North Dakota Quarterly

North Dakota Quarterly (NDQ) is a literary journal published quarterly by the University of North Dakota. NDQ publishes poetry, fiction, interviews, and literary non-fiction. It was first published in 1911 as a vehicle for faculty papers. After a hiatus during the depression, NDQ began publishing again with a broader focus that gradually came to include stories and poems. Preeminent Hemingway scholar Robert W. Lewis edited NDQ from 1982 until his death in 2013 and published about a dozen special editions focused on Hemingway, as well as a number of special editions focused on China, Yugoslavia, and Native American issues and literature. In 2019, NDQ began being published by the University of Nebraska Press.[1]

North Dakota Quarterly
DisciplineLiterary journal
LanguageEnglish
Edited byWilliam Caraher
Publication details
Former name(s)
Quarterly Journal; Quarterly Journal of the University of North Dakota
History1911-present, with a 30-year break prior to 1956
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4N. D. Q.
Indexing
ISSN0029-277X
LCCN12001863
OCLC no.01606908
Links

Contributors

Honors and awards

  • Pushcart Prize in 2008 "Overwintering in Fairbanks," an essay by Erica Keiko Iseri that first appeared in NDQ [3]
  • O. Henry Award in 1993 for The Killing Blanket by Rilla Askew
  • The Council of Editors of Learned Journals (CELJ), runner up in 1993 for best special issue, Out of Yugoslavia
gollark: Meanwhile on DCF, people continue to apply trade hub rules logic to the reverse engineering section of the T&C!
gollark: Soon... soon I shall have my mandatory 3 xenowyrms.
gollark: <@292188390684753920> No name shorter than 32 chars is too long!
gollark: This sounds worryingly like something TJ09'd do.
gollark: Oh, imaginary TJ09...

See also

References

  1. "Print is not dead – UND Today". Retrieved 2019-02-18.
  2. Reading Poems by Former President, Grand Forks Herald, Sept 18, 1992
  3. ESSAY PUBLISHED IN N.D. QUARTERLY CHOSEN FOR 2008 PUSHCART PRIZE, Grand Forks Herald, Feb. 2, 2008
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