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Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Category: Online Work

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

PATERSON: The Blue-Collar Poet and Writing with a ‘Day Job’

By: Nicholas DiBenedetto

LRR, April 5, 2017February 8, 2025

Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson is Paterson in ways that I never realized something could be Paterson. The film’s star, Adam Driver, plays a bus driver and poet named Paterson, who lives in the city of Paterson, New Jersey, and whose favorite poet is William Carlos Williams (whose epic poem Paterson, is…

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“Women are a Decorative Sex”: Literary Misogyny and its Perpetuation

By: Sabrina O’Brien

LRR, April 4, 2017February 8, 2025

One thing that politics has reminded us in the last few months is that gender equality, even in a first-world country like the United States, still has a long way to go. Some women remain oblivious and believe they already have access to equality. This is, of course, false. The…

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Nostalgia’s Curse

By: Jameson Croteau

LRR, April 4, 2017February 8, 2025

My grandparents’ living room reeked of encroaching death. Nature, for years, had been welcomed into the cracks of the handpicked brick walls that had been layered and mortared as an act of love from my strong armed Papa. But every one of those flowers, vines, and blooms were dying, curling…

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Soundtracks for Studying and Writing

By: Emily Catenzaro

LRR, April 1, 2017February 8, 2025

I listen to soundtracks for fun. I’m not sure if it’s because of my background in figure skating, because I’m a big movie buff, or I just love music in general, but I’ve listened to soundtracks since I was a kid. When my peers were really excited about Eminem, I…

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Ten Books I was Assigned to Read as an Undergrad that Actually Didn’t Suck

By: Amanda McCarthy

LRR, March 31, 2017February 8, 2025

It happens every semester. You arrive on the first day of class, sit down, and pour over the list of assigned texts that you will need to trudge through over the coming months. You remember something your tenth grade English teacher said about the classics being important and every time…

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Procrastinating? Look to the Visual Narrative

By: Benjamin Schultz

LRR, March 31, 2017February 8, 2025

If there’s one thing college students know how to find on the Internet, it’s sequentially-conveyed stories that are just interesting enough to distract them from their coursework and just boring enough that they can leave and come back without missing anything. Here, I’d like to encourage a different approach to…

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A Foray into Fantasy: Seven Must-Read Recommendations

By: Rebecca Hill

LRR, March 29, 2017February 8, 2025

    The first book that I ever fell in love with was Dinosaurs at Dark, the first of the Magic Tree House series .  I remember sitting alone on the living room carpet at six years old when, suddenly, I realized I was reading a “real” book with no…

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Morrison’s Mystery Flavored Prose

By: Traci Parker

LRR, March 22, 2017February 8, 2025

Remember mystery flavored candy? When you were little, you and your friends would take turns tearing a piece from a mystery Airhead, and fight over what the flavor was. You used to roll white DumDum pops from cheek to cheek, closing your eyes as your mouth discerned hints of strawberry…

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10 Poems for Graduating Artists

By: Taylor Caron

LRR, March 20, 2017February 8, 2025

  I often think that I am the only second semester senior with artistic ambitions who is realizing that the coming months may not perfectly correspond with my long-held fantasies as a post-graduate. Maybe all of you, loyal readers, are ecstatic to begin working with one of the four big…

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Potato-Ball Days: Spring Cleaning and Rediscovering the Thrill of Pleasure

By: Nicholas DiBenedetto

LRR, March 19, 2017February 8, 2025

“Put all your books on the floor.” Marie Kondo The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing Spring has finally woken up here in New England! Okay, maybe not quite yet, but I’m sure I heard him rustling around in his room. Honestly, I don’t…

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