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Visit The Chattahoochee
Review's blog: Pass
the Hooch.
The Chattahoochee
Review is a nationally recognized literary magazine
sponsored by Georgia Perimeter College. Our purpose,
a tradition begun twenty-seven years ago, is to publish
original writing of literary merit. Each quarter, we
publish the best in creative writing, essays, fiction,
literary criticisms; everything you’ve come to
expect from Atlanta's oldest literary magazine.
The Chattahoochee
Review is also a cultural organization whose purpose
is to build and maintain a literary community in Georgia
and the Southeast. However, having grown beyond its
past role as more of a Southern literary magazine, The
Chattahoochee Review has established a wider, more
diverse audience.
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To learn more about The Chattahoochee Review,
click here.
Scottish
author, Irvine Welsh, talks about his writing, his filmaking,
and his career post-Trainspotting in an exclusive
interview with The Chattahoochee Review.
» »
Click here to listen to the interview.
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spring/summer 2007 Web Supplement » » »
The Spring/Summer
2007 print issue is a special double feature, highlighting
poetry and the literary work and career of Byron Herbert
Reece. In the print issue, you'll find drawings by Reece,
a selection of his poems, and what Flannery O'Connor
had to say about this other Georgia author in an excerpt
from a previously unpublished letter. Here in this web
supplement, we're happy to present a more scholarly
study of Reece by Tyrie Smith. He shares with us his
essay on Reece: "'A voice that was thin and pure':
Folklore and Function in Byron Herbert Reece’s
Better a Dinner of Herbs"
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Click here to read the full essay by Tyrie Smith.
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Read more about Reece in the Spring/Summer 2007
print issue.
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