Louisiana Literature
Louisiana Literature is a literary magazine. Founded in 1984 by Southeastern Louisiana University, it publishes fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction quarterly.[1]
Editors
Editor, as of October 2009, was Jack Bedell.
Honors and awards
- Robert Olen Butler's short story, "Heavy Metal", was reprinted in New Stories from the South 2000.[2]
- Jacob M. Appel's short story, "Counting", was short-listed for the O. Henry Award in 2001.[3]
- Aaron Gwyn's short story, "Of Falling", appeared in New Stories from the South 2002.
- R.T. Smith's short story, "Tastes Like Chicken", appeared in New Stories from the South 2006.[4]
- Clinton J. Stewart's short story, "Bird Dog", appeared in New Stories from the South 2009.
- Writer's Digest named Louisiana Literature a "Top 50" market for both fiction and poetry in 2008.
Masthead
As of October 2009:
- Editor: Jack B. Bedell
- Associate Editors: Norman German, William Parrill
- On-line Editor: Chris Tusa
References
- ^ "Novelists Among SLU Magazine Contributors," The Advocate (Baton Rouge), August 3, 1999.
- ^ New Stories From The South (2006)
- ^ The O. Henry Prize Stories 2001
- ^ New Stories From The South (2006)
See Also
External links