Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The magazine was established in 1985 [1] by Richard Burgin, who served as editor-in-chief through 2015. [2] In 1991 the magazine began to be published by Drexel University in Philadelphia where Richard Burgin taught. In the fall of 1996, Burgin moved to St. Louis and St. Louis University became its publisher, until the magazine became ...
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.
The Brooklyn Book Festival is an annual book fair held in the fall in Brooklyn, New York. [1] It was begun in 2006 by Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz , co-producers Liz Koch and Carolyn Greer [ 2 ] who wanted to showcase the "Brooklyn voice" in literature, as numerous authors reside in the borough . [ 3 ]
The Brooklyn Book Festival kicks off first with a week of citywide Bookend Events, then a lively Children's Day and finally a celebratory Festival Day with more than 300 authors and 250 ...
Boulevard (formerly known as The Boulevard) is a Long Island/New York City regional variety magazine owned by Anton Media Group. Founded in 1985, it was well received as a bi-monthly newspaper inserted into selected weekly newspapers in and around Long Island's Gold Coast. The glossy magazine was relaunched in 2016 after a 5-year hiatus as a ...
Printers Row Lit Fest is an annual book fair and literary festival held in Chicago, Illinois in September. The fair's literary "tableau . . . fills a downtown district where linotype machines and printing presses once whirred." [1] The neighborhood was an early book making hub. [2]
The 2015 book fair featured Chinese publishers for the first time. [8] [9] For a time, DigiCon from the International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF) ran concurrently with BEA. [10] However, the IDPF was absorbed into the W3C in 2017; [11] no further DigiCon events have been announced, though the W3C holds other conferences on digital publishing.
The magazine was founded in 2006 [3] by Brigid Hughes, [4] former Executive Editor of The Paris Review. [5] The magazine is published triannually. [3] In its debut issue in 2006, Hughes stated that the journal's mission was to be “A literary forum for the stories behind the news, a fragment of an overheard conversation, a peek at the novel the person next to you on the subway is reading, the ...