Baltimore Review

Baltimore Review is an American literary magazine founded in 1996.[1][2] It publishes short stories, poetry, creative nonfiction, interviews, and items of interest to those interested in creative writing. The Baltimore Review, a literary journal of poetry and fiction, was founded by Barbara Westwood Diehl as a publication of the Baltimore Writers Alliance. The journal grew to become a nationally distributed journal, and later became an independent nonprofit organization. Susan Muaddi Darraj then led the journal from 2003 to 2010, expanding contributions to include creative nonfiction and interviews. In 2011, Barbara Westwood Diehl resumed leadership of the journal and now serves as senior editor with Kathleen Hellen. The Baltimore Review became a Web-based journal in 2011, and the first Web issue was launched in February 2012. Web-published work would be collected in print issues. Work that first appeared in the Baltimore Review has been shortlisted for the Pushcart Prize and been noted in Best American Short Stories and other anthologies.

Baltimore Review
DisciplineLiterary journal
LanguageEnglish
Edited byBarbara Westwood Diehl
Publication details
History1996-present
FrequencyAnnual
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Baltim. Rev.
Indexing
ISSN1092-5716
Links

Notable contributors

Masthead

  • Barbara Westwood Diehl - Founding and Managing Editor
  • Dean Bartoli Smith
  • Elise Burke
  • Joanne Cavanaugh Simpson
  • Rick Connor
  • Cody Ernst
  • Benjamin Goldberg
  • Ann Eichler Kolakowski
  • Amanda Fiore
  • Jonathan Green
  • Julia Heney
  • Jennifer Holden Ward
  • Lisa Lance
  • Holly Morse-Ellington
  • Bobbi Nicotera
  • Lalita Noronha
  • Michael Salcman
  • Seth Sawyers
  • Ashley Scurto
  • Holly Sneeringer
  • Lynn Stansbury
  • Matt Diehl - Webmaster
gollark: I predict that the "boredom point" when people mostly leave and/or stop consuming large amounts of metals will occur before the ore depletion point.
gollark: Er, it's not bound to happen.
gollark: Assuming 100 ores a chunk, we have >50 million.
gollark: They're not limited very much, I mean.
gollark: Actually, ores barely matter.

See also

References

  1. Sandy Alexander, The Baltimore Sun, December 29, 2006
  2. Getting the Word Out? Baltimore City Paper, July 4, 2001
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