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Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Tag: student writers

“Moon-Stain and Crawdad Eater” by Charlie M. Case

LRR, June 8, 2022June 8, 2022

CW: Death, Domestic abuse This is what is most important: the ache in scraped knees. The crawdads scuttling among river rocks. The groan of pipes in your cracked kitchen sink. Night stealing hours. Ponds like meters-wide tide pools. Mud stealing hours. The leak in your bedroom ceiling, the water damage…

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“Knell Inevitable” by Charlie M. Case

LRR, June 8, 2022June 8, 2022

CW: Illness, Death It came to me on the sixth night of my sickness, when the suffering had ceased to be new. I had been lulled into those familiar throes which, now that I was accustomed to them, deceived me into thinking that they were kinder. In came something—and I…

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“When Treading Water Above a Bottomless Pit” by John Guillemette Jr.

LRR, June 4, 2022June 4, 2022

Contest Winner for the Edwin Way Teale Award for Nature Writing (2022) I moved to Oregon during the dreadful forest fires of 2020. I moved out of Oregon during the even more dreadful forest fires of 2021. I came and went in smoke so thick that nobody noticed. As my…

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“The Ostrava Line” by Liam Kelsey

LRR, June 4, 2022June 4, 2022

Contest winner for The Long River Review Graduate Award (2022) “What would you like to know about yourself?” This was what my neighbor asked me when I took my seat. He was wearing a black suit and had a thick laptop resting on his thighs. I asked him what he…

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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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The Road to Hell By August Jones (2017)

LRR, June 30, 2017June 24, 2017

When I was seven, we made poetry books in school. I wrote two poems about my childhood dog, one about my grandpa, and one about 9/11. The rest were gibberish. On the cover, I drew broken hearts, storm clouds, a syringe, and my mom crying in the den. My dog…

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i think i dreamed you by Aryanah Haydu (2017)

LRR, June 27, 2017June 24, 2017

day 1 We met and though I was elsewhere involved, I knew that he would be the sweetest thing my eyes would ever reach. He had a long term girlfriend but still I couldn’t take my eyes from his toiled blonde hair those anesthetic blue eyes. He looked full to…

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