New England Review
New England Review is a literary quarterly that publishes challenging, innovative work in all genres, including poetry, fiction, translation, drama, criticism, and creative nonfiction.
The selection of writings in each issue presents a broad spectrum of viewpoints and genres, including traditional and experimental fiction, translations in poetry and prose, criticism, letters from abroad, reviews in arts and literature, and rediscoveries.
Founded in 1978 and edited by Stephen Donadio, NER has for more than twenty-five years kept its readers in touch with the imaginative adventures of some of the world’s most celebrated authors, while maintaining its commitment to new writers just emerging into prominence.
Recent and forthcoming issues feature new fiction and poetry by Brock Clarke, Stephen Dixon, Carol Frost, Linda Gregerson, Brigit Pegeen Kelly, John Kinsella, Keith Lee Morris, Lucia Perillo, Carl Phillips, Christopher Sorrentino, and Gregory Spatz, plus essays on filmmaker Jean-Pierre Melville, contemporary art criticism by Peter Plagens, unpublished stories by Stanley Elkin, and original works of literary biography. NER has also presented new translations of Boris Akunin, Witold Gombrowicz, Thomas Mann, F. T. Marinetti, Alfonsina Storni, Virgil, and others.
NER is published four times a year by Middlebury College. Managing Editor is Carolyn Kuebler; Poetry Editor is C. Dale Young.