Skip to content
Long River Review Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

  • Home
  • About
    • Meet the 2026 Long River Review Staff!
    • Meet the Teams
  • Online Work
    • Blog
    • Interviews
    • Podcasts
    • Contest Winners
      • Poetry Winners
      • Fiction Winners
      • Creative Nonfiction Winners
      • Translations Winners
  • Submit
  • The Archive
    • Team Archive
      • Meet the 2025 Long River Review Staff!
    • Issues Archive
      • LRR 2024
      • LRR 2023
      • LRR 2022
      • LRR 2021
      • LRR 2020
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Author: LRR

Blog

A Dramatic Reading of Books Found at Goodwill

LRR, May 2, 2019February 8, 2025

Isabella Baldoni, Fundraising co-Chair The Goodwill is a veritable paradise for discount fashion lovers and knickknack collectors (like myself). If you’re unfamiliar, here’s a tip–Goodwill’s book section provides the cheapest, fastest, and easiest way to build your personal library with bomb titles, and will free you from ever having to…

Continue Reading
Blog

Books to Give Your Graduate that Aren’t ‘Oh the Places You’ll Go’

LRR, April 24, 2019February 8, 2025

Bailey Shea, Non-Fiction & Multimedia Panel Editor and Arts Liaison Don’t get me wrong, I love a good book with some nostalgia factor, but Dr. Seuss’ Oh, the Places You’ll Go! has become too generic of a graduation gift. The last thing a recent college grad needs is five copies…

Continue Reading
Blog

Let me tell you a story…

LRR, April 23, 2019February 8, 2025

Jonathon Hastings, Chief Copy Editor “Never shall I forget that first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed…Never shall I forget the little faces of children, whose bodies I saw turned into wreaths of smoke beneath the silent…

Continue Reading
Blog

What is Women’s Literature?

LRR, April 17, 2019February 8, 2025

Anna Zarra Aldrich, Blog Editor  What is women’s literature? We have classes offered in it at UConn, one of which I am currently taking. While I am glad these classes are offered and I thoroughly enjoy the one I’m taking, I have been facing the question all semester of what…

Continue Reading

Not Your Usual Barnyard – A Day at the Book Barn

LRR, April 15, 2019February 8, 2025

Danny Mitola, Non-fiction and Multimedia Panelist This past Saturday I went down to the coast with a couple fellow Long River Review friends: Christine and Kelly. When we arrived, we were welcomed by the squawking of seagulls in the distance and the subtle aroma of salt on the air. The…

Continue Reading
Blog

Interview with S.C. Stephens

LRR, April 12, 2019February 8, 2025

Esther J. Santiago Rodríguez, Fiction Panelist S.C. Stephens is the New York Times and USA Today Bestselling author for the Thoughtless series. Thoughtless is a romance novel that focuses on angst-filled love triangle, self-discovery, exploring dreams and learning how to love. Other of her best selling works are: the Rush series,…

Continue Reading
Blog

Legendary Lines: How Famous Movie Quotes Can Inspire Writers

LRR, April 11, 2019February 8, 2025

Samantha Mason, Fiction Panelist and Fundraising Co-Manager While a wide variety of revered film institutes and movie database web pages have their personal opinions on which movie quotes stand the test of time in eternal fame, many of these lines often reappear on multiple lists. Thus, it should be taken…

Continue Reading
Blog

The Cannibal Aesthetic: Poetry and Feminist Film after the Millenium

LRR, April 10, 2019February 8, 2025

Siobhan Dale, co-Editor-in-Chief This year, I’ve been writing my senior thesis, which is a poetic response to the violence against women in the genre of the pseudo-snuff film. As part of my research, I have watched a wide variety of horror films, ranging from the excessively violent “torture porn” of…

Continue Reading
Blog

Do you ever feel like a plastic bag?

LRR, April 9, 2019February 8, 2025

Kelly Rafferty, Poetry Panelist “Sometimes I see it like the last of a movie. You know how how they start the picture up real close and then back it off steady and far? Well that’s how I dream it. I’m living in a McDonald’s and it’s real late at night…

Continue Reading
Blog

Reinventing the Canon: Diversifying Your Reading List

LRR, April 8, 2019February 8, 2025

Brianna McNish,co-Editor-in-Chief As undergraduate students, we are constantly engaging with the question of what exactly constitutes as “the canon.” Needless to say, the same titles rehashed and retaught in countless literature classes tends to be overwhelmingly, despairingly filled with older white men. Steinbeck, Dostoevsky, Tennyson–the list, especially the titles taught…

Continue Reading
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 43
  • 44
  • 45
  • …
  • 84
  • Next
©2026 Long River Review | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes

Review My Order

0

Subtotal

Taxes & shipping calculated at checkout

Checkout
0
 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Notifications