New Orleans Review

New Orleans Review
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
Publisher
The Department of English at Loyola University (United States)
FrequencyBiannually
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4New Orleans Rev.
Indexing
ISSN0028-6400
OCLC no.435982137

New Orleans Review, founded in 1968,[1] is a journal of contemporary literature and culture that publishes "poetry, fiction, nonfiction, art, photography, film and book reviews"[2] by established[3] and emerging writers and artists. New Orleans Review is a publication of the Department of English at Loyola University New Orleans. Lindsay Sproul is the current editor-in-chief.

New Orleans Review is published biannually and is distributed nationally and internationally by Ingram Periodicals. Work published in New Orleans Review has been reprinted in anthologies such as the Pushcart Prize Anthology, Best American Nonrequired Reading, New Stories From the South, Utne Reader, Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, and O. Henry Prize Stories. In 1978 the journal published an excerpt from Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole with a foreword by Walker Percy, who was a contributing editor to the magazine. The novel was subsequently published in 1980 by LSU Press and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1981. New Orleans Review published a critically acclaimed special issue on New Orleans by New Orleans writers and photographers in 2006 in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, which Tony D'Souza wrote in Salon is "a post-Katrina issue that avoids easy responses to the disaster, withholds simple prognoses for the future, and inhabits its moment of most-relevance so surely that its collective voice rises high above the din."[4]

  1. ^ Susan Larson (5 September 2013). The Booklover's Guide to New Orleans. LSU Press. pp. 1992–. ISBN 978-0-8071-5309-3.
  2. ^ "About".
  3. ^ Joseph M. Flora; Lucinda Hardwick MacKethan; Todd W. Taylor (January 2002). The Companion to Southern Literature: Themes, Genres, Places, People, Movements, and Motifs. LSU Press. pp. 638–. ISBN 978-0-8071-2692-9.
  4. ^ "Tony D'Souza's Articles at Salon.com".