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Three a generous amount of space was devoted to a particular featured poet (occasionally a group). The ... best way to describe Origin is simply to list the featured writers issue by issue. In Series Two, there ... carried many of the poets who had figured prominently in the first series. In each issue of Series Two and ...
Fall 1980
clinging to the Little Tailor, it is not. Were the new writers, produced in wholesale lots by Campbell, ... the science fiction community like a thunderclap. It has no "science" in it. The ... "Modern Science Fiction." Is Modern Science Fiction based on The Mightiest Machine? Ex­ cept in ...
concentrated on organized internal dissent. Today's nov­ elists, playwrights and poets, unlike writers ... paradox if we are to understand the writers in this issue. In 1985, one could attend a mass rally, or ... Page 20 from Issue 69 much incendiary internal criticism as it did. We must confront this apparent ...
libraries. The poet John Keene has served as this month’s guest Twitter author for the Poetry Foundation. For ... Karen Zemanick Thursday, April 28, 2011 Blog Kathleen Rooney posts today at Harriet, the news blog ... of the Poetry Foundation, about the organization Hey Small Press!. Here’s who they are: We are Hey ...
third-party content." After the popular success of his serial parody on Twitter, Dan Sinker donated ... Iowa Writers’ Workshop serves him well in his business career. He notes, “People depend on narratives ... analytics.” The Guardian writes about chapbooks worth collecting: "Today's chapbooks, which are ...
magazines because they have that particular feature of bringing in new writers. Many publish foreign work in ... magazine. Reed Whittemore once asked, "Does the little magazine of today occupy as important ... magazines then; they were more centered; they were the meeting places of the important writers, who today ...
Winter 1991/92
Page from Issue 83 Fiction • Poetry. Art • Criticism Three times a year The New York Times has ... called TriQuarterly "perhaps the pre-eminent journal for literary fiction" in the ... featured as the cover of TQ #74. will be shipped In a sturdv, �peCially c rarted mailing tube. o I enclose ...
Monday, June 15, 2015

Everyone who worked to make TriQuarterly an online journal wanted to create a beautiful, highly functional site designed with the reader in mind.  We hope our readers will continue to enjoy the look and use of our site.  But there was a second goal, too—a very large one that seemed both difficult and tremendously exciting.  This was to digitize and upload the entire print history of TriQuarterly and make it available everywhere without any cost to readers.   TriQuarterly’s history as a print journal is a unique and (we believe) peerless resource for readers and for those who study late-twentieth century and twenty-first century writing.

TriQuarterly’s earlier history is the documentation of an explosively creative time, especially in short fiction.  Also, the special issues—so various, often compendious, and unusual, from the 1960s to the early 1990s—are now fascinating windows on writers, topics and places that were part of the continuous remaking of literary culture both in the U.S. and abroad.  The special issues include a massive, groundbreaking issue on the history of the “little magazine” in America; the early book-length collection of essays on Jorge Luis Borges; the two cold-war volumes of translated “Russian Literature and Culture in the West”; the Nabokov issue and the Sylvia Plath issue (first gatherings of essays on these writers), as well as those on Leszek Kolakowski and Thomas McGrath; the conceptual art issue; the boxed two-volume issue filled with what is now, almost 40 years later, called “flash fiction”; the special issues of the 1980s and early 1990s on South Africa (the first imagining in the U.S. of what a post-apartheid literary culture might and should look like), Spain after the end of censorship, Poland under martial law, Mexico (the first collection of translated Mexican writing since the poetry anthology of Octavio Paz and Samuel Beckett in the late 1950s ), and writing about Chicago; the issues with special features on poetry from India and Chiapas; the extensive presentation of the work of William Goyen and John Cage.  To say nothing of all the general issues, including the many published between 1974 and 1981 that focused so often on what was new and exciting in American fiction, and the 1990 anthology issue of the best fiction published in TQ during the 1980s.

Digitizing this rich trove is well under way, and on the occasion of the publication of this issue, TriQuarterly 148, we offer our readers the first sampling of the print issues, selected from different eras of the magazine’s print life.  Over the next year or so, we will upload all of TriQuarterly from #1 to #137.

139

Featuring the Work of:
  • Ben Greenman
  • Carlos Cunha
  • James Tadd Adcox
  • William Goyen
  • Patrice Repusseau
Winter/Spring 2011

138

Featuring the Work of:
  • Jane Hamilton
  • Joe Meno
  • Jonathan Evison
  • Thisbe Nissen
  • David Driscoll
Summer/Fall 2010

95

Winter 1995/96

105

Spring/Summer 1999

115

Spring 2003

117

Fall 2003

18

Spring 1970

60

Chicago
Morris Dickstein
The City as Text: New York and the American Writer Print Pages:  Page 183 from Issue 83 The City ... as Text: New York and the American Writer Morris Dickstein for Alfred Ka?:in If the Ciry is a text, ... how shall we read it?- Joyce Carol Oates' Cities are constructions of steel and stone, ...

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