WHAT WEEKLY

Baltimore Review: Winter Issue

11 February 2013

★ whatweekly

The winter issue of The Baltimore Review went live on February 2. The spring issue of The Baltimore Review went live on May 1. Publishing since 1996, steadfast but never stodgy, this stalwart of the literary community got a technological makeover with the winter 2012 issue. Readers can enjoy five online issues now. The new format allows for expanded content, including videos—they want videos! See the submission guidelines on the site. Ideas? They want to hear them. Have some fiction credentials and want to review fiction submissions? Email them. Almost 6,000 submissions have arrived since the new online system opened for business in the summer of 2011. (Maybe the editors should send their 10,000th submitter a large can of Old Bay or a package of Berger cookies.) Not changed since 1996:  the BR’s mission to showcase great writing from Baltimore and beyond. Many fine “beyond” writers here, but you’ll find many incredible Baltimore-area writers throughout the online issues.

 

More big news: Baltimore Review contributors recently scored two “Best of the Net” prizes, for fiction and creative nonfiction!



fashion

Otakon 2011

Once again Baltimore’s annual Otakon Convention summoned a bevy of of eager practitioners of Otaku make-believe. This curious culture of…

Glenford Nunez

Otakon 2010

Smart Textiles

Dyed For You

The Tailor at Hour Haus

social innovation

Capitalism with a Conscience: All Tesla Patents are Now Open Source

The people over at Tesla Motors are at it again. After 11 years of designing, manufacturing and selling electric cars…

Create Baltimore, Take 2

Baltimore Renaissance Project

International Fest 2011

Living my Dream in Cherry Hill

Identity Pickup

artist profiles

Jennifer Stephens

Photo by Philip Laubner Jennifer Stephens, also known as Marigold Bumbleroot, is a professional bubble-blower. https://vimeo.com/34443712 Filmed and edited by…

Adam Scott Miller

Clifton Futch

Cara Ober

GETTING OUT OF THE GROUND with Adam Scott Cook

CMJ Crowd Discovers Indie Immigrants of Oz

sustainability

Big Green Pirate Party

The Big Green Pirate Party was a fundraiser for Baltimore Green Careers, a Civic Works project that has a kick-ass…

An Ambitious New Charter School Comes to West Baltimore

Welcome to the Free Farm

Strange Folks at Ash Street Garden

Baltimore Free Farm

Farmageddon