Skip to content
Long River Review Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

  • Home
  • About
    • Meet the 2025 Long River Review Staff!
    • Meet the Teams
  • Online Work
    • Blog
    • Contest Winners
      • Poetry
      • Fiction
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Translations
    • Interviews
    • Podcasts
    • Gallery
  • Submit
  • Issues Archive
    • LRR 2024
    • LRR 2023
    • LRR 2022
    • LRR 2021
    • LRR 2020
  • Contact Us
Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Tag: Robert Frost

Blog

The Line Between Artificial and Human Writing

LRR, March 25, 2025May 7, 2025

Written by: Toriana Grooms This semester, I am taking English 2614: Writing with Algorithms with Professor Kyle Booten, a course to learn basic coding skills to program computer-generated literature. Given the current fight between artificial intelligence and the art community, this course looks like a paradox. Not to mention, the…

Continue Reading
Blog

Dead Poets Society: New England Chapter

LRR, February 20, 2020February 8, 2025

Call me cliché, but with winter hanging around, the topic of death is on my mind more often than usual. This winter has been a little strange, with warmer temperatures than normal, but we won’t get into why that is. It has certainly increased outdoor activities – I’ve seen more…

Continue Reading

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…

Continue Reading

Remembering Robert Frost

by Emily Cantor

LRR, March 26, 2016February 8, 2025

“In three words I can sum up everything I’ve learned about life — It goes on.” —Robert Frost Today marks the 142nd birthday of the American poet Robert Lee Frost. Though Frost is most famous for his depictions of rural New England life, he was actually born in San Francisco….

Continue Reading
©2025 Long River Review | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes