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Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Category: Online Work

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

Why Social Media Poetry Isn’t the End of the World Or, Why Christopher Poindexter is More Successful Than You

LRR, February 7, 2018February 8, 2025

Amanda McCarthy unsplash-logoJohannes Roth Poetry looks like leather-bound journals, sounds like typewriter keys, and tastes like lukewarm Malbec. Poetry is something you do in your hybrid study-library with your prized, purebred poodle Pascal at your feet. Sometimes, writers are inherently nostalgic creatures, wanting to crawl back into previous centuries to…

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10 Reasons to Start Your Own Bookstagram

LRR, February 6, 2018February 8, 2025

Rachel Conte I never found much satisfaction in scrolling through Instagram pictures of the same people fishing for likes by using cleavage and HD quality as bait, until one day I discovered the secret wardrobe of Instagram hidden from the mainstream drag; an endless bookiverse of readers just like myself…

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What Book to Read Next Based on How You Decorated your College Dorm Room

LRR, February 5, 2018February 8, 2025

Rebecca Hill Whether you’ve found yourself searching recently for the next book on your reading list or for your memories of certain nights in college, you may be surprised to learn that there’s no reason these two experiences can’t be combined—or at least, why not use what you do remember…

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Constance By Jeremiah Dennehy (2017)

LRR, July 9, 2017July 4, 2017

The Jennie Hackman Memorial Prize for Fiction, Third Place (2017) I don’t take the school bus, I don’t drive, and because mom doesn’t get home from work until four most of the time, I don’t ask her for a ride. But if I take the 509 toward Whitney Avenue at…

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Erythrophobia By Jameson Croteau (2017)

LRR, July 8, 2017July 4, 2017

From out in the outfield dirt, the crack of the bat was the only indicator a ball was rising up before dive bombing, back through the crepuscular sky. Jimmy turned and chased the echo of the sound. Go foul… Go foul… The ball, draped in a cloak of clouds, seemed…

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Crumbling Walls By Kristina Reardon (2017)

LRR, July 6, 2017July 4, 2017

Long River Graduate Writing Award, Winner (2017) “Petra, she say there be bones,” my grandmother told me, pointing beyond me to the old castle on top of the hill. The frame of the old, Slavic structure was about as beautiful as a decaying tooth with jagged corners. A revolting brownness…

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Angus By Sten Spinella (2017)

LRR, July 5, 2017July 4, 2017

The Jennie Hackman Memorial Prize for Fiction, Second Place (2017) The girl I was seeing had this dog, a real fluffy fucker, whose name was Angus. It was her boyfriend’s dog. She was taking care of Angus because his owner was studying abroad in New Zealand for the semester. I…

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Cracking a Cold One with the Books

By: Parker Gregory Shpak

LRR, May 26, 2017February 8, 2025

Two of my most frequented hobbies are reading books and drinking beer. My favorite hobby, however, is reading books while drinking beer. Herein lies a primer for those of you who have perhaps dabbled in these pastimes, but have not yet mastered them in combination. Beer has as rich a…

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Where I Am Going And Where I Have Been

By: Maggie Parker

LRR, May 19, 2017February 8, 2025

I live in extremes. People laugh when I say that, they smile at me as if they know what I mean. “You go from zero to 60. But you got that from me.” My mother has said to me. But she’s wrong, I’m not like her. My intensity is drug…

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Ghostwriters: A Valuable Tool for both Rappers and Politicians Alike

By: Sten Spinella

LRR, May 11, 2017February 8, 2025

When the term “authenticity” comes up, it’s usually because the topic at hand is inauthentic. Authenticity, then, is hard to determine. Does it signify phoniness, or is it proof of validity? However, I am not out to define “authentic.” Instead, I’m writing to ask if authenticity matters. In 2010, The…

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