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

Hearing Poetry

LRR, March 24, 2013February 8, 2025

Although I’ll be the first person to admit that I love nothing more than curling up with a book of poetry, there is something very special about hearing the words on a page come alive through a writer’s voice.  The way in which poets play with language becomes evident upon…

Continue Reading

Suggested reading: picture books for adults! (I mean, graphic novels)

LRR, March 21, 2013February 8, 2025

So, it’s spring break and you’re haunted by the pile of required reading that is waiting for you next week. You spend hours watching bad television just to relax your poor, tired brain. But then you start to feel a little guilty—you love reading, after all. It’s just that reading…

Continue Reading

Building (and Cleaning Out) Your Book Collection

LRR, March 20, 2013February 8, 2025

The end of the spring semester is fast approaching and for me that means moving home, a place I have not lived consistently for about three years. Because of this, I recently decided to redo my room, putting away the pictures and collection of knick-knacks that remind me of my…

Continue Reading

The Devaluation of Creativity

LRR, March 17, 2013February 8, 2025

In my long experience on the receiving end of the education system, I have found that there is a significant part of our culture that devalues creativity, especially the fields of Liberal Arts and Fine Arts. In my four years of college as an English and Psychology major, I have…

Continue Reading

An Interview with Bruce Cohen (2013)

LRR, March 15, 2013June 16, 2017

  Bruce Cohen has written three volumes of poetry: Placebo Junkies Conspiring With the Half Asleep (2012), Swerve (2011), and Disloyal Yo-Yo (2009). He teaches creative writing at UConn. The following interview was conducted by Long River Review’s Tatiana Gomez. Long River Review: So tell me about the experience that…

Continue Reading

A Literary Meal

LRR, March 13, 2013February 8, 2025

I’ve been noticing a trend in many of the readings for my children’s lit class… there’s A LOT of food. And some of the descriptions are so vivid and detailed that you can almost picture yourself enjoying the cuisine. Ranging from the delightfully decadent (like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’s…

Continue Reading

Lines From the Works of William Shakespeare, or Jay-Z Lyrics?

LRR, March 2, 2013February 8, 2025

Answers at the bottom. Good luck. We swaggering here For now I get around Life is but a dream to me I hit it right She’s too low for a high I flow too many ways These clothes are good enough to drink in I’ll teach you how to flow…

Continue Reading

Exploitation of Femininity in “The Hunger Games”

LRR, February 24, 2013February 8, 2025

Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games is classified as a young adult book.  There are several characteristics that define a book as young adult literature, but the strongest characteristic is the main character’s ascension to adulthood as he or she grapples with issues of power.  While Katniss initially appears to be…

Continue Reading

Is Poetry Dead?

LRR, February 13, 2013February 8, 2025

In 2003, Newsweek released an article titled “Poetry Is Dead.  Does Anybody Really Care?”  The article, as you might guess, asserts the position of poetry as an irrelevant artform in today’s day and age.  The author claims that poetry simply cannot survive in our culture of notoriously short attention spans…

Continue Reading

Literature in Unlikely Places. Every Word Matters.

LRR, February 13, 2013February 8, 2025

When thinking about the word Literature we often only think of books. What we forget is that Literature is the art of written work. Written work can be anywhere, not just in books and although contradictory to its definition, it does not even have to be written.  Written work can…

Continue Reading
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 81
  • 82
  • 83
  • …
  • 87
  • Next

Want to Contribute?

  • Get Involved
  • Submit Your Work
  • Donate
©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