In this Issue
Having never missed an issue in more than a century, the Sewanee Review is the oldest continuously published literary quarterly in the United States. Begun in 1892 at The University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, the Review is devoted to American and British fiction, poetry, and reviews -- as well as essays in criticism and reminiscence. In this venerable journal, you'll find the direct literary line to Flannery O'Connor, Robert Penn Warren, Hart Crane, Anne Sexton, Harry Crews, and Fred Chappell -- not to mention Andre Dubus and Cormac McCarthy, whose first stories were published in the Sewanee Review. Each issue is a brilliant seminar, an unforgettable dinner party, an all-night swap of stories and passionate stances.
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Johns Hopkins University Pressviewing issue
Volume 125, Number 3, Summer 2017Editorial Board
Editor
Adam Ross
Editorial Assistants
Ansley McDurmon
Spencer Hupp
Walt Evans
Advisory Editors
Michael Dickman
Gary Fisketjon
Roger Hodge
Kellie Robertson
Susan Wheeler
Managing Editor
Alec Hill
Poetry Editor
Robert Walker
Aiken Taylor Intern:
Lily Davenport
Annie Adams
Design
Peter Mendelsund
Oliver Munday
Copyeditor
Joyce Guyette
Former Editors
William Peterfield Trent (1892-1900)
John Bell Henneman (1900-1909)
Benjamin Lawton Wiggins (1909-1910)
John MacLaren McBryde Jr. (1910-1920)
George Herbert Clarke (1920-1926)
William Skinkle Knickerbocker(1926-1942)
Tudor Seymour Long (1942-1944)
Allen Tate (1944-1946)
John E. Palmer (1946-1952)
Monroe K. Spears (1952-1961)
Andrew Lytle (1961-1974)
George Core (1974-2016)
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Copyright © University of the South and its author.