Wilderness House Literary Review # 19/1

WHLReview

145 Foster Street
Littleton MA 01460

The Wilderness House Literary Review is a publication devoted to excellence in literature and the arts.

TheWHLReview is published online quarterly. 

WHLR V3

To contact an editor simply click on a name below. To submit work to us please see "Submissions" below:

Editor & Publisher

Steve Glines 

Arts Editor

Bridget Seley Galway

Poetry Editor

Ravi Yelamanchilli

Fiction Editor

Joseph Carrabis

Nonfiction Editor

Steve Glines

Book Reviews Editor

Doug Holder

Poet in Residence

Tomas O’Leary

 Submissions

Deadlines are as follows
March 1 – Spring
June 1 – Summer
September 1 – Autumn
December 1 – Winter

Please read this section before submitting work.

Please include some form of identification in the work itself.

All submissions must be in electronic form. Our preference is an MS Word file uploaded through the system below. Please do not send us pdf files. We can't use them.

By submitting work to us you grant us a non-exclusive license to publish your work in any form we see fit. You may withdraw a submission up until the issue deadline (see above).

We don't pay so you retain all copyrights. If we publish your work online we may include it in a printed edition.

Poetry may be submitted in any length. Please don't submit 100 poems and ask us to pick 3.

Fiction may be submitted in three formats:

  1. very short stories less than 500 words in length

  2. short stories less than 1000 words in length

  3. Short stories that don’t fit the above should be less than 3000 words.

We also accept longer forms of fiction occasionally.

 Please, one fiction submission only per author, per issue. If you submit multiple stories for a single issue, we reserve the right not to review additional stories you submit after the first one.

Non-Fiction is just that so lets see some interesting footnotes. Non-fiction should be short, (a lot) less than 5000 words

Book Reviews should be positive unless the author is a well-known blowhard. Our mission is to encourage literature not discourage it..

Art: Minimun of 6 pieces. Please incluce a bio and statement about your work. Any form of art may be submitted with the constraint that it must be something that can be published in 2 dimensions. It’s hard to publish sculpture but illustrations together with some intelligent prose count.

Published works are welcome with proper attribution.

Please submit all works electronically. Click here to submit to Wilderness House Literary Review

 

 

Welcome to the 73rd issue (Volume 19, no 1) of the Wilderness House Literary Review. WHLR is a result of the collaboration between a group of poets and writers who call themselves the Bagel Bards.

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The stories, articles, poems and examples of art have been presented as PDF files. This is a format that allows for a much cleaner presentation than would otherwise be available on the web. If you don’t have an Adobe Reader (used to read a PDF file) on your computer you can download one from the Adobe website. These files are large and we hope you will be patient when downloading then, however we think the beauty of the words deserves a beautiful presentation.

Wilderness House Press has a Twitter feed and you can find us on Facebook or read about us on Wikipedia.

It costs quite a bit of money to keep publishing WHLR - Please help us out if you can as every little bit helps.

Our ISSN number is 2156-0153.

Let us know what you think in our Letters to the Editor.

Finally, the copyrights are owned by their respective authors whose opinions are theirs alone and do not reflect the opinions of our sponsors or partners.

Table of Contents

Opine

Creativity

Wilderness House, like all magazines both online and print, is dedicated to celebrating creativity. When curating submissions we often fall under the spell of “where on earth did that come from.” Unique thoughts or images are the hallmark of these creative products but where did they come from? What gives rise to the flowering of the muse? We’ve given this a lot of thought and debate to this and, while we don’t have an answer, we do have some interesting observations. There are three parts to creativity: The itch, the talent, and the craft. Masterpieces are the embodiment of all three aspects applied collectively.

The itch: we all get it. The urge to write a poem, take a brush to canvas, build a house or bake a cake. It’s the desire or impulse to create something. The itch is a prerequisite for any creativity but it’s not enough. For many of us the itch manifests itself in many different directions, literature, visual art, music, etc, and while satisfying in the moment may not lead to a brilliant work of creation.

Talent: Talent is an innate quality that seems to be dished out at random by the fates. Not every aspiring artist, poet, or writer. has the talent to create a masterpiece but that never quelled an itch. Still, we’ve all seen creative talent, gone to waste by sloth. A strong itch combined with talent often yields what has come to be known as “one-hit wonders.”

For many critics, the craft takes precedence over native talent and perhaps it should. Craft is what’s taught in school. Practicing the craft is what aspiring artists do when they fill volume after volume with stories, poems, or drawings. Mastering the craft is what Malcolm Gladwell wrote about when he said that it required 10,000 hours for the outliers to master their creative outlets. Picasso, Van Gough, and even Winston Churchill painted thousands of canvases. The Beatles played over 10,000 hours on stage before recording their first hits in the early 1960s.

The one thing that has left us wondering is the environment that encourages this creativity. There are short bursts of creativity usually during periods of social chaos followed by long periods of … drought. The majority of classical Greek literature and art was created in just a 100-year timespan between 400 and 300 BCE. Athens had a population of about 200,000 including slaves. Today the United States of America has a population of ~330 million. If creativity was just a function of population the United States should have over 1600 Socrates, Platos, and Aristotles but we don’t. Perhaps the current climate of political chaos will lead to a massive period of creativity. We’re not sure that's a good idea.

Search the house

Art



 Essay

There is, sometimes, a fine line between fiction and non-fiction. We have several essays that muddy that line, again. I've been assured by the authors that their stories rightly belong here and not in our fiction section. You can be the judge of that.



Fiction



For your reading pleasure we offer an outstanding collection of short stories by:

 

 



Poetry

 

 

Enjoy the collection of poetry we have assembled.

 

 

 

 

Reviews

 

WHLReview is brought to you by:


WHP

Dosha

Dosha, flight of the Russian Gypsies
by Sonia Meyer

Office
By Susan Isla Tepper

Mitchell

What Drives Men
By Susan Tepper

Mitchell
The Last of the Bird People
a novel by John Hanson Mitchell

Daly
Sophocles' Ajax
translated by Dennis Daly

 

 

 

 

Our editors write too

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