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The Classical Journal: Review [85] "The Life of Towns" Grand Street: Essay [86] "Just for the Thrill: Sycophantizing Aristotle's Poetics" 1990 Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics: Essay [87] "Now What?" Grand Street: Translation & Poetry [88] "Short Talks" The Yale Review: Poetry [89] "Alphabetic Edge" 1991 The Canadian Bookbinders
The Adelphi or New Adelphi was an English literary journal founded by John Middleton Murry and published between 1923 and 1955. The first issue appeared in June 1923, with issues published monthly thereafter. Between August 1927 and September 1930 it was renamed the New Adelphi and issued quarterly.
Flesh and the Word: Assotto Saint: Here to Dare: George Stambolian: Men on Men 4: Lesbian Anthology Joan Nestle: The Persistent Desire: Winner [6] Katherine V. Forrest and Barbara Grier: Erotic Naiad: Finalist [6] Tee Corinne: Poetry of Sex: Anne MacKay: Wolf Girls at Vassar: Anita L. Pace: Write from the Heart: 1994 Anthology Henry Abelove ...
Hugh Brennan Scott Symons (July 13, 1933 – February 23, 2009), known professionally as Scott Symons, was a Canadian writer. [1] He was most noted for his novels Place d'Armes and Civic Square, among the first works of LGBT literature ever published in Canada, [2] as well as a personal life that was often plagued by scandal and interpersonal conflict.
The narrator, commenting on the antics of his own literary creation, named Justin Horgenschlag, remarks sarcastically: “You can’t expect Collier’s readers to swallow that kind of bilge.” [12] Significantly, “The Heart of a Broken Story” was accepted for publication in Esquire—and not Collier’s. [13]
William Howard Gass (July 30, 1924 – December 6, 2017) [1] was an American novelist, short story writer, essayist, critic, and philosophy professor. He wrote three novels, three collections of short stories, a collection of novellas, and seven volumes of essays, three of which won National Book Critics Circle Award prizes and one of which, A Temple of Texts (2006), won the Truman Capote ...
In 1937 he edited Hermes, the annual literary journal of the University of Sydney Union, in which many of his early poems, beginning in 1935, [1] were published until 1941. [2] He began his life as an Anglican and was sometime organist and choirmaster at Holy Trinity Church, Dulwich Hill, in Sydney. He lost his Christian faith as a younger man.
The Cornhill Magazine (1860–1975) was a monthly [1] Victorian magazine and literary journal named after the street address of the founding publisher Smith, Elder & Co. at 65 Cornhill in London. [2] [3] In the 1860s, under the editorship of William Makepeace Thackeray, the paper's large circulation peaked around 110,000. Due to emerging ...