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The Louisville Review, Number 93, Summer 2023Editor Sena Jeter NaslundAssociate Editor Flora K. SchildknechtManaging Editor Amy Foos KapoorGuest Poetry Editors Greg Pape, Tammy RamseyGuest Fiction Editor Juyanne JamesCornerstone Editor Betsy WoodsTechnical Director Ron SchildknechtFinancial Director John MorganTLR publishes two volumes each year. Visit our website for complete guidelines, back issues, subscriptions, and more: www.louisvillereview.org.Like us on Facebook for up to date information about each issue, news on contributors, etc.: www.facebook.com/TheLouisvilleReview. Follow us on Twitter @TheLouRev.Questions? Please note our email and mailing addresses:managingeditor@louisvillereview.orgThe Louisville Review Corp.1436 St. James Court #1Louisville, Kentucky 40208This issue: $10 ppdample copy: $5 ppdSubscriptions: One year, $18; two years, $36; three years, $54 plus $2 shippingSubscribers outside the United States please add $35/year for shipping.Text and cover printed in the United States.Cover and interior design by Jonathan Weinert.Cover artwork: Alfred Conteh, Aaron, 2018. Acrylic, atomized steel dust, and soil on canvas. Courtesy of the Collection of Laura Lee Brown and Steve Wilson, 21c Museum Hotels. Photographed by Ron Schildknecht.The Louisville Review is a not-for-profit publication.The Louisville Review Corporation is a member of the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses.© 2023 by The Louisville Review Corporation. All rights revert to the authors.
The Louisville ReviewNumber 92Editor Sena Jeter Naslund Associate Editor Flora K. SchildknechtManaging Editor Amy Foos KapoorGuest Poetry Editors Debra Kang Dean, Wanda FriesGuest Fiction Editor Dr¿ma Drudge Cornerstone Editor Betsy WoodsTechnical Director Ron SchildknechtFinancial Director John Morgan Poetry by: Frederick Smock, Tony O'Keeffe, Congxia Ma, Daisy Bassen, Kristin Camitta Zimet, Karen McAferty Morris, Elya Braden, Juan Pablo Mobili, Angie Macri, Joe Schmidt, Josh Mahler, Wendy Taylor Carlisle, Michelle Glans, Michelle Bonczek Evory, Michael J. Galko, Mary Buchinger, Rebecca Thrush, Mark Smith-Soto, Ciara Shuttleworth, John Repp, John A. Nieves, Jeff Hardin, Renee Gilmore, Matt Dennison, Lana Spendl, Gaylord Brewer, Diane Scholl, Marianne Kunkel, Melissa Madenski, Jeremy Paden, Rosanne Osborne, Robert Eric Shoemaker, Marcia L. Hurlow, Chelsie Taylor, Joseph Anthony, Luke Wallin, V. Joshua Adams, Denise Duhamel, Pat Owen, Donald Illich, James B. Nicola, Hollie Dugas, Millard Dunn Nonfiction by: Chris Reitz, Dianne Aprile Fiction by: Patricia Foster, Jody Lisberger, Mrinal Rajaram, Lynn Gordon, Elizabeth Schoettle, Catherine Uroff, Sarah Martin, David Wilde, Bob Chikos Cornerstone (K-12 Poetry) by: Kate Rowberry, Faye Zhang, Emma Catherine Hoff, Jiayi Shao, Yunzhong Mao, Helena Wu, Mary Virginia Vietor, Cloris Shi
New York Times bestselling author Sena Jeter Naslund explores the lives of successful creative women—their devotion to work and family; their fears; their loves—in an enthralling novel that resonates across time and placeIt's midnight on St. James Court, in which stands a fountain sculpture of Venus rising from the sea. Kathryn Callaghan has just finished a draft of her novel about renowned painter Élisabeth Vigée-Le Brun, a survivor of the French Revolution. Kathryn remains haunted by Élisabeth's experiences—revealed here in a novel-within-a-novel, interleaved with the chronicle of one day in Kathryn's life. Despite being separated by time, place, and culture, Kathryn and Élisabeth possess similar gifts and burdens. And before another midnight arrives, Kathryn will confront personal danger as frightening as that which Élisabeth faced during the Reign of Terror. Each woman will be called upon and tested; each will, like Venus, rise triumphantly above the expectations of her world.
The Louisville Review, Number 91, Spring 2022Poetry Contributors: Mary Ann Samyn, Adrian Blevins, Adam Tavel, Kyle D. Craig, Diamond Forde, Ann Pedone, Rachel Whalen, Kevin McLellan, Christopher Howell, Roy Bentley, Gabriel Welsch, Clay Cantrell, James Hejna, Rolly Kent, Alamgir Hashmi, Jack Ridl, Don Bogen, Michael Mark Fiction Contributors:Jane Ogburn Dorfman, Dennis Hurley, Patricia Dutt, Rebecca Bernard, Edward Jackson, John Sims Jeter, S. A. Griffin, Marguerite Alley Cornerstone Contributors (work by writers K-12):Saanvi Mundra, Kay Lee, Jiayi Shao, Haile Espin, Henry Phoel, Bravery Grace Boes, Alexander Miller, Matteo Tremaine Pavlenko, Emma Catherine Hoff Editor: Sena Jeter Naslund Associate Editor: Flora K. SchildknechtManaging Editor: Amy Foos KapoorGuest Poetry Editor: Jonathan WeinertGuest Fiction Editor: Beth Ann Bauman Cornerstone Editor: Betsy WoodsTechnical Adviser: Ron SchildknechtFinancial Director: John Morgan TLR publishes two volumes each year: spring and fall. Visit our website for complete guidelines, back issues, subscriptions, and more: www.louisvillereview.org. Like us on Facebook for up to date information about each issue, news on contributors, etc.: www.facebook.com/TheLouisvilleReview. Follow us on Twitter @TheLouRev. Questions? Our please note our email and mailing addresses:managingeditor@louisvillereview.org. The Louisville Review Corp.1436 St. James Court #1Louisville, Kentucky 40208This issue: $10 ppdSample copy: $5 ppdSubscriptions: One year, $18; two years, $36; three years, $54 plus $2 shipping.Foreign subscribers, please add $35/year for shipping.The text and the cover printed in the United States. Cover design by Jonathan Weinert. Cover artwork, Table For . . . , by Joyce Gardner.The Kentucky Arts Council, the state arts agency, provides American Rescue Plan funds to The Louisville Review Corporation with federal funding from the National Endowment of the Arts. The Louisville Review is a not-for-profit publication.The Louisville Review Corporation is a member of the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses.© 2022 by The Louisville Review Corporation. All rights revert to authors.
Weaving together the lives of blacks and whites, racists and civil rights advocates, and the events of peaceful protest and violent repression, Sena Jeter Naslund creates a tapestry of American social transformation at once intimate and epic.In Birmingham, Alabama, twenty-year-old Stella Silver, an idealistic white college student, is sent reeling off her measured path by events of 1963. Combining political activism with single parenting and night-school teaching, African American Christine Taylor discovers she must heal her own bruised heart to actualize meaningful social change. Inspired by the courage and commitment of the civil rights movement, the child Edmund Powers embodies hope for future change. In this novel of maturation and growth, Naslund makes vital the intersection of spiritual, political, and moral forces that have redefined America.
How did Sherlock Homes come into possession of a true Stardivarius? Who was the one true love of the great detective's life? And what shattering disappointment left the detective with feelings of overwhelming melancholy? As Holme's great friend, Dr. Watson, sets out to answer these questions and recount the thrilling "lost" adventure of Holmes's attempt to rescue the love of his life from a mad King Ludwig of Bavaria, his own life is threatened by a figure in a familiar Inverness coat and deerstalker cap. In this extraordinary novel, Sena Jeter Naslund, author of the critically acclaimed national bestseller Ahab's Wife, brilliantly reweaves the colorfully cryptic, fog-enshrouded world of Sherlock in Love is at once a rewarding entertainment and a remarkable homage to the greatest sleuth in literature.
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