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Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Author: LRR

Blog

Trouble Writing? Scrivener Is The Only Tool You’ll Need

LRR, February 22, 2019February 8, 2025

Ryan Amato, Marketing Coordinator  Any writer knows that the actual process of writing can be extremely tedious and hard to keep organized. If you’re anything like I was, you’ll have hundreds of notes stored on your computer in various Microsoft Word documents, notebooks overflowing with fleeting ideas, and no possible…

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Blog

Black and White Revival: How The Golden Age of Hollywood Resurrected the Writer in Me

LRR, February 21, 2019February 8, 2025

Samantha Mason, Fiction Panelist and Fundraising Co-Manager In high school, I took  Creative Writing 1, 2, 3, and 4. My teens years became a whirlwind of fiction, as I had what seemed like endless time to become immersed in the worlds I was creating on paper. College, in general, takes…

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Blog

The Marie Kondo Method for Writers

LRR, February 20, 2019February 8, 2025

Kate Luongo Community Engagement Coordinator Ever since watching the new Netflix show, “Tidying up with Marie Kondo,” I have become somewhat obsessed with seeking order. Perhaps only because of her meditative tongue, I have found peace within the realm of tidiness. Kondo’s method consists of six steps: Commit yourself to…

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Blog

The Princess Diarist: Carrie Fisher’s Writing Career

LRR, February 19, 2019February 8, 2025

Brenna Sarantides, Social Media Coordinator When you hear Carrie Fisher’s name, you may think of her iconic look with two giant, dark buns of hair bookending her cheeks. Or you may think of her in the metal bikini that she so vocally despised. You may even mourn her tragic passing…

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Blog

An Interview with Poet Trista Mateer

LRR, February 18, 2019February 8, 2025

Lauren Ablondi Olivo, Interviews Editor Spilled ink. It’s a term that’s been popularized within the last few years, especially on social media sites such as Tumblr, Twitter, and Instagram. Writers, especially poets, have taken to the internet to “spill” their work with the world, rather than going through more mainstream…

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Blog

Where Fiction Meets Life: A Trip to the Breakers

LRR, February 15, 2019February 8, 2025

Lilia Shen, Managing Editor  If I’m remembering correctly, the Vanderbilts called it the “Breakers” because when you stand on the balcony, looking over the cliff the mansion is nestled on, you can hear the sound of the ocean waves breaking on the stone walls in the distance. The sound is…

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Blog

From a Graduate’s Perspective

LRR, February 14, 2019February 8, 2025

Christine Byrne Poetry and Translations Panelist Last night I dreamt I was Benjamin Braddock two years after The Graduate. And this is how it went: So Elaine left me. Happy Valentine’s Day! It was basically inevitable—the whole dating your ex-lover’s-daughter situation ending explosively. She always kind of hated me anyway…constantly asking…

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Blog

The Downfall of Being Inspired by TV Authors: Why Carrie Bradshaw is a Really Bad Writer

LRR, February 13, 2019February 8, 2025

Bailey Shea Non-fiction and Multimedia Panel Editor, Arts Liason  As a wannabe writer, the idea of seeing my potential future on TV is comforting. After realizing the entirety of Sex and the City was available on Amazon Prime, I was excited by the opportunity to watch the unedited series. During…

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Blog

Christopher Paolini Comes Out of Hiding

LRR, February 12, 2019February 8, 2025

Hannah L. Desrosiers, Non-Fiction and Multimedia Panelist  Okay, I’ve heard a ton about how the fans of Game of Thrones have been waiting forever (since 2011, but really it’s forever) for the next book to come out. Well, to the fans of a lesser-known but even better series who have…

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Blog

Eat up. Writing is the New Kale.

LRR, February 11, 2019February 8, 2025

Kelly Rafferty, Poetry Panelist  During the summer of second grade, I sheltered earthworms inside a deep puddle I graciously flooded every evening. My love so pure and forgiving I paid little mind to the precise distinction between moist and…drowning. Remarkably, they died. I wept wells of slimy tears and buried…

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