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Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Category: Online Work

https://longriverreview.com/online-work/

What Can Economics Do For Literature?

LRR, March 8, 2018February 8, 2025

Rebecca Hill Whenever I tell people that I’m an English and Economics major I tend to get surprised glances. “That’s an unusual combination,” I’ve been told more than once. “It’s good to be a writer in economics because a lot of economists are better at math than writing,” I’ll say. …

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Five Government Control Books Turned Found Poetry

LRR, March 7, 2018February 8, 2025

Amanda McCarthy Found poetry has been saturating the poetry world, from blackout poems to republishing snippets of sex offender law cases. Found poetry is crafted out of any work by rearranging, omitting, or just spacing out a text. In honor of the film adaptation of Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer’s release…

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6 Author’s Quotes to Make You Feel Better About the World

LRR, March 6, 2018February 8, 2025

Andrew Katz Alright, I’m feeling particularly positive today, so I thought it might be good to think about some cool quotes from some pretty smart people and how they can put you in your feelings. The world can be a dark and scary place sometimes (especially at night), but you…

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An Open Letter to the College Student Who Doesn’t Know Where They’re Going

LRR, March 5, 2018February 8, 2025

Max Gasner Dear <student>, This letter is for you: the student who pretends they know where they’re going but have no idea. I know it’s hard to see everyone appear to have their life sorted out. Some of them may, but many of them are just as lost as you….

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3 Reasons to Read Your Writing to a Dog

LRR, March 2, 2018February 8, 2025

Austin Hill During the peak of winter when the temperature dipped into the single digits, my motivation was at an all time low. The ground was still covered in snow. This kept me locked away in my room, where I had spent the last few days finishing a midterm essay….

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5 Books by People of Color You Should Read

LRR, March 1, 2018February 8, 2025

Brianna McNish 2017 was a watershed year for writers of color: four out of the five finalists for the 2017 National Book Award were writers of color and Colson Whitehead was the recipient of the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for The Underground Railroad. Yet, people of color still face significant adversity…

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5 Openings I Don’t Want to Read in Your Novel

LRR, February 28, 2018February 8, 2025

Christian Buckley You may find yourself, a perspective novelist, dragging your forehead across the keyboard for your first chapter. And you’d be in good company as almost everyone has gone through this process. The first chapter is your chance to reel in your readers, but it’s also where you can…

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Blog

4 Novelists You Didn’t Know Were Poets

LRR, February 27, 2018February 8, 2025

Raeann Veronesi One time, I took a BuzzFeed quiz that told me to build a bedroom and they’ll tell me what to do with my life. My result? “Write the next great American Novel”. As a poet, I laughed. But also, as a poet, sometimes I have the urge to…

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7 Poems to Start Every Morning This Week With

LRR, February 26, 2018February 8, 2025

Kelly Stoldt I like to start off my mornings with a poem.  Reading or listening to poetry helps get myself in a headspace where I’m overall more in tune with my own emotions and the people around me.  They can be deep and heartbreaking, often both, and inspires me to…

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Albums to Read to

LRR, February 23, 2018February 8, 2025

Elizabeth Sankey I’ve always struggled combining my two favorite art forms: music and writing. Often, they can distract from one another when I’m attempting to both read and listen simultaneously. I’m sure many of us have experienced the distraction that comes with music interrupting the literary train of focus and…

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