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Long River Review
Long River Review

UConn's Literary & Arts Magazine

5 Tips for Being a Good Editor

LRR, March 3, 2015February 8, 2025

A good writer is nothing without a good editor. However, a good editor is not always easy to come by. Just as there is an art to writing, there is an art to editing. Here are five tips for being a good editor.  Proofreading is not editing. Proofreading (or copyediting)…

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Rebel Against Yourself

LRR, March 2, 2015February 8, 2025

Often when we settle down to read for pleasure, we instinctively reach for an easy read, a book we can flip through and digest in a single sitting without coming up for air. These are books to be briefly enjoyed, then dismissed from our minds. We should keep reading them….

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On Being “Deliberate and Afraid of Nothing:” Black Women Poets You Should Know

LRR, March 1, 2015February 8, 2025

Audre Lorde, a famous black lesbian feminist poet, ends her poem “A Woman Speaks” with the lines, “I am/woman/and not white.” What may come off as obvious or overly simplistic in this statement actually speaks to larger structures of power that operate within feminist and anti-racist movement discourses. By claiming…

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“The Power of Words”

LRR, February 27, 2015February 8, 2025

  “I wrote down ‘The Power of Words’ in my sketchbook and I don’t know why.” Mika Caldera, an art student at the University of Connecticut, presented this piece, “Empathy,” (pictured above) to me during a one minute artist-writer speed dating event that was held. She expressed her love for…

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“I don’t want to miss out on living because I’m too busy writing” – Hanging Out With Kate Monica (2015)

LRR, February 27, 2015March 5, 2024

The most surprising thing I learned about Kate Monica, UConn’s 2015 representative of the Connecticut Poetry Circuit, was that poetry was not a life-long pursuit for her. Rather, she used to hate it. Her work is so fluid and natural, informal but still balanced and graceful that I assumed she…

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Writing Advice From the King

LRR, February 26, 2015February 8, 2025

Last year I was assigned to read a book on creative writing. I wound up choosing Stephen King’s On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft; a cheeky, bright, and inspiration text by one of the most successful authors in the business. In between snippets of Stephen King’s life and his personal…

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Can Grammar Be Fun?

LRR, February 25, 2015February 8, 2025

All is (almost) quiet on the LRR front after a barrage of colorful pens took to the rough draft of the journal in class last night. As students and as aspiring writers, we are used to the concept of editing and proofreading. We know the basic rules, we have learned…

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“I am first a creature of the imagination” – An Interview with Poet Benjamin Grossberg (2015)

LRR, February 24, 2015March 5, 2024

Benjamin Grossberg, Spring 2015 representative of the “Writers Who Edit, Editors Who Write” series, is passionate and personable. I had the opportunity to ask him a few questions, and the resulting conversation is a thoughtful reflection of all the different roles a writer can play. Supplement your experience of his…

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The Parts That Stay, Recommendations

LRR, February 23, 2015February 8, 2025

There are certain pieces of writing that I have for one reason or another returned to. This list of writings is embarrassing, probably juvenile and ill explained. However, there is still merit in the stepping stones of the random pieces of literature, I’ve used them as handholds, or they have…

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Artist Spotlight: Nicole Horsman

LRR, February 22, 2015February 8, 2025

As each day brings us closer to the April 16th opening of UConn’s Senior Show, illustrator and animator Nicole Horsman is drawing feathery clocks. They’re for her senior project, which is an incredible feat of animation using traditional media: pens, paint, and film. For character development, Nicole looked to her…

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