POETRY
Return to Romania with Lucia Cherciu. Listen to the changing of the seasons as told by Samantha Finley. Remember Salem with Sarah Grodzinski. Look eastward with Matthew Hamilton. Savor the view with Art Heifetz. Discover if the sun will rise with Robert Lawless. Weigh choices with Michael Maul. Read about Jayne Marek's "icicle." Daniel Pecchenino offers thoughts on Vermeer. Derek Pollard explores the Old Erie Canal. Read the words of Wendy Scott. Avoid the greeting card aisle with Lee Colin Thomas. Find out what Milton knew with Rosa Maria Woodson. FLASH PROSE Get Adam Berlin's take on German engineering. Elizabeth Brown introduces us to the inseparable sisters. Read Hank Peter's mysterious take as told by Mitchell Grabois. Grow up with Laura Ingram. |
FICTION
Will C.K. Black follow through on an unwilling promise? Alisa Bristow invites us to a funeral. Run through the forest with Jeremy Britton. Work in fast food with Michael Fischer. Amanda Pauley discovers her love of trees. Have a martini with Gary V. Powell. Follow Lance Turner into the hotel room. MULTIMEDIA Susana H. Case captures vivid color. Get nostalgic with Chelsey Clammor. Roopa Dudley's imagination is king. Peek into Janne Karlsson's surreal madness. Visit Luke Normsy's darker view. CREATIVE NONFICTION Bank on the future with Melissa Ballard. Alex Barbolish reminds us about the war. Peggy Barnes looks through old photographs. Visit Belmont with Robert Boucheron. Bird watch with Mary Callahan. Marisha Hicks moves into the sunroom. Sparks fly with Falon Lantrip. Understand grief with Katie Martin. Star gaze with LC Stair. |
You are presently reading the March 2015 issue of Gravel.
This magazine is produced by the MFA program in creative writing at the University of Arkansas at Monticello editorial staff. Cover art by Roopa Dudley. If you're interested in submitting to this literary journal, this is where you want to click. If you want to follow us on Twitter, which you probably do, here you go. If you want to Like us, which is probably the neediest verb/noun device in modern history, but I mean, we really do want you to like us and we could probably use the traffic on Facebook, well this is the place. We are slowly building our blog, so please join in. Click Archives to check out the great work we've published in the past. |