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CMI publishes Creation magazine as well as the Journal of Creation. Creation reports that it has subscribers in more than 170 countries, [7] [independent source needed] with 60,000 copies of each issue produced. [8] Creation is published four times a year. The Journal of Creation is published three times a year.
Aerie was preceded by a small literary magazine, The Hog River Review, that was started in 1972. [1] Other campus publications included: From the Workshop, a product of Friday afternoon get-togethers; Explorations, composed exclusively of freshman literary accomplishments; and Conception, a creation of the English Department's honor society, Sigma Tau Delta.
Creation Quarterly (创造季刊) was a Chinese literary quarterly magazine founded in 1921 and published between 1922 and 1924. [1] [2] [3] Publication history.
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.
TriQuarterly journal was established in 1958 [1] as an undergraduate magazine remembered now for publishing the work of young Saul Bellow. [2] It was reshaped in 1964 by Charles Newman as an innovative national publication aimed at a sophisticated and diverse literary readership. [3]
The magazine was established in 1923 [2] by the Estonian writer Friedebert Tuglas. Its purpose was the publication and popularization of Estonian contemporary literature. Virtually all known Estonian authors have contributed to the journal. [citation needed]
After leaving the Creation Society in the 1928, he started up his own publisher, Liqun Books, through which he issued books and a literary journal. His output of fiction slackened after the early 1930s, and by the middle of the decade he was mainly writing science books and doing translations from the Japanese.
Though it published works "by, for, and about Mormons," Irreantum sought to be considered a literary, humanities-based journal, rather than a religious publication. It was advertised as "the only magazine devoted to Mormon literature." [39] It went on hiatus in 2013. [40] Five years later, in 2018, Irreantum was again published as an online ...