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Creative Writing > Literary Magazines
Vol. 36 (2008) through current issue.
Appalachian Heritage is a leading literary magazine of the Southern Appalachia Region, published by Berea College. Founded in 1973, Appalachian Heritage keeps readers abreast of the visual and literary arts in the region. The mix of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry by both well-established writers and new writers keeps each issue fresh and entertaining for readers.
Published by: Berea College
Distributed by: University of North Carolina Press
Vol. 1 (2007) through current issue
Azalea aims to promote Korean literature among English-language readers. The first volume includes works of several contemporary Korean writers and poets, as well as essays and book reviews by Korean studies professors in the United States. Azalea will introduce to the world new writers and also promising translators. The journal will provide the academic community of Korean studies with well-translated texts for college classes. Writers from elsewhere in the world will also share their experience of Korean literature or culture with wider audiences.
Vol. 40 (2013) through current issue
Launched in 1956, Colorado Review is a triquarterly literary journal published at Colorado State University. Each approximately 200-page issue features short fiction, creative nonfiction, book reviews, and poetry. Work first published in Colorado Review has been reprinted or noted in Best American Poetry, Best American Essays, Best American Short Stories, Best New American Voices, Best American Nonrequired Reading, Best Travel Writing, Best Food Writing, and Pushcart Prize.
Vol. 36 (2012) through current issue
cream city review, founded in 1975, is a non-profit literary magazine published
semi-annually, Spring and Fall, in association with the English Department
of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. The magazine has always been edited and produced
entirely by volunteers.
cream city review takes its name from the “City of Cream-Colored Bricks,”
or “Cream City,” as Milwaukee was once known. The first “cream” brick
was made in 1835. Pale yellow, the bricks proved more durable and aesthetically
pleasing than the traditional red bricks produced by East Coast kilns.
Popular throughout the 1800s, Cream City bricks were used widely for ornamental
architecture in the United States and Europe.
Vol. 1 (2005) through current issue
Since a year after its founding, in 2005, Ecotone is one of only two literary magazines in the United States to have had its work reprinted in Best American Short Stories, Best American Essays, Best American Poetry, Best American Science and Nature Writing, PEN / O. Henry Prize Stories, and The Pushcart Prize. It is based at the University of North Carolina Wilmington and comes out twice a year. Each issue contains new fiction, poetry, essays, and artwork. The magazine bridges the gap between science and culture, bringing together the literary and the scientific, the urban and the rural, the personal and the biological. Ecotone has published original writing by winners of the Nobel Prize, Pulitzer Prize, and National Book Award, as well as new work by emerging authors.
Vol. 1 (1999) through current issue
Fourth Genre: Explorations in Nonfiction is devoted to publishing notable, innovative work in nonfiction. The title reflects the intention to give nonfiction its due as a literary genre to give writers of the fourth genre a showcase for their work and to give readers a place to find the liveliest and most creative works in the form. To reflect the genre's flexibility and expansiveness, the journal includes works ranging from personal essays and memoirs to literary journalism and personal criticism.
Vol. 151 (2008) through current issue
Hispanófila, a journal that accepts essays on any literary, linguistic, or cultural topic dealing with the Spanish and Portuguese-speaking worlds, appears three times a year. Articles may be written in English, Spanish, or Portuguese. Only work that has not been previously published is considered for publication with Hispanófila. The journal, founded by Professor Alva V. Ebersole, was brought to the Department of Romance Languages at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1968. Professor Fred M. Clark is the current Editor and, to date, the journal has published 160+ issues as of 2012.
Vol. 1 (2008) through current issue
The original Hopkins Review was a literary magazine published by the Johns
Hopkins Writing Seminars from 1947 to 1953. With the Winter 2008 issue, the Writing Seminars and the
Johns Hopkins University Press in a joint venture are bringing the magazine
back into existence as The Hopkins Review (New Series),
a quarterly that will publish fiction, poetry, memoirs, essays on
literature, drama, film, the visual arts, music, dance, and reviews of books
in all these area, as well as reviews of performances and exhibits.
Vol. 11, no. 2 (1999) through current issue
Manoa is a unique, award-winning literary journal that includes American and international fiction, poetry, artwork, and essays of current cultural or literary interest. An outstanding feature of each issue is original translations of contemporary work from alongside contemporary writings from Asian and Pacific nations, selected for each issue by a special guest editor. Beautifully produced, Manoa presents traditional alongside contemporary writing from the entire Pacific Rim, one of the world's most dynamic literary regions.
No. 1 (1973)-no. 62 (2004), missing nos. 2,3,9,22,39-44,50-51,55-57,59-60; No. 75 (2010) through current issue
Publishing contemporary poetry and fiction as well as reviews, critical commentary, and interviews of leading intellectual figures, the minnesota review curates smart yet accessible collections of progressive new work. This eclectic survey provides lively and sophisticated signposts to navigating current critical discourse. Under the leadership of new editor Janell Watson, the review will maintain its tradition of exploring the most exciting literary and critical developments for both specialists and a general audience.