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  2. List of literary magazines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_literary_magazines

    Others: A Magazine of the New Verse (United States, 1915–1919) Partisan Review (United States, 1934–2003) Pearl (United States, 1974–2014) Pen Pusher (United Kingdom, 2005–2011) Pertinent (Australia, 1940–1947) The Port Folio (United States, 1800–1814) Puck (United States, 1984–1997) Quarterly Review of Literature (United States ...

  3. Heart of Darkness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_of_Darkness

    The tale was first published as a three-part serial, in February, March, and April 1899, in Blackwood's Magazine (February 1899 was the magazine's 1000th issue: special edition). Heart of Darkness was later included in the book Youth: a Narrative, and Two Other Stories, published on 13 November 1902 by William Blackwood.

  4. Category : Literary magazines published in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Literary...

    Chinese Literature Today; Chips (literary magazine) Chiron Review; The Cimarron Review; College English; Colorado Review; The Common (magazine) The Comparatist; Comparative Literature Studies; Concho River Review; Configurations (journal) Confluence (journal) Confrontation (journal) Conjunctions (journal) Contemporary Literature (journal ...

  5. Arthur Krystal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Krystal

    Krystal has written for publications including The American Scholar, Harper's Magazine, The New Yorker, The New York Times Book Review, The Times Literary Supplement, The Wall Street Journal, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Washington Post Book World, New York Newsday, The Village Voice, The New Criterion, the Los Angeles Review of Books, Sports Illustrated, Art & Antiques, the ...

  6. Execrabilis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Execrabilis

    Pius II had intended Execrabilis to put a definitive end to all future attempts to appeal papal decisions to a council. However, his intention was weakened by the fact that this injunction was not consistently invoked by subsequent Renaissance popes in response to the various manifestations of conciliarist tendencies.

  7. John Reynolds (writer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Reynolds_(writer)

    Dolarnys Primrose was an early work, published in 1606. In 1650 Reynolds published an imitation of the Arcadia, with interspersed verse, entitled The Flower of Fidelitie: displaying, in a continuate historie, the various adventures of three foreign princes (London, 1650); a seventh edition, with alterations, bore the alternative title of the Garden of Love (London, 1721).

  8. Fugitives (poets) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fugitives_(poets)

    James Marshall Frank home at 3802 Whitland Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee, where the Fugitive Poets regularly met from 1920 to 1928 (photo: December, 2021). About 1920, a group consisting of some influential teachers of literature at Vanderbilt, a few townies, and some students began meeting on alternate Saturday nights at the home of James Marshall Frank and his brother-in-law Sidney Mttron ...

  9. John Livingston Lowes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Livingston_Lowes

    Though later critics have disputed both Lowes' findings and method, The Road to Xanadu, [8] according to English author Toby Litt, is "a book of a lifetime": "Its argument, that Coleridge had one of the most extraordinary minds the world has ever seen, is there on every page"; it "is one of the books which helped me understand what writing is." [9]