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Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Author: LRR

REMEMBERING THE LIFE OF MICHAEL S. HART AND HOW HE CHANGED READING FOREVER

BY LAURA RUTTAN

LRR, March 8, 2016February 8, 2025

“20 or 30 years from now, there’s going to be some gizmo that kids carry around in their back pockets that has everything in it-including our books, if they want.” — Michael Hart, 1998 Michael Stern Hart was the legendary founder of Project Gutenberg, the oldest and largest digital library,…

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Am I being too pedantic?

By Emily Zimmer

LRR, March 8, 2016February 8, 2025

“Vocabulary enables us to interpret and to express. If you have a limited vocabulary, you will also have a limited vision and a limited future.” — Jim Rohn New words have always been drilled into our minds. Initially small and minimal in complexity, vocabulary was learned through spelling tests and…

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America’s Great Black Hope

by Sten Spinella

LRR, March 7, 2016February 8, 2025

I’ve been doing some thinking on Kendrick Lamar lately. His new album, untitled unmastered is great, but that is to be expected. I don’t have any more to say on it than your average music reviewer does. I want to get into something different. I want to address the fact…

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Some Faerie Good Reads for a Courtly Spring Break

By Theresa Kurzawa

LRR, March 7, 2016February 8, 2025

With Spring Break approaching fast, it’s time to stock up on some books to last you the week. Whether you’re spending your time at home or on a beach, a good read is essential for any successful break from school. The books that become popular in the Young Adult genre…

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Remembering Nikolai Vasilyevich Gogol

By Emily Catenzaro

LRR, March 4, 2016February 8, 2025

“It is well-known that there are many faces in the world over the finishing of which nature did not take much trouble, did not employ any fine tools such as files, gimlets, and so on, but simply hacked them out with round strokes: one chop-a nose appears; another chop-lips appear;…

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The Threat of an Empty Page

By Emily Zimmer

LRR, March 4, 2016February 8, 2025

“I have a horror of the blank page. I simply cannot write on a blank page or screen. Because once I do, I start to fix it, and I never get past the first sentence.” — Charles Krauthammer The vast emptiness of the page is overwhelming. The stark white seems…

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Does Anyone Really Know What Alt-Lit is?

by Alexandra Cichon

LRR, March 1, 2016February 8, 2025

My freshman year of college, spring semester 2013, I found myself standing on a rooftop in Brooklyn with people I didn’t know. What we did have in common was our ability to Instagram the Manhattan skyline and our following of alt-lit, or Alternative Literature. The semester before, I had discovered…

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To Prompt, or Not to Prompt, That is the Question

by Theresa Kurzawa

LRR, February 29, 2016February 8, 2025

It’s the kind of question you ask yourself, as a writer, when you’re stuck on what to write about. Should you venture into the dangerous and confusing world of Writing Prompts, or should you leave your writing decisions to your own imagination? There are a lot of pros and cons…

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Storytelling with WNPR

by Allison McLellan

LRR, February 28, 2016February 8, 2025

Storytelling is the original form of entertainment used to pass on legends and histories, and to pass the time. But now we have more stimulating forms of entertainment—Xbox360, Netflix, YouTube, etc. You can’t have a conversation without maybe half of the faces being immersed in a smartphone screen at any…

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Where did the quotation mark go?

by Steph Koo

LRR, February 27, 2016February 8, 2025

We are approaching copyediting time at the Long River Review and it has me thinking about grammar, punctuation, and writing style—leading me to this question: Why do some authors do away with the quotation mark in dialogue? Perhaps I am noticing it more as I am reading more “serious literature”…

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