Skip to content
Long River Review Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

  • Home
  • About
    • Meet the 2026 Long River Review Staff!
    • Meet the Teams
  • Online Work
    • Blog
    • Interviews
    • Podcasts
    • Contest Winners
      • Poetry Winners
      • Fiction Winners
      • Creative Nonfiction Winners
      • Translations Winners
  • Submit
  • The Archive
    • Team Archive
      • Meet the 2025 Long River Review Staff!
    • Issues Archive
      • LRR 2024
      • LRR 2023
      • LRR 2022
      • LRR 2021
      • LRR 2020
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

Tag: writing

2017 Bags and Books Sale!

LRR, March 6, 2017

It’s back for 2017! Mark your calendars. If you have any books you’d like to donate (or just want more information) please contact us on our Facebook page.

Continue Reading

The Sputter: The Monster Under Every Writer’s Bed (and how you can fight it)

By: Amanda McCarthy

LRR, March 3, 2017February 8, 2025

It is nine-thirty on a Monday night. Usually, you’re not a last-minute-poet. But tonight, your midnight deadline is drowning under pages and pages of beginning lines that, at this point, sound more like the humming of a garbage disposal than poetry. You do really well under pressure, so generally this…

Continue Reading

Becoming the Writer That I’ve Always Been

By: Julia Alexander

LRR, March 1, 2017February 8, 2025

Ever since I could read and write, I have been infatuated with storytelling. I remember the desk in my childhood bedroom overflowing with half-filled notebooks and the scraps of torn out pages. My handwriting, barely legible to anyone but myself, was scrawled across papers that were stalked high like mountains….

Continue Reading

How to Surive an Attack from an Ex-M15 Agent: Eleven Steps to Getting the Most out of Your Writing Workshop

By: Jameson Croteau

LRR, February 27, 2017February 8, 2025

Someone told me— right before my transatlantic flight—that Englishmen hate confrontation. Flash forward to my writing internship in London and I have an ex-MI5 agent, veins popping purple through the Skype window on my 16-inch laptop screen, about to burst from my criticism of his second to-be-published novel. His vitriol,…

Continue Reading

Want to Write? Get Talking.

By Benjamin Schultz

LRR, February 21, 2017February 8, 2025

Like most people, I can never pass up a good story. I’m sure that you are no different. Stories have always been able to captivate the human psyche– whether spoken, written, or edited together. Even that Super Bowl commercial that made you laugh is telling a story (albeit one 30…

Continue Reading

When is a Good Time to Stop Writing? Spoiler Alert: Probably Never.

By Emily Catenzaro

LRR, February 20, 2017February 8, 2025

On the subject of perseverance in writing, a question that may linger in many writers’ minds is: what is the correct timetable for getting published? If your goal is to publish a book of prose or poetry, sell a screenplay, or land a job at a prominent periodical, you may…

Continue Reading

My Inconsistent Affair with Literature

By: Parker Gregory Shpak

LRR, February 14, 2017February 8, 2025

My relationship with literature has been inconsistent at best. As much as I would like to pass myself off as the prodigal son of the modern literati, heralding the return of the writer-artist to the public eye, it would be dishonest to posture as anything resembling that figure. When I…

Continue Reading

Musings of a Curious Newbie

By: Breanna Patterson

LRR, February 8, 2017February 8, 2025

I’m an amateur writer. I’ve clawed out my own precious corner of my school’s Creative Writing Program and it is in this space that I am continuously attempting to prove myself. That’s the issue with writers: we sit in front of our keyboards, we psychoanalyze our own characters, and we…

Continue Reading

MFA—Recipe For Success or Disaster?

By Kate Monica

LRR, March 31, 2016February 8, 2025

“Does any (MFA) program really improve anybody, as much as simply identifying them? And, after identifying them, not ruining them?” —Chang-rae Lee, On Such A Full Sea Getting an MFA seems like the natural progression for any English major looking to take a swing at making a career of writing….

Continue Reading

Stay Creative This Spring Break

by Emily Cantor

LRR, March 11, 2016February 8, 2025

“You can’t wait for inspiration, you have to go after it with a club.” — Jack London It’s been a long winter of below-freezing temperatures, snow, and that signature Storrs wind that we all love to hate. But Spring Break is approaching quickly and it’s bringing exactly the kind of…

Continue Reading
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • Next
©2026 Long River Review | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes

Review My Order

0

Subtotal

Taxes & shipping calculated at checkout

Checkout
0

Loading Comments...

You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Notifications