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

Category: Fiction

Four Rules for Professional Thievery

by Tyler Valzania (2016)

LRR, June 24, 2016June 16, 2017

“Okay this first rule is the most important of all so listen up,” he said as he transferred a grease-stained wrench from his hands to mine. “The world is not fair, that’s a fact of life alright? So don’t get all high and mighty and act like it should be….

Continue Reading

They Didn’t Mean To

by Carleton Whaley (2016)

LRR, June 24, 2016June 16, 2017

The Old Man had a perpetual hunch to his shoulders, which was only accentuated as he chuckled at the cat sitting across from him. His shoulders rose and fell quickly, and at their height they nearly touched his bat-like ears, the same ears that the cat would swat at late…

Continue Reading

Invisible

by Máiréad Loschi (2016)

LRR, June 24, 2016June 16, 2017

I don’t know all the technical jargon and stuff, but I can tell you what happened to me. I guess if you need to know all those medical details it’s in the chart. I mean you guys can read those charts, right? Maybe those regular doctors don’t put down the…

Continue Reading

“Turner’s Comedy”

by Martin Bremer (2015)

LRR, February 7, 2016March 16, 2016

The pistol lies across the desk from me—out of reach, but pointing straight at my chest. Halogen lamps flood the interrogation room—I can almost feel my innards incinerate as the brightness forces its way through my retina—every crevice, every wrinkle of me, laid bare, out in the open—illuminated. I’m trying…

Continue Reading

“Morning on Cathedral Parkway”

by Lillie Gardner (2015)

LRR, February 7, 2016March 16, 2016

Waking up after being awake all night from sweating under your blankets and out of your blankets and leaning against the wall to cry and cough, with your loose shirt slipping off my shoulders, with too much of the moonlight bouncing off the cold cars in the parking lot below…

Continue Reading

“Glorious”

by Amy Martin (2015)

LRR, February 7, 2016March 16, 2016

Glimpses of his dreams pass by his eyes in the calm solitude of the waiting window. It’s one thing in Sean’s life that he wants slow and still and calm. One of few. He always seems in a rush. In a way, he is; in a way no one but…

Continue Reading

“Cold Water”

by Catherine Hires (2015)

LRR, February 7, 2016March 16, 2016

Nia was still sleeping when I woke up. She was snoring loudly as I crawled my way down the rickety ladder that supported my lofted bed. I walked past her bed, her open mouth smushed ungracefully against her pillow, and made my way into the kitchen. I turned on the…

Continue Reading

“Wrong Crowd” by Ethan Sheehan (2009)

LRR, February 7, 2016

Bradley had never wanted to get mixed in with that crowd. But it seemed beyond his control. His best friend, Alex, had started hanging out with them, so Bradley went along with it. It wasn’t that bad at first. Drinking or smoking; it didn’t hurt anybody. But then the crimes…

Continue Reading

“Vive la Révolution” by Timothy Stobierski (2009)

LRR, February 7, 2016

II was born under the lion as he commingled with the snake, but conceived when the dragon pillaged the great scales of their gold. “Who am I?” were my first words; they passed by unanswered. III heard the words of God as a child, but He has grown silent. The…

Continue Reading

“Penance” by Lillian R. Handleman (2009)

LRR, February 7, 2016

The paunching of Dan’s belly that once sported lean muscle exposed a doughy adipose mass protruding from just above his belt. One could say his belly was a monument to all the fallen heroes of love gone wrong—those weary soldiers adrift in marital limbo who seek comfort in swigs of…

Continue Reading
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Next
©2026 Long River Review | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes

Review My Order

0

Subtotal

Taxes & shipping calculated at checkout

Checkout
0

Notifications