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Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Tag: UConn

It’s Here: the 20th Anniversary Issue of LRR!

LRR, June 4, 2017

It’s finally here, and it’s fluorescent. Our 20th Anniversary Issue is now available at the UConn Bookstore. We are so proud of this issue. Keep an eye out for the bright orange cover, and pick up your copy today. Thank you so much to our contributors that made this year’s…

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Another 2017 video!

LRR, June 4, 2017

Take a look at one of our earlier videos from 2017, created by Ben Schultz and starring Creative Nonfiction Panelist, Brandon Marquis. Video by: Benjamin Schultz Get pumped for the Long River Review's 20th Anniversary Edition to be released this April! Posted by Long River Review on Sunday, February 26,…

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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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Punctuation Party Stereotypes

By: Mairead Loschi

LRR, April 8, 2017February 8, 2025

If you’re living the life of a typical college student, you’ve probably made it to a party or two (no word back on if you remember them…). And, if you’re at all like me (a writer and a deeply introverted person), you’ve probably also cringed at the memory of going…

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Books and Videogames: A Marriage of Two Mediums

By: Autumn Magro

LRR, April 7, 2017February 8, 2025

I love videogames more than books – sometimes. It’s not easy to admit that books are not my one bountiful passion in life (because how romantic is that?), and it’s taken me even longer to rationalize the two together. Unlike books, there is a negative connotation with video games. There…

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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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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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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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Oh My Pod! Podcasts to Keep You Entertained Over Spring Break

By: Mairead Loschi

LRR, March 18, 2017February 8, 2025

Spring Break is finally here and it couldn’t have come sooner. You’re probably off to an exotic location or maybe even your bed (both options sound pretty amazing right now). Midterms are over and this is your chance to relax and get away from all of that reading and studying….

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Embarrassing First Lines

By: Sydney Lauro

LRR, March 17, 2017February 8, 2025

A few years ago, my mom found an old composition notebook of mine from when I was a wee tike. In it, there was one entry that struck her. It said something like: “Meghan (my sister) says if I try hard one day I might write good.” Even little me…

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  • 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
 

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