Wilderness House Literary Review # 14/3

WHLReview

145 Foster Street
Littleton MA 01460

The Wilderness House Literary Review is a publication devoted to excellence in literature and the arts.

TheWHLReview is published online quarterly. 


WHLR V3

To contact an editor simply click on a name below. To submit work to us please see "Submissions" below:

Editor & Publisher

Steve Glines 

Poetry Editor

Kate Hanson Foster

Poetry Readers

Carol Smallwood
Teisha Twomey

Fiction Editor

Tim Gager

Nonfiction Editor

Steve Glines

Book Reviews Editor

Doug Holder

Arts Editor/Curator

 Steve Glines

Poet in Residence

  Tomas O’Leary

 Submissions

Deadlines are as follows
March 1 – Spring
June 1 – Summer
September 1 – Autumn
December 1 – Winter

Please read this section before submitting work.

Please include some form of identification in the work itself.

All submissions must be in electronic form. Our preference is an MS Word file uploaded through the system below. Please do not send us pdf files. We can't use them.

By submitting work to us you grant us a non-exclusive license to publish your work in any form we see fit. You may withdraw a submission up until the issue deadline (see above).

We don't pay so you retain all copyrights. If we publish your work online we may include it in a printed edition.

Poetry may be submitted in any length. Please don't submit 100 poems and ask us to pick 3.

Fiction may be submitted in three formats:

  1. very short stories less than 500 words in length

  2. short stories less than 1000 words in length

  3. Short stories that don’t fit the above should be less than 3000 words.

We also accept longer forms of fiction occasionally.

Non-Fiction is just that so lets see some interesting footnotes. Non-fiction should be short, (a lot) less than 5000 words

Book Reviews should be positive unless the author is a well-known blowhard. Our mission is to encourage literature not discourage it..

Any form of art may be submitted with the constraint that it must be something that can be published in 2 dimensions. It’s hard to publish sculpture but illustrations together with some intelligent prose count.

Published works are welcome with proper attribution.

Please submit all works electronically. Click here to submit to Wilderness House Literary Review

 

 

Welcome to the 55th issue (Volume 14, no 3) of the Wilderness House Literary Review. WHLR is a result of the collaboration between a group of poets and writers who call themselves the Bagel Bards (who keep publishing their anthologies).

Lets get this out of the way. We use cookies, everyone uses cookies. Our cookies just tell us how many people take a look at Wilderness House Literary Review. Over the life of an issue we get about 1500 unique visitors. The cookies tell us who’s unique. If that's a problem We're sorry. Enough of that.

The stories, articles, poems and examples of art have been presented as PDF files. This is a format that allows for a much cleaner presentation than would otherwise be available on the web. If you don’t have an Adobe Reader (used to read a PDF file) on your computer you can download one from the Adobe website. These files are large and we hope you will be patient when downloading then, however we think the beauty of the words deserves a beautiful presentation.

Wilderness House Press has a Twitter feed and you can find us on Facebook or read about us on Wikipedia.

It costs quite a bit of money to keep publishing WHLR - Please help us out if you can as every little bit helps.

Our ISSN number is 2156-0153.

Let us know what you think in our Letters to the Editor.

Finally, the copyrights are owned by their respective authors whose opinions are theirs alone and do not reflect the opinions of our sponsors or partners.

Table of Contents

Opine

The cold and darkness of winter descend slowly upon us. Squirrels frantically hide their spoils before the first frost while late leaving butterflies, moths, and bugs fly south exhausted or else search for an overwinter hiding place. For some life hastens, for others, life slows. The hummingbirds left weeks ago.

A new birdseed formula (liberal dose of cayenne pepper added) hinders the chipmunks from hoarding the seed in the feeder. The Blue Jays can feed without a screeching dive-bombing run first. Color is late in the trees but inevitable. Nature hopes to sleep while human passions explode with imagined violence down in Washington. The rest of us keep our heads down and hope that, for once, politics can be just a spectator sport. At least for a short season.

Our vision: a Sunday afternoon battle with Team Trump on one side and Team Pelosi on the other. Rachael Madow calling the play-by-play and Stephen Colbert doing the color commentary (substitute your favorite Fox personalities if needed). We picture The Donald on the sidelines screaming instructions to his players on the field, his quarterback Rudi Giuliani sacked. Speaker Pelosi on her sideline (a female version of Bill Belichick) passing instructions to her quarterback Schiff. After four hours of yelling at the TV – and one too many beers – we retire for dinner and the rest of our evening. The beauty of being a writer is that you can live in many alternative Universes at the same time. We sit back, beer in hand, and wait for the first real frozen snowflake.

Don't forget to take a look at Poplar Hill by Stephen Ramey Glines in e-book or on Amazon for hardback.

Search the house

Art

  • Art? What art? We need an arts editor to ferret out some cool visual thingies. In the mean time our editor/publisher has fun creating art when he isn't editing, writing, or putting together books and WHLR: PIXELS

Buy a literature review from professional custom paper writing service.

Essay

A wonderful collection of essays came in over the transom this Summer.

Carol Smallwood has been interviewing writers for quite a while. Four interviews:



Fiction



For your reading pleasure we offer an outstanding collection of short stories by:

 

 



Poetry

 

 

Enjoy the collection of poetry we have assembled.

 

 

 

 

Reviews

For many more book reviews we'd like to point you to The Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene

In this issue, we have a review of Denise Provost's book of poetry. She is not only a long time Bagel Bard but she is also a State Representitive for parts of Somerville Massachusetts.

 

WHLReview is brought to you by:

An exciting travelog:
Support independent publishing: buy this book on Lulu.
Seven Days in Fiji
by Steve Glines

WHP

Dosha

Dosha, flight of the Russian Gypsies
by Sonia Meyer

Mitchell

What Drives Men
By Susan Tepper

Mitchell
The Last of the Bird People
a novel by John Hanson Mitchell

Daly
Sophocles' Ajax
translated by Dennis Daly


Ibbetson Street Press

As we said when we started this is a joint production of Wilderness House Literary Retreat and the “bagel bards”. The “Bagel Bards” have just published their nineth anthology. You may purchase them here:

Bagels with the Bards #5Bagels with the Bards #6Bagels with the Bards #7 Bagels with the Bards #8
BB#9 BB#9
BB#9 BB#9
BB#9

 

 

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