Greensboro Review

The Greensboro Review, founded in 1966, is one of the nation's oldest literary magazines, based at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in Greensboro, North Carolina. It publishes fiction and poetry on a semi-annual basis. Work from the journal is featured in such anthologies as New Stories from the South, the O. Henry Prize Stories, and the Best American Short Stories.[1] Founded by poet Robert Watson, the journal was edited for many years by Jim Clark during his tenure as director of the MFA program; it is currently edited by MFA director Terry L. Kennedy. The original design of the magazine was updated in 1989 by then-MFA in Poetry candidate S. P. Donohue, who served as the poetry editor and production manager from 1989–90.

Greensboro Review
DisciplineLiterary journal
LanguageEnglish
Edited byJim Clark
Publication details
History1969-present
Publisher
FrequencyBiannual
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Greensb. Rev.
Indexing
ISSN0017-4084
Links

The Review awards the Robert Watson Literary Prizes.

Notable contributors

gollark: Oh yes, we know about the objects in advance, right.
gollark: Can you even work out where it is in 3D space unambiguously without *two* cameras?
gollark: Ah. Yes. Would we not need much information about the camera and stuff?
gollark: ?
gollark: Ideally for feed the fish and whatever we would know exactly where the robot is and exactly where the target object is in 3D space and have some code work out exactly how to turn and whatever to go there, but hahahahano.

See also

References

  1. Greensboro Has Spawned A Host of Talented Writers, Greensboro News and Record, September 16, 1990


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