well as a collection of nonfiction shorts from the Southeastern Louisiana Writing Project’s “New Orleans Minutes.”
One Story Issue Number 148, April 2011
Red Fez Publications Issue 33, April 2011 Featuring "Dispatches from Atlantis", the column by Paul Corman-Roberts, video, audio, photography, comics, reviews, poetry and prose from contributors David Blaine, Todd Cirillo, Melissa Hansen, Alan Catlin, John Dorsey, Rebecca Schumejda, Melissa Studdard and many others. [o]
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Issue 70/71
Anarchy #70/71 is out now, perfect bound and 100 pages. In this issue we have three separate takes on the now-infamous book The Coming Insurrection as well as book and media reviews, columns, and letters to the editor. Sample issues are $10 postpaid. Visit us at www.anarchymag.org
May 2011
The War At Home
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Volume 17 Number 1, 2011
Rich Ives presents a multifaceted perspective of the world around us both through his poetry, his artisanship and music. A generous selection of his work furthers his ability to capture the real in the most intimate of particulars. Also included in this issue is the poetry of such notables as Robert Bly, Alan Britt, Lara Gularte, Patrick Lawler, Wanling Su, Anthony Seidman, Lisa D. Schmidt and translations from the poetry of Jacques Dupin (France), Kristiina Ehin (Estonia), Yang Jian (China), Carmen Váscones (Ecuador), Yang Zi (China) and Santiago Vizcaíno (Ecuador). Rounding out the issue in fine form are the four short fiction pieces by James Frazier, Simon Howells, Mark Joseph Kiewlak, and James Schlatter.
Number 9, Winter/Spring 2011
Cave Wall #9 is here and selling quickly. Get yours today, before it sells out. This issue features poetry by Christina Cook, Jim Daniels, James Doyle, Jehanne Dubrow, Allison Elrod, Patricia Fargnoli, Kathleen Hellen, Karen Holmberg, Susanna Lamey, Angie Macri, James Scannell McCormick, Alison Pelegrin, Jim Peterson, David Roderick, Gabriel Spera, Shelby Stephenson, Sara Talpos, Angela Vogel, Karen J. Weyant, and Lisa Zimmerman; with art by Frederick Jones.
Volume 30 Number 1, Fall 2010
Special Focus: French Fiction
Volume 38 Number 2, Spring 2011
This special issue deals with Homer’s Odyssey and more specifically with a specific question concerning the second half of the Odyssey (books 13-24), which in Homeric scholarship has been much debated since P.W. Harsh’s 1950 article “Penelope and Odysseus in Odyssey XIX.” The special issue includes essays by Edwin D. Floyd, Bruce Louden, Steve Reece, Scott Richardson, John Vlahos, and Naoko Yamagata.
Volume 12 Number 6/Volume 13 Number 1, 2011
The Fiction Issue
Volume 36 Number 2, 2010
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Volume 37 Number 1, 2010
The literary journal of the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa University, co-founded by Allen Ginsberg and Anne Waldman. Issue 37.1 features work by Amiri Baraka, Jaime de Angulo, Ani DiFranco, The Fugs, Allen Ginsberg, Brenda Hillman, Greil Marcus, Shin Yu Pai, Reina Maria Rodriguez, and Anne Waldman.
Volume 34 Issue 2, Fall/Winter 2010/11
Issue 3, Spring 2011
The third issue of Devil's Lake, a new journal from UW-Madison, features fiction and nonfiction by Meagan Cass, Josh Parish, and Emily Conner; poetry by Alex Lemon, Mary Biddinger, Greg Wrenn, Molly Brodak, and more; and comics by Minty Lewis and Melissa Mendes. [o]
Winter 2011
This food-themed issue features prose and poetry from Albany Park, Uptown, Chicago Lawn, Bronzeville, the Near West Side, Humboldt Park, and St. Leonard’s House. Photographs of Chicago’s food culture, taken by DePaul University students under the guidance of instructor and photographer Jason Reblando, accompany the writing.
Volume 52 Number 1, Spring 2011
John Ashbery's new translations of Rimbaud's Illuminations, exciting new prose from Amy Leach, Sabina Murray, and Douglas Bauer, wonderful new poetry from Meena Alexander and Brian Culhane, and a special color insert of Whitfield Lovell's More Than You Know exhibition.
April 11, 2011
A sort of scary, and sort of amazing, little story at matchbook, entitled "dean," by Tim Dicks is now up. [o]
Volume 31 Number 1, 2011
Volume 37 Number 1, Spring 2011
This first issue of Ploughshares’ 40th anniversary volume year features selections of poetry and prose made by award-winning writer Colm Tóibín, including new work from poets such as Eavan Boland, Nick Laird, Paul Muldoon, CK Williams, and Bruce Bond, and prose writers Tessa Hadley, Tom Mallon, Rabih Alameddine, Ewa Hryniewicz-Yarbrough, and Hester Kaplan, among others.
Volume 65 Number 1, Winter 2011
Volume 99 Number 2, April 2011
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April 11, 2011
Number 95, May/June 2011
The Philosophy Issue
Spring 2011
The Rebel’s Tale: An Oral History of Afghanistan
Volume 75 Number 2, April 2011
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Posted April 4, 2011
March 30, 2011
“I was a man of principles…” Read “The Far Side of the Moon” from the forthcoming story collection I Knew You’d Be Lovely by Alethea Black (Broadway Books/Random House) now on Anderbo.com [o]
Volume 38 Number 1, Spring 2011
Volume 65 Number 1, Spring 2011
Entirely devoted to a reprise of outstanding fiction and visual art from the past quarter-century of issues, Spring 2011 emphasizes this journal’s commitment to the ongoing importance of the short-story form. Nineteen writers are represented, including Lee K. Abbott, Robert Olen Butler, Mary Hood, Barry Lopez, Joyce Carol Oates, Marjorie Sandor, and George Singleton. The words of these and the other authors are aptly complemented by word-related visual art reprinted from the same time span. Images include internationally known artist Jerry Uelsmann’s flaming desk on the cover, as well as work by Thomas Allen, Melissa Harshman, Maggie Taylor, and more.
Number 89, Spring 2011
Volume 50 Number 1, Winter 2011
Michael Reid Busk on the roller derby, Berel Lang on replenishing the world, Eugene Goodheart on Darwinian hubris, Ismail Kadare on dictatorship, Miah Arnold on teaching writing to children with terminal cancer, Laurence Goldstein on the poetry of Charles Harper Webb, Maxine Kumin, and Edward Hirsch. Poetry by Francine Harris, Gwyneth Lewis, Susanna Mishler, Allison Peters, and Michael Peterson. Fiction by Lucy Ferriss, Kuzhali Manickavel, and Rachel May.
Number 5
Volume 40 Number 1, Spring 2011
This issue features special selections from seven Capital Region Poets: Maureen Thorson, Justin Sirois, Tony Mancus, Hope LeGro, Christophe Casamassima, Buck Downs, and Joe Hall. The cover and interior postcards are by Emily Trueblood, an award-winning New York based woodcut and linocut artist.
Volume 198 Number 1, April 2011
Poems by Averill Curdy, Scott Cairns, Roddy Lumsden, Dave Smith, Laura Kasischke, C.K. Williams, W.S. Di Piero, Karen An-hwei Lee, Todd Boss, Atsuro Riley and Tim Bowling; translations of Arthur Rimbaud by John Ashbery; Reviews by David Orr, Jason Guriel and Abigail Deutsch; letters.
Volume 12 Number 2, 2011
The current issue of River Teeth features an interview with and two essays by Sam Pickering, a craft essay on place and an excerpt from Bob Cowser's newest book, GREEN FIELDS, and more from Angela Morales, Bruce Ballenger, Lori Jakiela, Tom Lassiter, Maggie Messitt, Gabriel Urza, and Jason Tucker.
Issue 19, Spring 2011
This month RUMINATE is excited to announce the winner of the annual William Van Dyke Short Story Prize. The contest was judged by Leif Enger whose debut novel Peace Like a River was selected as one of Time Magazine’s Best Books of the Year in 2001. Work from Paul Willis and Luci Shaw also are featured in Issue 19 on the theme of "Sustaining".
Volume 23 Number 1, Spring 2011
Work by novelists Robley Wilson (The World Still Waiting) and Cai Emmons (The Stylist), short story veteran Dwight Yates (Bring Everybody) and avant-gardist Rich Ives (The Balloon Containing the Water Containing the Narrative Begins Leaking), with personal memoir from multi-form author Kris Saknussemm (Zanesville) and fiction from So Cal contributor Erik Kongshaug writing magical political realism. A dreamy story from Chera King, coming-of-age tale from Ryan Shoemaker, meta-fiction by Tim Dyke, sadness and loss from Lorene Sun, a sexy, smart love story by Cathy Jacobowitz and US-Russian writer Olga Zilberbourg finding hope in darkness, but not too much.
Spring 2011
Spring Sleet 2011 has emerged with a new look and a new hairdo. Spring writers include: Jamie Buehner, Steve Mitchell, and an interview with CNF author Barrie Jean Borich. [o]
Issue 26, 2011
Zahir, Issue 26, is now online with new speculative stories by Ann Claycomb, Laura Valeri, Jeffrey Greene, Francesca Forrest, David Evans Katz, and William Doonan, and featuring the beautiful paintings of Teresa Frazee. [o]
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Spring 2011
What makes a secret so exciting? Is it the power of withholding information, the ability to be select with the moment we share the information, or the way we feel at the shock, anger, elation, disappointment that crosses the face of the person to whom we reveal our secret?
Volume 11 Number 1, Spring 2011
BLR’s spring issue features the winners of our annual prizes – Patti Horvath, Elizabeth Crowell, and Janet Tracy Landman – as well as new work by Floyd Skloot, Steve Gehrke, Virgil Suarez, and more. The prizewinning pieces were selected by judges Andre Dubus III, Marie Ponsot, and Jerome Groopman.
Volume 13 Issue 1, Spring 2011
The spark: Same was a loyal employee. The result: Eight tales of workplace fun.
Number 9, Spring/Summer 2011
Anger cannot heal us (so we've got "love" on our lips); the Azolla Story; resisting "growth" in India, El Salvador, everywhere; women of color organizing in Detroit; queer bisexuality; learning to say "fuck you" with Ida McCray; photography by Kirstyn Russell; Dean Spade on Wu Tsang's Wildness; Manshi Asher; Cucci; Viviane Saleh-Hanna; Salsa Soul Sisters; D'Lo; and more.
March 28, 2011
Hello Spring! It’s still cold! Ignore it and head on over to matchbook for a story by Shane Jones, entitled “Discovery of the Pipe Square.” [o]
Number 8, Spring/Summer 2011
With stories and poems from 22 authors, Monkeybicycle8 is sure to please. Featuring cinema stars, cave-dwelling hermits, imaginary monsters, Internet hookups, and so much more, this issue packs a mighty wallop. Contributors include: Matt Briggs, Aaron Burch, Michael Hickins, Steve Himmer, Ben Loory, Laura McCullough, Curtis Smith, and more.
Issue Number 147, April 2011
“Filament” by K.L. Cook
Volume 38, Spring 2011
The Spring 2011 issue of Oyez Review features an array of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction, as well as the provoking brush ink drawings of artist Thomas C. Jackson. Volume 38 includes seven pieces of short fiction, four pieces of creative nonfiction, and sixteen poems by new and established writers.
April 2011
Editor-in-Chief Mimi Ferebee invites you to read RED OCHRE LiT. Currently boasting a beautiful, Hungarian oil painting by Melinda Matyas, this issue includes John Sibley Williams, Lisa Marie Basile, Patricia Hanahoe-Dosch, Elise Gregory, Judah Skoff & others. A melting pot of multicultural emotion, APRIL is sure to move you. [o]
April 2011
Status Hat contributors offer a panoply of tools—of destruction, productivity, science and love. 3 poets, 2 artists, new music & work from our "Life of an Idea" series [o]
Issue 1, Spring 2011
StepAway Magazine is a quarterly collection of urban prose and poetry, with an emphasis on the walking narrative. Our inaugural issue includes a short story by the distinguished New York novelist, Sarah Schulman, flash fiction by Gem Andrews, David Gaffney, Kyle Hemmings, and Tom Sheehan and poetry by Jaydn DeWald, Matthew Hittinger, P.A. Levy, Joan McNerney and Changming Yuan. [o]
125, Spring 2011
Number 20, Winter 2011
Norbert Krapf’s ekphrastic poetry inspired by the sculpture of Chris
Quigley. Rita Dahl’s “Haukka leikkii kyyhkysellä” self-translated from Finnish to English as ”A hawk plays with a pigeon.” Poetry by Gilbert Allen, Matthew Brennan, Jared Carter, Joan Colby, Joseph Heithaus, Marjorie Maddox, Kenneth Pobo, Ann Walters, Kirby Wright & others.
Issue 2, Spring 2011
Issue 105, March 2011
Verse Wisconsin 105, available in different but compatible versions online and in print, includes a special online section of "Poems in Form," essays about haiku, sonnets, prose poems & more, as well as interviews with Philip Dacey and Marilyn L. Taylor, book reviews, audio & news about Wisconsin poetry. The online issue is available at http:versewisconsin.org/issue105.html
Volume 27 Number 1, Spring 2011
New fiction from Tom Barbash, Vanessa Hua, and Erika Recordon; dispatches from Stephen Elliott, the best (mostly) daily columnist in the country; Paula Priamos on the danger within her family —- and lurking outside; poetry from Matthew Dickman, Carl Adamshick, Robin Ekiss, and David Meltzer; and featuring a cover by Richard Misrach
Sponsor Print Alternative Magazines Received &
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April 2011
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April 4, 2011
Volume 32 Number 2, January/February 2011
Volume 31 Number 3, April/May 2011
In April/May's cover feature "Facing Misery," rank-and-file secular humanists share their experiences confronting serious and chronic illness "without a prayer." Also columns by Christopher Hitchens, Arthur Caplan, Nat Hentoff, others. Ronald A. Lindsay asks whether seculars should seek to convert religious believers. Jennifer Michael Hecht argues against the right to suicide.
Number 385, April 2011
Issue 4, Spring 2011
Volume 30 Number 1, Feb/March 2011
Volume 16 Number 1, Spring 2011
Cover art by the late, great Ann Mikolowski. Issue features interviews with Stephen Dixon and Paul Nelson, reviews of David Foster Wallace, Joseph McElroy, Leslie Scalapino, Eddie Campbell, Gabriel Josipovici, Kit Robinson, Charles Baxter, and more. Plus a profile of Quincy Troupe.
May 2011
Number 274, Jan/Feb 2011
Athapaskan Beadwork, Crow photos 1873-1910, Native Americans in the Civil War, Thunderbird Designs, Tipi Exhibition at Brooklyn Museum, Horse Decorations.
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Posted March 21, 2011
Volume 28 Numbers 1 & 2, Spring & Summer 2011
Eclectic and compelling new writing: 12 short stories, 8 creative nonfiction essays, and a poetry section featuring the work of 25 poets. Also included is a Memoir as Drama special feature by Alaska Native writer and US Artist, Susie Silook—Ungipamsuuka: My Story.
Volume 61 Number 3, Spring 2011
The Spring 2011 issue of the BPJ features a bilingual corrido by Eduardo C. Corral, winner of this year’s Yale Younger Poets Prize, new work by Sarah Blackman, Traci Brimhall, T.J. Jarrett, Patrick Moran, Christopher Munde, Jacques J. Rancourt, Daneen Wardrop, and more. John Rosenwald reviews Anne Carson’s Nox.
74, 2011
CutBank publishes two print issues a year of compelling poetry, fiction, and literary nonfiction by established writers and new voices alike. CutBank 74 features new writing by G C Waldrep, Hadara Bar-Nadav, Jamey Gallagher and many others, and includes art by Brian Aldrich and Nikki Witt.
Issue 0, Spring 2011
draft: the journal of process, is a new educational literary journal which features stories, drafts, and interviews about the writing process. Our mission is to emphasize the importance and diversity of the creative process, especially for new writers and students in writing classrooms. The inaugural issue features Greg Hrbek and Mary Miller.
Volume 33 Number 2, Spring 2011
The Spring 2011 issue of KR features fiction by Kelly Cherry, Seth Fried, Theodore Wheeler, Alexei Bayer, A.R. Rea, Robert Yune, and Hasanthika Sirisena; an essay by Andrew Hudgins; poetry by Roger Desy, Katherine Larson, Albert Goldbarth, Kevin Young, Andrew Wells, Marilyn Hacker and Deema Shehabi; and reviews by Jeffrey Meyers and Cynthia Haven
Volume 16 Number 1, Winter 2010/2011
Volume 85 Number 1, Spring 2011
You’ll find a complete list of awards for outstanding work from 2010. Interim Senior Editor Stephen Behrendt writes about the past, present, and future of the magazine. And then you’re into the usual delights! New poetry by Robert Wrigley, M. Shahid Alam, Lilah Hegnauer, and Susan Gubernat. Book prize winner Greg Hrbek contributes a piece from his forthcoming book. And other fiction on offer, by Helen Elaine Lee and Gregory Blake Smith. Essays about the shape of the world from John Lane and David Torrey Peters. We even have a healthy handful of reviews to suggest other great reads.
Volume 96 Number 1, 2011
This issue contains the announcement of the annual award winners, publication of the Morton Marr Poetry Prize contest winning poems, and pieces by Tess Taylor, Alix Christie, Rafael Campo, Michael Spence, just to name a few.
Volume 85 Number 2, March/April 2011
Chinese poet Duo Duo, winner of the 2010 Neustadt International Prize for Literature, headlines the March 2011 issue of WLT. Also, check out the special section devoted to Jazz Poetry, with poems by Virgil Suárez, Nii Parkes, Adrian Matejka, LaurenCamp, and Virgil Mihaiu. Additional highlights include an essay by AdrianneKalfopoulou (Greece), new fiction by Luay Hamza Abbas (Iraq), and poetry by Jan Wagner (Germany) and Romeo Çollaku (Albania).
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Issue 3, Spring 2010
Volume 2 Issue 1, 2011
Our first print issue features work by Brian Bahouth, David Bartone, Franco Belmonte, Liam Day, Javier Berzal de Dios, Shannon Derby, Cyndi Gacosta, Carissa Halston, Christina Kapp, J.F. Lynch, Seann McCollum, Dolan Morgan, Robin E. Mørk, Pete Mullen, Randolph Pfaff, Vincent Scarpa, Janelle M. Segarra, N. A’Yara Stein, and Curtis Tompkins.
Volume 39, 2010
Number 85, Spring 2011
Iconoclast
Number 107, 2011
Issue 25, Fall 2010
Number 1, 2011
The debut issue features humorous stories and essays by Steve Almond, Simon Rich, David Kirby, Mike Birbiglia, Larry Doyle, D. Harlan Wilson, David Galef and others.
Number 29, 2011
Long Story 29 pays homage to five men who fought against injustice and tyranny—Dietrich Bonhöffer, Robert Burns, Henry David Thoreau, Tom Paine and John Brown—and in the mix are several stories and the editorial Prelude that reflect that ethos.
Volume 10 Issue 2 Fall/Winter 2009/Volume 11 Issue 1, Spring/Summer 2010
Special double issue
Issue Number 146, March 2011
Issue 72, 2011
In addition to an essay by novelist John Hodges on his friendship and admiration for Hannah, this issue presents a chorus of anecdotes about "Barry in the World," exploring the legacy of the "good Barry" and the "bad Barry" in the words of such writers as Donna Tartt, Jack Pendarvis, Rick Bass, and Humphreys McGee.
Volume 4 Number 2, December 2010
Featured poet Renee Emerson's graceful poetry introduces this issue chockfull of big characters, everyday people, small heroic acts, those things that never change, what ifs and possibilities, a couple different versions of heaven, and maybe a few different ways to get there.
Volume 2 Issue 1, Winter/Spring 2011
Temporary Structures is our look into poems using form from a very contemporary standpoint. It includes essays by Jacob McArthur Mooney and Carmen King. Along with an interview with Sina Queyras, aka Lemon Hound.
Issue 2, 2010
This issue features poems from 26 poets including Angela Ball, Ted Haddin, Jean-Mark Sens, R. Allen Shoaf, and William Wright. Half of the poets in this issue live and work in the south though the magazine publishes poets from anywhere.
Volume 54, 2010
Issue 32, March 2011
Featuring columns by Paul Corman-Roberts and Karl Koweski, video by Cecelia Chapman and poetry and prose by James Valvis, Samuel Snoek-Brown, Brandon Tietz, David S. Pointer, Jessica McHugh and many others. [o]
Sponsor Print Alternative Magazines Received &
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March 21, 2011
Volume 35 Number 3, March 2011
Other Print Alternative Magazines Received &
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March 21, 2011
Volume 80 Number 2, Spring 2011
Number 150, Spring 2011
Mental Health: Challenges and Hope. We explore mental health challenges both in and out of intentional community, as well as strategies for nurturing mental wellness. We hear first-hand from those who have confronted "mental illness" both in themselves and others, and learn about ways in which community can help.
Number 79, Spring 2011
Volume 13 Number 1, Spring 2011
Volume 40 Number 4, Winter 2011
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Posted March 14, 2011
Volume 4 Number 1, Winter 2011
This issue features short prose and long poems from Juliana Gray, Mark Halliday, Joshua Harmon Rick Hilles, Judy Jordan, Sarah Goldstein, and many others.
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March 2011
This edition features stories by Paul GnanaSelvam, Khairul Hj Anwar, Karl Wendt, and Paige Yeoh. The stories discuss marriage and maid problems; childhood friends growing apart and cultural shame; Indonesian food stall delights and dangers; and reminiscing about a long career in hotel management. [o]
Issue 5, 2011
Volume 13 Number 2, Winter 2011
March 2011
We invite you to check out The March issue featuring the results of the Poetry Open competition. The Grand Prize of $1,000 goes to David Mohan, of Dublin, Ireland, for "The Lazarus Dream." Mohan describes this haunting poem as "an attempt at imaginative empathy" for those dealing with the aftereffects of war and other trauma. [o]
March 14, 2011
Creatures of the day (and night), We Bring you a new story from Shelley Day Sclater entitled "Jennifer and Nicola." [o]
Issue 1, February 2011
inter|rupture's first issue aims to startle and assault the current by providing readers with emerging and established artists who crave discovery. It features new work from Peter Jay Shippy, Dean Young, Sarah Green, Matt Hart, Anthony McCann, Nate Pritts, and many others. Artwork by Nicolle Richard. [o]
February 2011
Our featured poet this issue is Jerry Bradley, the editor of Concho River Review. Along with five of his poems we have an issue packed with 44 poems, several from aboard as well as two book excepts; Odysseus Orders Room Service by Robert Wynne and The madwoman watches by Ann Howells. [o]
Volume 34 Number 1, 2011
Issue 34.1, entitled “Momentous," will hit the stands in early March and showcases the work of Room's 2010 writing contest winners.
It also features an excerpt from award-winning writer Nalo Hopkinson’s novel-in-progress, Blackheart Man, and includes a candid discussion between Room's Lorrie Miller and author Cathleen With. Our delicious cover art piece, “Blink," is by Teri Donovan.
Winter 2011
This inaugural issue features twelve top-notch writers, from Seattle to Hong Kong, shining a light on minority and queer experience. It includes moving and surprising pieces by Seattle local poets, like Marita DeLeon and Jeremy Halinen, as well as emerging writers like Caroline Picker, first published here.
Number 8, 2011
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March 14, 2011
Number 151, Mar/April 2011
Special feature on "Arab World Arising!" with Gilbert Achcar, Valentine Moghadam, Michael Warschawski and other experts; Women in the Struggle including Stephanie Coontz on rethinking The Feminine Mystique; Europe's crisis with reports on the budget crises and mass strikes in France, Ireland, Greece, Britain and Spain; the revolutionary socialism of novelist Stieg Larsson; much more!
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Posted March 7, 2011
Volume 40 Number 2, March/April 2011
(March 3, 2011)
New story on Anderbo: “Foreigners” by Aziz Friedrich. New “fact on Anderbo: “Mountain Sleepers” by Nuria Sheehan. New Poem on Anderbo: “When a Sister Loses a Sister” by Elisabeth Sharp McKetta. [o]
Volume 26 Number 2, Winter 2011
Volume 2 Issue 6, Spring 2011
Cerise Press (Spring 2011, Vol. 2 Issue 6) features a cover photo by Steven Benson; poetry by Henri Michaux, Yang Jian, René Depestre, Aharon Shabtai, G.C. Waldrep, Susan Tichy, Jeannine Hall Gailey, Jennifer Barber, and many others; new fiction by Maura Stanton, Perle Besserman, Geoffrey Heptonstall and Jennifer Kelly-DeWitt; interviews with Susan Musgrave, Peter Cole, Will Barnet, Lynn Saville, and Marti Epstein; as well as essays ranging from Egypt to Croatia, and Canada to France. [o]
Volume 1 Issue 2, Spring 2011
Contemporary art misunderstands its quest for novelty. The new is inherently relational, and as such, requires a point of contrast in order to assert its claims to innovation and difference. In this, its newest issue, Literary Laundry continues in an exploration of contemporary literature that holds discourse with great intellectual traditions while still engaging the complexities of our world today. The poetry, short-stories, and one-act dramas that it features aspire to both daring and difficulty as they evoke the intellectual wonder that the journal’s editors regard as the foundation of artistic poignancy. [o]
Volume 197 Number 6, March 2011
Poems by Sarah Lindsay, Carolyn Forché, Daisy Fried, Paul Hoover, and Clive James; translations of Kabir by Arvind Krishna Mehrotra; translations of Gottfried Benn by Michael Hofmann; a notebook by Anna Kamienska, translated by Clare Cavanagh.
Issue 11/12, Winter/Spring 2011
Number 1, February 2011
Exquisite Corpse Annual has gone bust and the Toad Suck Review has taken its place! Issue includes Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Xaviera Hollander, Jack Hirschman, Antler, Lyn Lifshin, C.D. Wright, Mike Topp, Jack Collom, Leticia Luna, Jose Beduya, David Gessner, Marck Beggs, Kevin Brockmeier, William Lychack, Jacques Prevert, Daniel Grandbois, and mas!
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March 7, 2011
Number 4, 2011
Number 7, 2011
Number 3, Spring 2010
Black & White is the student-run literary journal from Western Connecticut State University. They are launching their fourth annual in late spring. They've accepted submissions from fantastic writers across the country, and Canada.
03: The Music Issue
Featuring Yoko Ono, Saul Williams, Pendulum, Russ Chimes, Broken Social Scene, Chromeo, Jian Ghomeshi, Kate Carraway, Bikini and more, plus musically inspired poetry, prose, photography and visual art, Burner 03 is an ode to music. [o]
Volume 34 Number 1, 2011
Volume 48 Number 1, February 2011
Number 68, Winter 2010-11
Issue 5, 2011
Naugatuck River Review’s second annual Narrative Poetry Contest judge this year was Patricia Smith. The journal features a new piece of hers entitled “Jumper”, and includes 70 poets’ work. Prize winners are Jon E. Seaman of Portland, OR, Nancy Clarke Otter of New Britain, CT, and Monica Hand of NYC.
Spring 2011
Parcel is a literary magazine dedicated to readers with a love of the elegant, tangible, hand-delivered book. The first issue features fiction by Kate Bernheimer, Pamela Ryder, and Michael Martone, poetry by Brooklyn Copeland and Christopher Salerno, and nonfiction by Daniel A. Hoyt, as well as art by Jaclyn Mednicov.
Spring 2011
Number 56, 2011
Volume 2, 2010
Issue 2, 2011
(March 2011)
Block prints, sculptures, patterned photos, airport scenes, a walled city, poetry from a daughter & father, plus eclectic music... the CITIES issue of Status Hat (March, 2011) is now online. [o]
Volume 5, 2010
Volume 23 Issue 1, Winter/Spring 2011
Edith Pearlman’s wild tale of a man tasked with eulogizing a Bernie Madoff-like character, Josh Kalscheur’s poem about economic woe, and Gregory Sherl’s poem “Wikipedia,” which features Mel Gibson as a thundercloud. Also the winner of the 2010 Wabash Prize for Poetry, judged by Jane Hirshfield, and interviews with Pulitzer Prize winners Ted Kooser and Annie Proulx.
2010
Volume 45 Number 4, Winter 2011
This issue contains a mix of essays, discussing Watermelon Nights by Greg Sarris, frontier masculinity in The Rise of Silas Lapham, and sentimental politics of language in Emerson's and Sánchez's Texan stories. 2010 was in important year for Twain scholars. Four recent books on Twain are discussed in an essay review.
Sponsor Print Alternative Magazines Received &
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March 2011
Other Print Alternative Magazines Received &
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March 7, 2011
Volume 32 Number 1, November/December 2010
Number 384, March 2011
March/April 2011
Volume 14 Number 1, February 2011
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
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Posted February 28, 2011
February 26, 2011
New Story on Anderbo.com: “Physical” by Sarah Goffman [o]
84, 2011
Issue 84 of River Styx features the winners of the 2010 International Poetry Contest (Stephen Gibson, Diana Arterian, William Greenway, and Susan Cohen); poetry by Ned Balbo, Rhina P. Espaillat, Elton Glaser, Naton Leslie, Suzanne Rhodenbaugh, Marjorie Stelmach, David Wagoner, Charles Harper Webb, and many others; an essay by Edward Hower; stories by Adam Dowd and Gillian King; and art by Cindy Tower and Christopher Register.
Volume 29 Number 1, 2011
The Southeast Review’s Volume 29.1 is our biggest issue yet, containing the work of more than forty writers and artists, including the winners and finalists of our 2010 Poetry, Narrative Nonfiction, and World’s Best Short Short Story Contests. Inside, readers will encounter cameos by Miss Scarlet and Captain Ahab, a boy’s self-destruct button, dancing monkeys, a trip to Death Valley, and a mariachi band. This issue also features a comic by Kaitlin Baudier and paintings by Jenna Gribbon, as well as work from Elena Stefoi, Amina Gautier, W. Todd Kaneko, Chad Faries, and an inspiring interview with Melissa Pritchard.
Volume 39 Number 1, Fall 2010
Other Print Literary Magazines Received &
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February 28, 2011
Number 164, Winter 2011
Issue 11, Spring 2010
Volume 31 Number 2, Winter 2011
The band breaks up; a scholar gets what he deserves; kids build a time machine; girl defaces church; and on, and on, and on.
February 28, 2011
Marisela Navarro's piece entitled "I Only Speak Two Languages" is up and waiting for you. [o]
Volume 76 Numbers 1 & 2, Winter/Spring 2009
The North Dakota Quarterly again celebrates Ernest Hemingway with a rich variety of essays (on the African book, In Our Time, The Sun Also Rises, Islands in the Stream, et al.) and criticism. Also, a Hemingway-like story and a poem about teaching Hemingway.
Volume 12 Issue 4, Winter 2011
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Corporate Responsibility Magazine
January/February 2011
Issue 51, Spring 2011
Topics this time: Literary Fiction; Structure, Pacing & Scale; Use of Autobiographical Material; Publishing. Insights from Mary Gaitskill, Ron Savage, Laura, Valeri, Jay McInerney, Lisa Graley, Andrew Porter, and many others.
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Posted February 21, 2011
American Literary Review (Volume 22 Number 1, Spring 2011)
Anderbo (February 18, 2011)
“Linus Pauling, Linus Pauling” – New Fiction by 2009 OPEN CITY RRofihe Trophy Short Story Contest Winner Leslie Maslow [o]
Brick (Issue 86, Winter 2011)
Brick 86 features new fiction from Colm Tóibín, an interview with Seamus Heaney, essays from Margaret Atwood and Saskia Hamilton, uncensored Mark Twain, a lament for José Saramago by Dionne Brand, a time-bending postcard from John Berger, a look at the life and books of Arthur Koestler by film editor Walter Murch, drawings from the Coen brothers¹ film A Serious Man by Eric Karpeles and Mike Sell, a story by Adrienne Monnier about her lunch with Colette, as well as a chronicle of the unlikely friendship between G. Bernard Shaw and heavyweight champion Gene Tunney.
Eclipse (Volume 21, Fall 2010)
Volume 21 features fiction from S. James Stambaugh, Phillip Gardner, Kevin Griffith, Lucille Lang Day, Joseph Levens, Judith Slater, Crystal Charee, and Pierre Hauser. Poets include Pam Crow, Allen C. Fischer, Jackie Bartley, Christopher Buckley, Sandra Kohler, Jack Ridl, Joanne Lowery, Kevin Clark, William Archila, Tera Vale Ragan, Mark Burke, Chris McCarthy, Peter Borrebach, Marjorie Power, Laura Madeline Wiseman, Mark Taksa, M.L. Brown, Lavonne J. Adams, Anemone Beaulier, Robert Funge, Barbara F. Lefcowitz, Deborah Fleming, Christine Hope Starr, Karen R. Porter, Douglas Collura, Laura Stott, Kathryn Good-Schiff, Mark Wisniewski, Centa Theresa, Octavio Quintanilla, Mary Crow, and Jenny Yang Cropp.
The Gettysburg Review (Volume 24 Number 1, Spring 2011)
Featuring paintings by John Koenig, this issue also contains the entertaining and compelling essays, poems, and stories you have come to expect. Highlights include poetry by Dean Young, Kirk Nesset, and Carolyn Miller, stories by Geoffrey Lee, Tim Fitts, and Kate Blakinger, and essays by John Picard and Norma Marder.
Grist (Issue 4, 2011)
The Journal (Volume 34 Number 2, Autumn/Winter 2010)
Juked (Number 8, Spring 2011)
Our Spring 2011 issue is 156 pages, 6" x 9", illustrated, and features fiction by James Scott, Vanessa Carlisle, Jen Gann, J.A. Tyler, Andrew Roe, non-fiction by Ira Sukrungruang, and poetry by Chris Haven, Scott Abels, Elizabeth O'Brien, Paul Hlava, and more. Interviews with bestselling author Lauren Groff (The Monsters of Templeton) and poet Campbell McGrath. It's a grab bag of goodies: fiction ranges from historical fiction to magical realism to humor to experimental, lyrical prose; long and short poems, language-oriented and narrative.
New England Review (Volume 31 Number 4, 2010-11)
Fiction: Amin Ahmad, Bradley Bazzle, Kathleen Ford, Sarah Frisch, Tara Goedjen, Robert Oldshue, Christine Sneed. Poetry: Kellam Ayres, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Paula Bohince, Geri Doran, Joanne Dominique Dwyer, Linda Gregerson, Matthew Nienow, Steve Orlen, Oliver de la Paz, Mark Wagenaar. Nonfiction: Michael Cohen, Michael Collier, Stacey D’Erasmo, Denis Donoghue, Joshua Harmon, George F. Hoar, Scott Nadelson. Translations: Miguel de Cervantes by Tom Lathrop.
New Ohio Review (Issue 9, Spring 2011)
Our Spring issue is jammed with exciting new work by Carl Dennis, Tony Hoagland, Maria Kuznetsova, Steve Orlen, Joyce Peseroff, Elizabeth Powell, David Rivard, Neil Shepard, Maya Sonenberg, and many others. Also, announcing the 2011 New Ohio Review prize in fiction and poetry. Deadline is March 10, 2011. See www.ohio.edu/nor for details.
Passages North (Volume 32 Number 1, Winter/Spring 2011)
Rock & Sling (Volume 6 Number 1, Winter 2011)
The Sewanee Review (Volume 119 Number 1, Winter 2011)
We are kicking off 2011 with an issue devoted to "Idioms of Poetry"—an appropriate title for an issue containing essays on Robert Frost by Baron Wormser, Mark Royden Winchell, and Scott Donaldson and an excerpt from a forthcoming book on William Carlos Williams by Wendell Berry. We also have Peter Makuck on Donald Hall, David J. Rothman on Robinson and Una Jeffers, and Emily Grosholz on "The Hudson Review, Women, and Poetry." Sam Pickering reviews Wyatt Prunty's The Lover’s Guide to Trapping, Marc Hudson examines John Haines's Descent, and Catharine Savage Brosman reviews the monumental French Women Poets of Nine Centuries.
The Southampton Review (Volume 4 Number 2, Summer 2010)
Thin Air Magazine (Number 17, Winter 2011)
This year, we at Thin Air thought about genre boundaries, conventions, why they exist, and how the academy speaks often of bending them to rearticulate parts of the world that exist outside/beyond them: poetry that reads like prose, fiction that reads real, and work that takes the term “meta” to a new level, circling around on itself in layered and complex ways. But why talk about the importance of blurred genre if it is not rewarded when people write it? For this year’s “Shades of Gray” issue, we asked readers to send us their best work that blurs conventional category and show us just how many unique, uncoded ways there are to see the world.
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Another Chicago Magazine (Number 50, 2010)
The first of two volumes of 'Another Chicago Issue,' a street-level examination of the exciting writing being churned out here in Chicago right now in 2011. Volume One features work by Kathleen Rooney, Simone Muench, David Trinidad, Achy Obejas, Bayo Ojikutu, Patrick Somerville and a slew of other talented Chicagoans. With art by local illustrator Rob Funderburk.
Bloodroot (Volume 4, 2011)
The 2011 edition of Bloodroot awarded three poetry prizes and three honorable mentions. First place awarded to Laura Bernstein-Machlay; second place, Ivy Schweitzer; and third place, Carol Milkhun. Three honorable mentions went to the following: W.F. Lantry, Laura Davis Foley, and Margaret Roman.
Borderlands (Number 35, Winter 2011)
Guest editor: Deborah A. Akers. New Mexico photography series by Jim Nix. Reviews of recent books by Larry D. Thomas, Marcela Sulak and David Wevill. Includes poems by Usha Akella, David Meischen, B. Z. Niditch, Simon Perchik, Anthony Seidman and Marcela Sulak.
The Chariton Review (Volume 33 Number 2, Fall 2010)
Dos Passos Review (Volume 7 Number 2, Spring 2011)
Features fiction by Robert Rice and Shelly King. CNF by Marlene Nadle and Jonathan Barnes. Poetry by Joey Brown, Christina Cook and Robert Guard. Also included in this issue is a sample of Bonnie Bolling’s In the Kingdom of the Sons, our 2011 Liam Rector First Book Prize for Poetry winner.
F Magazine (Volume 9, 2010)
Fiction International (Number 43 – Wall, December 2010)
What is a wall? Is it a barrier or protection? Can it be breached or torn down? Can it withhold or transmit information? In this book 19 writers and 6 visual artists describe and define the walls that bind, blind - and protect.
Gigantic Sequins (Volume 2 Number 1, 2010)
The Helix (Fall 2010)
Knee-Jerk (Offline Volume 1, 2010-11)
Monthly online literary journal Knee-Jerk presents its first annual print edition, featuring fiction, essays, artwork, and Reviews of Things by David Shields, Kim Chinquee, Jack Pendarvis, Joe Meno, John McNally, Lindsay Hunter, Roy Kesey, Dan Kennedy, Kathleen Rooney, Billy Lombardo, Michael Czyzniejewski, Lucy Knisley, Greg Fiering, and many more, as well as interviews with Glen David Gold and Harold Ramis.
Light: A Quarterly of Light Verse (Number 69, Summer 2010)
The Literary Review (Volume 54 Number 2, Winter 2011)
Mantis (Issue 9, Summer 2010)
matchbook (February 14, 2011)
Michael Davidson brings us “Sinews.” It’s got pesto, biceps, and conversation. [o]
Minnetonka Review (Issue 7, Spring 2011)
The New Guard (Volume 1, 2010)
As the first independent multi-genre literary review in the state of Maine, our aim is to juxtapose narrative with experiment and create a new dialogue. This issue contains two new, unpublished essays by Bill Roorbach and Jaed Coffin, and a segment called "Writers to Writers: Fan Letters to the Dead," which includes Sven Birkirts, Maxine Kumin, Josip Novakovich and Scott Wolven.
Notre Dame Review (Number 31, Winter/Spring 2011)
Ping Pong (2010)
Post Road (Number 20, 2010)
The Seattle Review (Volume 4 Number 1, 2011)
Slab (Issue 5, 2010)
SUPERMACHINE (Issue 3, 2010)
SUPERMACHINE Issue #3 brings forth contemporary poetry by CA Conrad, Tomaz Salamun, Heather Christle, Ben Mirov, Kate Durbin, and others. Astrology Column by Mary Anne Carter. Cover art by Sarah Everton.
West Wind Review (2011)
Whiskey Island Magazine (Issue 58, 2010)
Wild Apples (Issue 6, Fall/Winter 2011)
The theme of this issue is Dwelling, Refuge, Shelter. Founding Editor, Linda Hoffman, writes in her introduction, “For artists and writers, the subject of dwellings, the meaning of home, the spaces we inhabit, and the strange places of the psyche are fertile subject matter. “ This issue of Wild Apples invites the reader to cross new thresholds.
Xavier Review (Volume 30 Number 1, Spring/Summer 2010)
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Korean Quarterly (Volume 14 Number 2, Winter 2011)
Featuring: Third World Newsreel advances social justice through films; John Choi, Minnesota's first Asian American county attorney (and the country's first Korean American county attorney); Korean unwed mothers advocate for a stigma-free society; Six Korean journalists jailed for doing their jobs; Artist Ju-Yeon Kim and The In-Betweens. Essay/column section featuring: The facts on the shelling of Yeonpyeong Island, China's North Korean calculations, Crisis in Cheju, Creation Myth: A Korean Adoption in Real Time, Harry Holt and being a good eater, Why I teach Korean, Adoptee research findings. Plus tons of film, drama and book reviews and comics...For more info, and how to subscribe, visit: www.koreanquarterly.org
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February 21, 2011
Buddhadharma (Volume 9 Number 3, Spring 2011)
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Posted February 14, 2011
Fugue (Issue 39, Summer-Fall 2010)
Our most recent issue, #39, features contest winners Colette Sartor (fiction, chosen by Junot Diaz) & Caitlin Cowan (poetry, chosen by Ilya Kaminsky), as well as work from David Shields & an interview with George Saunders.
Glimmer Train Stories (Issue 78, Spring 2011)
#78 includes stories by Stephanie Soileau (winner of our Fiction Open), David Rothman, Adam Theron-Lee Rensch, Lynn Ahrens, Gina Ochsner, Alyson Foster, D M Gordon (winner of our Short Story Award for New Writers), Yuvi Zalkow, and Cary Holladay. Interview with Christopher Coake by Andrew Scott. Sara Whyatt’s article on silenced writers focuses this time on Iranian writers and women’s-rights activist Parvin Ardalan.
The Malahat Review (Number 173, Winter 2010)
The Malahat Review’s Winter 2010 issue features the winner of our 2010 Creative Non-Fiction Prize, “Intimate Strangers” by Eve Joseph. Informed by her twenty years as a hospice worker, Joseph’s essay combines professional experience with personal loss, and explores different cultural approaches to death as well as the power of metaphor to ease the transition from life to death. This issue contains fiction by new writers Kris Bertin and Deirdre Dore, and the usual batch of fine poetry by Robert Colman, Anne Compton, Stephen De Paul, Jason Heroux, Kathy Mac, Orland Ricardo Menes, Shane Rhodes, Kenny Tanemura, and more. In our reviews section, we also feature Anita Lahey on three of P. K. Page’s last books.
New Madrid (Volume 6 Number 1, Winter 2011)
The Winter 2011 issue of New Madrid is dedicated to the viability of water as resource and symbol, and includes fiction, poetry and creative nonfiction from established and emerging writers. Contributors include Scott Gould and Karen Holmberg, as well as essayist Jeff Fearnside, who sheds light on the Aral Sea disaster with his piece titled “Ships in the Desert.” The cover features the photographic art of Sant Khalsa.
Seneca Review (Volume 40 Number 2, Fall 2010)
This issue features lyric essays by Kerry Banazek, Noam Dorr, Jennifer O’Grady, and others; poetry by James Doyle, John A. McDermott, Ani Gjika, Nikki Rhodes, and others; translation of a Michaël Glück poem by Rosanna Warren; interviews with essayists Amy Benson and Christine Hume. Cover art by Nicholas H. Ruth.
Tin House (Volume 12 Number 3, Spring 2011)
Tin House’s Mysterious Spring 2011 issue delves into stories, poems, and essays about the unknown and the unknowable, from quantum physics to the what lies in the depths of the soul, from unexplainable phenomenon to interpersonal mysteries. The Mysterious Issue will spontaneously appear on newsstands March 1, 2011 and will then vanish June 1.
(Volume 27 Number 1, 2010)
Willow Springs (Issue 67, Spring 2011)
Willow Springs issue 67 features poetry and prose by Dawn Raffel, Laurie Lamon, Molly Tenebaum, Adrian C. Louis, Matthew Nienow, and Jess Walter. In an interview, Lydia Millet reveals why she loves to play with "the wicked and the dismissive, and the narcissistic in particular" in fiction. Prageeta Sharma discusses how we all work for Citibank, and what it means to take out loans for studying poetry instead of renovating your house.
Witness (Volume 24, 2011)
Witness 24 (2011) is a special issue on the topic of "Blurring Borders." Featuring work that crosses boundaries of gender, race, language, religion, literary form, and the human body, the issue includes new writing from Mikael Awake, Brenda Coultas, Viet Dinh, Richard Froude, Cathy Park Hong, Bhanu Kapil, Peter Orner, Josip Novakovich, Paisley Rekdal, Solmaz Sharif, and Terese Svoboda, and documentary photography from Andrea Bruce.
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February 14, 2011
Alligator Juniper (Issue 15, 2010)
Big Lucks (Number 3, December 2010)
Quarterly publication featuring work that with conceptual and experimental formal innovations. BL #3 features work from Joe Riippi, Mike Young and Caren Beilin, among others.
Birmingham Poetry Review (Number 38, Spring 2011)
Poems by Medbh McGuckian, Sidney Wade, Greg Fraser, Erica Dawson, Julie Funderburk, Jake Ricafrente, Charles Harper Webb, Joanne Lowery, Ricardo Pau-Llosa, and others.
Event (Volume 39 Number 3, 2010)
Fact-Simile (Volume 3 Number 2, Autumn 2010)
This issue features an interview with New Mexico Poet Arthur Sze plus new work from Laura Sims, George Moore, Erin Geegan Sharp, Debrah Morkun, Shawn Huelle, Andrew Schelling, Deborah Poe, kevin mcpherson eckhoff, Cindy Savett, Susanne Dyckman, Changming Yuan, Scott Alexander Jones and Nicholas Chiarella.
Habitus: A Diaspora Journal (Number 7, 2010)
Berlin is a city at once haunted by its history and insecure about its future. This issue of Habitus features a diverse selection of Berlin voices, reckoning with memory and defining a space for Jewishness in what has once again become a city of immigrants and outsiders.
The Laurel Review (Volume 44 Number 2, Fall 2010)
Los Angeles Review (Volume 9, Spring 2011)
Dedicated to Bruce Holland Rogers. Contributors include Dana Gioia, Annie Finch, Roy Kesey, Ray Vukcevich, and Terri Brown-Davidson. Issue 9 also features the winners of the A Room of Her Own Foundation Orlando Awards in poetry, flash, creative nonfiction, and fiction.
Modern Haiku (Volume 42 Number 1, Winter-Spring 2011)
Includes Jim Kacian’s essay, “Haiku as Anti-story,” the last part of Charles Trumbull’s review of world haiku, Tom Tico’s reading of Marcus Larsson’s work, Max Verhart’s account of the Ghent haiku festival, and lots and lots of haiku, haibun, haiga, obituaries, book reviews, and more.
Off the Coast (Volume 17 Number 1, Winter 2011)
One Story (Issue Number 145, February 2011)
"Summer, Boys" by Ethan Rutherford
Pleiades (Volume 31 Number 1, 2011)
Featuring poetry by Suzanne Buffam, Brian Barker, Victoria Chang, Marvin Bell, Melissa Kwasny, John Matthias, Adda Djørup, and Bruno K. Öijer; fiction by Susan Steinberg and Allyson Goldin; essays by William Giraldi, Carol Ciavonne, and Joe Miller; Cynthia Marie Hoffman introduced by Jennifer Atkinson; David Caplan on “Obama and the Poets,” Mark Halliday defending Tony Hoagland, Kristina Marie Darling on G.C. Waldrep, and 60+ pages of reviews.
The Puritan (Issue 12, Winter 2011)
Featuring fiction by Daniel Scott Tysdal, Christine Fadden, Joel McConvey, and Sharon Erby; Poetry by E Martin Nolan, Kristine Ong Muslim, Bardia Sinaee, William Doreski, and more; a review; and several interviews. [o]
Red Fez Publications (Number 31, February 2011)
Red Fez is back with its second monthly issue. Now with more madcap than ever before, this issue features videos from Peter Schwartz and the Red Fez Janitor guy, Brian Fugett of Zygote in my Coffee. Other contributors to this issue include Joel Sweeney, Gail Clinton, John Dorsey, Gerald So, Mather Schneider, John Grey and many others. [o]
Southern Literary Journal (Volume 43 Number 1, Fall 2010)
Tar River Poetry (Volume 50 Number 1, Fall 2010)
The fall 2010 issue of Tar River Poetry features work by William Trowbridge, Margot Schilpp, Vern Rutsala, Wendy Mnookin, Rina Ferrarelli, Thomas Reiter, Keetje Kuipers, Corrie Williamson, and Claudine R. Moreau, among others, and reviews by Peter Makuck, John Hoppenthaler, and Donald Mace Williams.
Sponsor Print Alternative Magazines Received &
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February 14, 2011
(Volume 36 Number 3, Fall 2010)
(February 2011)
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February 14, 2011
Alternatives: Global, Local, Political (Volume 36 Number 1, Jan-March 2011)
This is a special issue on the work of the political and social theorist Barry Hindess. It includes commentaries by Mitchell Dean, Ian Hunter, Duncan Iveson and eight others togethyer with an extended response by Hindess.
Labor Notes (Number 383, February 2011)
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Posted February 7, 2011
Cold Mountain Review (Volume 39 Number 1, Fall 2010)
The current issue of CMR features a striking full-color cover photograph by Matt Powell as well as poetry by Becky Gould Gibson, Mark Jay Brewin Jr., Carol Hamilton, Jim Bainbridge, Virginia Shank Weston Cutter, and other notable contributors. The issue also includes creative non-fiction by Harmony Neal, a haunting account of love and loss by Robert Busby, as well as an unforgettable tale of faith and family by novelist Ted Wojtasik. The issue showcases the photo essay “Stolen Childhood.” This documentary work by Michael Mullady presents an unflinching look at the lives of child coal miners.
Green Mountains Review (Volume 23 Number 2, 2010)
Special Issue: Stephen Dunn, Maxine Kumin, Ruth Stone
New Quarterly (Number 117, Winter 2011)
For this issue, TNQ asked 3 talented writers where their stories originate: Andrew Tibbetts, whose stories, he regrets, contain neither strippers nor zombies; Adrian Michael Kelly, with whom we dive off "the edge"; and Andrew Borkowski, whose Babagaya takes a startlingly dark turn. Plus, Robert Lapp and Jeffery Donaldson reflect on their various shifts in allegiance, disaffection, and re-evaluation of literary critics; Richard Cumyn confesses to being a reluctant traveller; Patricia Young shares "Four Short Love Stories’" and we complete the package with enough new fiction and poetry and to keep you inspired through the long cold winter.
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February 7, 2011
The Meadowland Review (Winter 2011)
The Meadowland Review Winter, 2011. Featuring poems by Giles Goodland, Corey Mesler, Howie Good, Desmond Kon Zhicheng-Mingdé, Matteo Spinetti, Laura E. Davis and more. Fiction by Maria Hummer. Mixed Media collage by Charles Farrell and photography by Colleen Purcell. [o]
Puerto Del Sol (Volume 45 Number 2, Winter 2010)
This issue has a loose theme of film and popular culture, inspired by beautiful photographs of an Elliott Smith memorial by Krista Kahl, as well as a related essay by Rick Moody. Features poetry and fiction by Grace Krilanovich, Joshua Cohen, Sandra Simonds, Abraham Smith, and many more.
Sport Literate (Volume 7 Issue 1, 15th Anniversary Issue, December 2010)
We held two contests for this issue. Philip Gerard (by invitation) chose our essay winner (Jay Lesandrini), and Frank Van Zant selected best poem (Scott F. Parker). Sean Prentiss’s interview with poet Jack Ridl (Losing Season) and a photo essay featuring Adolph Kiefer, a 1936 gold medalist, complete the collection.
Status Hat (February 2011)
Pottery from the northern climes, an interview with a Shakuhachi player, two different approaches to manipulated photos, poetry, prose and new music all infuse the SPICE issue of Status Hat. [o]
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Trigger93 (Volume 1, December 2010)
Trigger93 is a radical new journal of literature, art, and the uncanny—a journal that juxtaposes magic(k)ally informed works by established artists and academics with works created by practitioners of magic(k). This issue explores the relationship between language and spirituality, with contributions from Michael Taussig, James Eshelman, and Seth Tobocman.
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Posted January 31, 2011
The Antioch Review (Volume 69 Number 1, Winter 2011)
The lead essay in the winter 2011 issue reports on the “new China,” the ways in which the current generation of young people are trying to find their way. Wide-ranging essays on education, euphemisms, measurement, and biography follow, with fiction, poetry, and reviews rounding out the issue.
Fiddlehead (Number 246, Winter 2011)
Enjoy the five stories in this issue: Greg Bechtel’s “The Mysterious East (Fredericton, NB),” Marjorie Celona’s “Big Sex,” Michael Doyle’s “The Disappearing Man,” Sheila McClarty’s “Stolen,” and Shane Neilson’s “Freight.” Turn to the poetry and read new works from fifteen poets including Jan Zwicky, Jack Hannan, Christine Lowther and Shane Rhodes. There are also reviews and Anna Cameron’s wonderful artwork, “Untitled V” graces the cover.
(Volume 63 Number 4, Winter 2011)
Indiana Review (Volume 32 Number 2, Winter 2010)
This issue features fiction by Michael Czyzniejewski and Mark Holden; marvelous nonfiction by Barrie Jean Borich; fantastic poetry by Patrick Rosal, Tyehimba Jess, and David Wojahn; and many others, including our 2010 Indiana Review Poetry Prize winner.
The MacGuffin (Volume 27 Number 2, Winter 2011)
The MacGuffin’s Winter 2011 issue highlights the winners of the 15th National Poet Hunt, judged by Jim Daniels. The issue features fiction by Calla Devlin, Gail Seneca, Ladee Hubbard, Natalie Segal, Kathryn Henion, and Daniel Pearlman; non-fiction by Kevin Chauncey Avery; poetry by Richard Schiffman, Susan R. Williamson, Nancy Carol Moody, and Poet Hunt winners Mary Schmitt, Suzanne Roberts, and Rex Richards; and artwork by Jeffrey Slebodnick.
MAKE (Issue 10, Fall/Winter 2010)
Issue 10 - At Play - commemorates MAKE’s fifth year by asking collaborators to play with form, language, convention, and expectations. The high-quality print edition exhibits an impressive collection of full-color art curated by painter Stacie Johnson featuring Phyllis Bramson, John Dilg, Lily Van der Stokker, and Liz Nielsen. Readers will find, interspersed amongst the new work from poets and writers such as Gina Frangello, Mabel Yu, James Tate, Geoffrey Nutter, and Devin King, a special section in celebration of MAKE’s fifth anniversary featuring short stories, poems, and ruminations on the number five from past MAKE contributors including Blake Butler, Lewis Warsh, Alissa Nutting, and Travis Nichols.
The Missouri Review (Volume 33 Number 4, Winter 2010)
Straight from deepintheheartof, The Missouri Review heats up your winter with our fourth and final issue of volume 33. Our latest issue features first fiction by Jennie Lin, plus new stories by Daniel Stolar, Adam Krause, and Karl Taro Greenfeld; Danielle Ofri’s essay on an emergency room visit she experience as a medical student at Bellevue; a fantastic interview with Michael Byers about his short stories and new novel; poetry by Tarfia Faizullah, Brian Brodeur, and Maria Hummel; a feature on Nancy Cunard, and much more. Visit us online and snag a copy!
Palooka (1, 2010)
Like Jane the headless mannequin, stalled on the side of the road, the stories, poems, essays, graphics and artwork in Palooka 1 are on a quest. From a factory worker who seeks a winning scratch-off to a young woman who rebels against society with a Michael Jackson record. From theories of legendary heroes to a journalist on a mission to tell the story of a nonexistent country, each of these pieces in their own way depict the struggle to navigate the self, each understanding that the question—Who the hell are we, anyway?—is far more important than the answer.
Paul Revere's Horse (Volume 2 Number 2, Fall/Winter 2010)
New translations from the work of the great Iranian modernist Bahram Sadeqi, from the Peruvian poet Aníbal Cristobo, and from the notebooks of the Russian artist Leonid Sokov. Also featuring the enigmatic and meteoric Bob Brown in this issue’s Lost Poets Review (introduced by Craig Saper). Plus Russell Duvernoy on Frank Samperi, a stunning musical score from Will Redman, and new writing from Fanny Howe, Minnie Singh, Sam Truitt, and Michael Mejia.
Poetry (Volume 197 Number 5, February 2011)
Poems by Carolyn Forché, Thomas Lynch, Jessica Jopp, Lisa Russ Spaar, Patricia Lockwood, Ange Mlinko, Alberto Rios, Alicia Ostriker and others; Adam Kirsch on The Anthology of Rap; David Orr lays down the law; reviews; letters.
The Spoon River Poetry Review (Volume 35 Number 2, Summer/Fall 2010) Contemporary poetry from the U.S. and around the world in English translation. This issue (35.2) includes an interview with featured poet Joanne Diaz; a review-essay by Andrew Osborn; winning poems of the Editors' Prize contest, judged by Jeanne Marie Beaumont; and poetry by Andrew Schelling, Emily Carr, Michael Joyce, Dzvinia Orlowsky, James Longenbach, and Naomi Buck Palagi.
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A Public Space (Issue 12, 2011)
Bone Bouquet (Volume 2 Issue 1, Winter 2011)
Bone Bouquet's first print issue, following two successful online editions in 2010, contains work from Claire Hero, Arielle Greenberg, Jennifer Firestone, and more. Bone Bouquet publishes poetry by women.
Brevity (January 2011)
This issue offers eighteen concise. Included is one of our briefest essays ever, Steve Barthelme’s “White Guy,” and some past authors returning for an encore, including Richard Terrill, Lance Larsen, and Tim Elhaj. Meanwhile, Linsey Maugham graces us with her first creative nonfiction publication, and graduate student authors display their growing talents and strengths. [o]
Chtenia: Readings from Russia (Issue 13, Winter 2011) Of course, for our 13th issue, we had to take on “Luck” as our theme. But where do you look for luck in Russian literature and memoirs? How about in the works of Pushkin, Tolstoy, Bunin, Aleshkovsky, Tsvetaeva and half a dozen others?
Copper Nickel (Issue 15, January 2011)
2010 Contest winners Robert Glick and Susan Grimm. Poetry by Sandra Beasley, Curtis L. Crisler, Kyle G. Dargan, Wayne Miller, and others. Fiction by Sean Bernard, Merrill Feitell, Hester Kaplan, Michael Martone and others. Creative nonfiction by Alex Lemon. Debut publications by Patrick Milian and Kyle York.
Harvard Review (Number 39, 2010)
Featuring poems by Shara McCallum, fiction by Deni Bechard, drawings by William Kentridge, and essays by Jessica Johnson and Jerald Walker, plus First Books, First Looks: an Omnibus Review of Poetry
Hunger Mountain (Issue 15, 2010)
Theme: the Thing at the top of the Stairs. Contributors participate in writing exercise inspired by Ray Bradbury—surprising results from Bruce Smith, Michael Burkard, Paul Lisicky, Michael Martone, Melissa Febos, Jedediah Berry, Mark Halliday, Angie Estes, and others. Issue includes winners of fiction, poetry, and writing for children prizes.
Jelly Bucket (Number 2, 2010)
This issue solidifies the mission of the MFA program at Eastern Kentucky University to produce a professional-quality, international literary journal. In addition to poetry, fiction, and essays from around the globe. Issue Two continues the journal's unique art inserts that focus on text as art, featuring in this issue industrial sewing machine artist China Marks and outsider artist Dale Jackson.
Kaleidoscope (Number 62, Winter/Spring 2011)
matchbook (January 31, 2011)
February is upon us. Say goodbye to January and hello to our shortest month at matchbook. Catherine Lacey has alittle piece there called "Kid's Choir." [o]
Midwest Quarterly (Volume 52 Number 2, Winter 2011)
Paperbag (Issue 2)
The newest issue of Paperbag is now live, featuring art by Steven Bindernagel and Michael Hilsman, poetry comics by Bianca Stone, song-video by R.A. Villanueva, poetry by Zachary Schomburg, Matvei Yankelevich, Gordon Massman, Jen Hyde, Ben Pease, Daniel Bailey, and Tamiko Beyer, and sound by Jozeph Herceg. [o]
Room (Volume 33 Number 4, 2010)
"Learning Swadeshi" by poet Emily McGiffin opens the issue and Casey Wolf's "The Corpse Pose," fiction, closes it. In between--a rich array of poetry, fiction, and art including cover art by and interview with noted Coast Salish artist Susan Point, and Susan McCaslin's essay on the Song of Songs explores bridal mysticism.
Southern Women’s Review (Volume 4 Issue 4, January 2011)
The Southern Women’s Review is a newly established on-line literary journal that allows others access to artistic excellence through Southern Literature and Photography. Our fourth issue celebrates creative works from poets, fiction and creative non-fiction writers, photographers, and more. [o]
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January 31, 2011
Against The Current (Number 150, January/February 2011)
Celebrating 25 years of publication, our new issue includes activist features on beating back anti-Muslim bigots in Murfreesboro, Tennessee; Kristian Williams on West Coast police violence and community responses; Zaragosa Vargas on myths and facts about immigration; Detroit's crisis; socialist campaigning in Ohio -- and more!
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January 31, 2011
Free Inquiry (Volume 31 Number 2, February/March 2011)
Philip Appleman: The Labyrinth: God, Darwin, and the Meaning of Life
Lilipoh (Issue 62 Volume 16, Winter 2011)
Death & Dying
Shambhala Sun (March 2011)
Pema Chodron: The Smile at Fear Teachings
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
Notices of Online Issues
Posted January 24, 2011
The Florida Review (Volume 35 Number 1, Summer 2010)
A special issue on Native writing and writers, this issue of The Florida Review features new work by Gerald Vizenor, Sherwin Bitsui, Santee Frazier, Orlando White, Stephen Graham Jones, Geary Hobson, Allison HedgeCoke, Travis HedgeCoke and many others. A reading and live webcast in celebration of the issue is scheduled on Feb 5, 2011 at 1:00 at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian.
Manoa (Volume 22 Number 2, 2010)
The Mānoa issue entitled Wild Hearts: Literature, Ecology, and Inclusion features fiction by Barry Lopez, Leo Litwak, and Andrew Lam; a performance piece by South Asian playwright Manjula Padmanabhan; journal entries by Donald Richie, the preeminent American expert on Japanese cinema; poetry by Yang Zi, of the PRC, and Arthur Sze, of New Mexico; translations of bhakti poetry by Andrew Schelling; an interview with Aaron Woolfolk, director and writer of The Harimaya Bridge, by Honolulu artist Calvin Collins; and four natural history essays by Robert Bringhurst, Thom van Dooren, Deborah Bird Rose, and Anna Tsing.
Ninth Letter (Volume 7 Number 2, Fall/Winter 2010-11)
Featuring new writing by Peter Orner, Matt Bell, Jedediah Berry, Mary Miller, D. A. Powell, Margot Singer, William Wenthe, Paula Bohince, Traci Brimhall, and featured artist Allan de Souza.
The Southern Review (Volume 47 Number 1, Winter 2011)
This issue features new writing, including a translation from Danish by K. E. Semmel of Line-Maria Lång’s intimate story about life and the end of it as well as a frightening story by Jaquira Díaz about youth and its end. Also a look back by Robert Lacy of Walker Percy’s The Moviegoer fifty years after its initial publication. Derek Mong’s adaptations of Latin texts, a powerful and evocative poem by Kevin Prufer, and generally terrific poetry from Albert Goldbarth, Joshua Rivkin, Julia B. Levine, and many others warm our pages.
Other Print Literary Magazines Received &
New Online Literary Magazine Notices Received
January 24, 2011
Absinthe: New European Writing (Number 14, 2010)
Fiction by Mateiu Caragiale, Anca Cristofovici, Robert Gal, Wieslaw Mysliwski and Norberto Luis Romero, with poetry by Rita Dahl, an interview with filmmaker Dmitry Trakovsky, book reviews and film & music recommendations, and reports from Copenhagen and Prague. In addition, photographs by Giacomo Brunelli appear on the cover and in an 8-page portfolio.
American Short Fiction (Volume 13 Issue 50, Winter 2010/11)
Arkansas Review (Volume 41 Number 3, December 2010)
This issue features two articles in African American Studies. Spencer Wood and Ricardo Samuel examine armed self-defense in the Civil Rights Era, and Adam Gussow contributes the second part of his series on Southern Religion and the Devil's Music. Creative works also appear, alongside regular features and book reviews.
Boxcar Poetry Review (Winter 2011)
We close 2010 and open 2011 with an array of poems which announce and recall, binding moments and memories together. This issue features a conversation between Kara Candito and Kristina Marie Darling, as well as an interview with Candace Pearson conducted by Lynne Thompson. Zara Raab also reviews Carrie Shipers' Ordinary Mourning. [o]
Coe Review (Volume 41 Number 1, Fall 2010)
Denver Quarterly (Volume 45 Number 2, 2011)
Harvard Review Online (Issue 4, January 2011)
Happy New Year! We are proud to announce the fourth issue of Harvard Review Online. In this issue we not only bring you more poetry and book reviews, but also From the Archives, the first in a series of new online features. [o]
matchbook (February 17, 2011)
New work at matchbook by Rachel B. Glaser entitled “Fat Bird Makes a Beat.” [o]
The Open Face Sandwich (2, 2010)
Volume 2 is a smorgasbord of the ecstatic and deviant with a dollop of blood pudding on top. We serve up work by award-winning playwright Young Jean Lee, post-apocalyptic maternity woes from Blake Butler, deconstructions of suicide with Gregory Sherl, and full color children's drawings of prostitutes and male pattern baldness.
PEN America (Issue 13, 2010)
Who is dear to you? PEN America 13: Lovers features short fiction by Don DeLillo, new poetry by John Ashbery and Marilyn Hacker, a conversation between Patti Smith and Jonathan Lethem, and much more—including a forum on literary love with John Barth, Jessica Hagedorn, Yusef Komunyakaa, Lily Tuck, and many others.
Prick of the Spindle (Volume 4 Number 4, 2011)
Poetry by Bonnie Auslander, Rebecca Schumejda, Benjamin Cartwright, Howie Good, Corey Mesler, and more; fiction by Brian Mihok, Jennifer Juneau, Donna Vitucci, and more. Includes a special reprint from late author Cami Park. Plus, nonfiction by Richard Paul Skinner, Brant Goble, Julie Innis, and others; drama by Garrett Socol, Jen Karetnick, and Nancy Gessner. [o]
Sixth Finch (Winter 2011)
The new issue of Sixth Finch brings together work from both poets and artists, including Dorothea Lasky, Zachary Schomburg, MRB Chelko, Sampson Starkweather, Joshua Petker, Ala Ebtekar, Richard Barnes and David Stein. [o]
Print Alternative Magazines Received &
New Online Alternative Magazine Notices Received
January 24, 2011
In These Times (Volume 35 Number 2, February 2011)
HELP WANTED to build a progressive America
Our Times (Volume 29 Number 5/6, October 2010/January 2011)
Double Autumn/Winter Issue
Socialism & Democracy (Volume 24 Number 3, November 2010)
Special issue: "Marx for Today." Issue editor: Marcello Musto. Part 1: "Re-reading Marx in 2010" (eight articles exploring Marx's present-day relevance). Part 2: "Marx's Global Reception Today" (review essays on Marx scholarship on four continents). For detailed listing & other info: http:sdonline.org
Sponsor Print Literary Magazines Received &
Notices of Online Issues
Posted January 17, 2011
The American Poetry Review (Volume 40 Number 1, Jan/Feb 2011)
Anderbo (January 11 & 13, 2011) “The Ladyboys of Thailand” – New “fact” on Anderbo! + Poetry by Sara Peck and Melissa Schuppe. Also, we have Anderbo’s second essay ever – “Towards a Sublime Pineapple” by Eleanor Stanford. [o]
Camera Obscura (Volume 2, Winter 2010) The Winter 2010 issue of Camera Obscura Journal of Literature & Photography showcases the photography of Chan Kwok Hung, Marcela Bolívar, Larry Louie and numerous other professional and amateur photographers from around the world. Rosebud Ben-Oni’s novel excerpt “A way Out of the Colonia” wins the Camera Obscura short fiction prize and is presented alongside the work of eleven other writers including Thisbe Nissen, Mark Budman, Henriette Lazaridis Power, and Scott Nadelson.
(Volume 38 Number 1, Winter 2011)
Special Issue: Arendt, Politcs, and Culture
Creative Nonfiction (Number 40, Winter 2011) Cattle, centaurs, chickens, dachshunds, gorillas, grunion, horses, humans, mice, monarch butterflies, mountain lions, mutts, racehorses, raccoons, starlings and wood ducks ... Creative Nonfiction's Animals issue has all these, and more! Featuring the winners of the Creative Nonfiction Animals contest, Jennifer Lunden and Chester F. Phillips, plus Susan Cheever, Randy Fertel and others. Plus, there's an Encounter with Lauren Slater, who talks about her writing process, truth, and why people get so angry with her; Phillip Lopate on the ethics of writing about others; Sarah Z. Wexler on magazine editors' unwillingness to adapt to new technology; a literary crossword and more.
The Iowa Review (Volume 40 Number 3, Winter 2010/11) Dana Johnson conjures 1980s Palm Springs, Patrick Madden turns thirty-five, and Megan Grumbling considers gold, metaphorically; plus Thai centipedes, the high seas, street dogs in India, Dillinger, Baby Face, living and losing with in-laws. New T.C. Boyle and the winners of the 2010 Iowa Review Awards.
Sleet Magazine (Winter 2011 Supplement) Sleet Magazine is proud to announce the arrival of its Winter 2011 Supplement. We feature new poems and fiction by Jamie Buehner, Martin Cozza, Alice Duggan and Michael C. Keith. Please visit us at www.sleetmagazine.com [o]
(Volume 48 Number 2, 2010)
World Literature Today (Volume 85 Number 1, Jan-Feb 2011) Ten writers explore The Crosstalk between Science and Literature in the January 2011 issue of WLT, guest edited by poet and cognitive scientist Pireeni Sundaralingam, demonstrating that the synapses between the “two cultures” are firing at an astonishing rate. New poetry by Pattiann Rogers, Natalia Toledo, Esthela Calderón, Rosario Murillo, and Panna Naik as well as interviews with Juan Villoro, Tarık Günersel, and Jenny White round out the issue.
Other Print Literary Magazines Received &
New Online Literary Magazine Notices Received
January 17, 2011
A Cappella Zoo (Issue 6, Spring 2011) Cover art (Mark Morgan), “Metamorefruitis” (Anton Baer), “In the Circus of You” (Nicelle Davis & Cheryl Gross), “The Legs Come Off Easily” (Emily Lawrence), “The Adventures of Starfish Girl” (Lindsay Miller), “within the face what other faces swim?” (Guy R. Beining), “Reflections on an Alien Melon” (Michael Jones), & more.
DMQ Review (Winter 2011) The DMQ Review is pleased to announce the release of the Winter issue featuring the poetry of Leslie Adams, David McAleavey, Nin Andrews, David Blomenberg, Carolyn Dille, Marcene Gandolfo, Sarah Greenleaf, Chris Haven, John Stanford Owen, Simon Perchik, Mike Smith, Christopher Watkins and Al Young, with artwork by Amy MacLennan. [o]
The Massachusetts Review (Volume 51 Number 4, Winter 2010)
Moon City Review (2010) 2010's special theme, emphasizes sci-fi, fantasy, and magical realism, including poetry by Jim Daniels and Jeannine Hall Gailey; fiction by Juned Subhan, Nancy Gold, and Ted Chiles; and creative nonfiction by Julie Platt. “Archival Treasures” features the more serious art by the creator of the Kewpie, Rose O’Neill.
Northwest Review (Volume 48 Number 2, 2010)
One Story (Issue Number 144, December 2010) "Life Among the Terranauts" by Caitlin Horrocks is set in NovaTerra, an isolated man-made ecosystem where six people have signed on to live for two full years without any contact with the outside world. We meet the group on day 543, after most of the enthusiasm, crops, and animals have died.
PostPoetry Magazine (1, 2010)
Puffin Circus (Volume 2 Issue 1, January 2011) Featuring Michael Crane, Jenny Starr-Busch Johnson, Frank Roger, Christopher Woods, John Tustin, Sean Butner, Marcelo Hernandez, Kevin Heaton, and more. [o]
Red Fez Publications (Number 30, January 2011) The first of our monthly issues, Red Fez #30, consists of two comics, twenty-six poems, four reviews and twelve stories including a non-fiction piece by Eric Day and columns by Paul Corman-Roberts and Karl Koweski. Contributors in this issue include Doug Draime, Rebecca Schumejda, Jason Hardung, William Taylor Jr., Ben Nardolilli and many others. [o]
South Dakota Review (Volume 48 Number 2, Summer 2010)
Tipton Poetry Journal (Number 19, Fall 2010) Translations: Sergey Yesenin’s “Я по первому снегу бреду” translated from Russian to English by Rohana McCormack; Liang Yujing’s “Four Pseudo Haiku” self-translated from English to Chinese. Book reviews: Sandy Green's "Pacing the Moon"; Norbert Krapf's "Sweet Sister Moon" and Kristine Ong Muslim's "A Roomful of Machines". A kasen renga by Carolyn Kreiter-Foronda, Joyce Brinkman and Kae Morii.
The Yale Review (Volume 99 Number 1, January 2011) Celebrating our Hundredth Anniversary
Sponsor Print Alternative Magazines Received &
New Online Alternative Magazine Notices Received
January 17, 2011
Conscience (Volume 31 Issue 3, 2010) The pope supports condom use, faith-based organizations doing AIDS outreach with federal funding, the reach of Opus Dei in Latin America and American conscience clauses are discussed in this issue of Conscience: The Newsjournal of Catholic Opinion.
Z Magazine (January 2011) Obama's "Horns": Economic Predictions for 2011; Interviews with Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Victoria Law, and Fidel Castro Ruz; Bullying & "Glee": It's Not Getting Better; Plus, Noam Chomsky, Phyllis Bennis, Edward S. Herman, & More
Other Print Alternative Magazines Received &
New Online Alternative Magazine Notices Received
January 17, 2011
Maisonneuve (Issue 38, Winter 2010) Tourists of Consciousness: Drugs, Your Brain and the Edges of Reality
Science & Society (Volume 75 Number 1, January 2011) Consciousness as Objective Activity; Symposia: Reading the Grundrisse After Capital; The Western Left, The USSR, and Marxism; plus book reviews
Whispering Wind Magazine (Volume 39 #6, Jan/Feb 2011) Athabascan Beadwork, Tipi exhibit at Brookly Museum, Crow historical photos, Oral histories, powwow dates, music and book reviews, 40 pages.

