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Atlanta Review is an international poetry journal based in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. It was founded by Daniel Veach in 1994 and is published twice a year. Karen Head of the Georgia Institute of Technology became editor in 2016. [1] The journal's focus is poetry, but interviews and black-and-white artwork are occasionally accepted.
The Georgia Review is a literary journal based in Athens, Georgia. Founded at University of Georgia in 1947, [ 1 ] the journal features poetry, fiction, essays, book reviews, and visual art. The journal has won National Magazine Awards for Fiction in 1986, for Essays in 2007, and for Profile Writing in 2020.
Below is a list of literary magazines and journals: periodicals devoted to book reviews, creative nonfiction, essays, poems, short fiction, and similar literary endeavors. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Because the majority are from the United States , the country of origin is only listed for those outside the U.S.
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Joyland (formerly known as Joyland: A hub for short fiction) is a digital platform and print literary journal.It was created in 2008 [1] by novelist Emily Schultz [2] and filmmaker Brian Joseph Davis. [3]
New South (previously known as The GSU Review) is an American print literary magazine published twice a year by Georgia State University. Founded in 2007 by Jamie Iredell and Christopher Bundy, it is affiliated with GSU's Creative Writing program, which also publishes the literary magazine Five Points. Anna Sandy-Elrod is the Editor-in-Chief of ...
Free State Review was founded in 2012 by Hal Burdett, J. Wesley Clark, and Barrett Warner. [3] Initially, submissions were generated by word of mouth until its website launched in 2013. The first issue, which came out in 2013, featured a painting by Pulitzer prize winning poet Mark Strand. [4] The journal's motto is "Totally Limited Omniscience ...