Copies of the new issue shipped from the printer December 7 but have been delayed in the postal system. We apologize for the delay and thank you for your patience!

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Archives for December 2012

Year-end giving at New England Review

December 14, 2012

As the year winds to a close, we hope you’ll consider making a charitable contribution to New England Review.

Your gift will directly support the creation of new literature, sustaining the writers, editors, and artists who make this journal “among the nation’s best,” according to the Boston Globe.

Recent NER contributors include U.S. and State Poet Laureates, Guggenheim and NEA Literature Fellows, and writers working towards their very first books. Work from New England Review appears every year in the Pushcart Prize anthologies, the Best American series, and the O Henry Prize anthology. Our print issues draw together established and new voices, and, between issues, the magazine’s web site presents new features and an original creative writing series.

We hope you will consider making a gift—of any size—that will help to support NER. We look forward to giving our readers another year of exceptional writing by authors whose work really matters.

You can give online, by phone at 888.367.6433, or by mail to 5 Court Street, Middlebury, VT 05753. All gifts are tax deductible.

Thank you!

Filed Under: NER Community Tagged With: Support NER

Self-Portrait as Superman

December 13, 2012

From Jake Adam York’s “Self-Portrait as Superman (Alternate Take),” in the current issue:

At twenty-four frames per second, sixty seconds is two hundred
feet of film you’ll never see: Christopher Reeve
ready to become mild-mannered Clark Kent—sharp

trilby and blue chalk-pinstripe suit—
once they call Action, the Who-me smile fading
to bit-lip circumspection, cover story and secret,

hand on the button-down’s placket, ready to pull
the buttons from their eyes, peel
the rough-hewn cotton from the ancient crest, the S

[read more]

Filed Under: Poetry Tagged With: Jake Adam York, Self-Portrait as Superman

Waiting for the Hurricane

December 12, 2012

From Jennifer Grotz’s “Listening,” in the current issue:

Water turns everything into a jewel
then puts a metal taste in the mouth
slowly replaced by dust. Which is why standing
in the rainy street you feel much richer than you are. Or, aware that everything will dry, much poorer.

You feel that way anyway in New York, and a little lost,
but let’s be honest, that’s what you want, to hide,
and like an owl, you’ve retreated not to high branches
but an anonymous skyrise.

[read more]

Filed Under: Poetry Tagged With: Jennifer Grotz, Listening

I Could Say I’ve Been a Shadow

December 11, 2012

From Brendan Grady’s “Moths,” in the current issue:

We know the moths circling the porch light,
the dolt among them breaking orbit,
dusty Icarus drawn to his demise.

This isn’t new, but seventeen others
stuck on the wall have turned their wings
against it, like stoics, as if the light isn’t light,

and if they move, it is only a slight flutter,
a twitch of motion, before they still again.

[read more]

Filed Under: Poetry Tagged With: Brendan Grady, Moths

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Cover art by Ralph Lazar

Volume 41, Number 4

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Writer’s Notebook

Writer’s Notebook—No Ruined Stone

Shara McCallum

Writer’s Notebook—No Ruined Stone

Answering such queries typically falls to novelists. But, being a poet, I felt compelled to ask poetry to respond.

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