This World Poetry Day, why not celebrate by reading all the wonderful poets The Lincoln Review has featured across Issues 1–6 www.lincolnreview.org
@thelincolnreview.bsky.social #WorldPoetryDay #poetry #writingcommunity
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Are you a photographer?
The Lincoln Review is here for you.
Today is the last day to submit.
Send us work that sees beyond the surface.
lincolnreview.org
#photograghy #photographer #photos
We’re delighted to share The Lincoln Review’s TLR6 Best of the Net nominations.
Only 10 days left.
Submissions to The Lincoln Review close on 1 March.
If your work has been waiting for the right home, this may be.
Poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, translations, and visual art.
lincolnreview.org
If your work carries a question, a memory, or a voice that insists on being heard, we hope you’ll send it to us.
🔗 Submit to The Lincoln Review at lincolnreview.org
🖋️ Our submission window is still open.
Poetry
Fiction
Creative Nonfiction
Translations
Art
Submit to The Lincoln Review at lincolnreview.org
Submissions are still open for Issue 7 of The Lincoln Review. Check our website to submit your work. lincolnreview.org Thank you for considering The Lincoln Review. ••• #poetry #prose #art #photography #fiction
Cuban-born poet and collage artist Virgil Suárez builds worlds from fragments.
His collage from The Lincoln Review, Issue 3, invites us to look again at what survives within us.
See more at lincolnreview.org
Memory, machinery, and the myths of modern life; Virgil Suárez’s collage from The Lincoln Review Issue 3.
See more at lincolnreview.org
A still rhythm of Imogen Reid.
“Text(ile)”
The Lincoln Review, Issue 6.
Discover more at lincolnreview.org
“Let letters spill over this dimpled egg – this stone without its fruit.”
Sharon Dolin invites us to look inward to the quiet, enduring treasures we carry within.
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Read the full poem in Issue 6 of The Lincoln Review.
#poem #journal #writing
Today is National Poetry Day!
It is a time to recognize the power of poetry to inspire, heal, and connect us.
This year’s theme is “PLAY.”
A reminder that poetry isn’t just serious or structured. It’s also freedom, creativity, experimentation, and joy.
“I’ve never been one to struggle with parting ways or marching towards the unknown. Change doesn’t frighten me; on the contrary—the craving visits recurrently.”
-Burcu Güney, The Lincoln Review, Issue 5
🔗 Read now at lincolnreview.org
Have a poem, story, or essay you’ve been waiting to share with the world? The Lincoln Review is calling for fresh voices and bold ideas.
Submit today and let your words find their home with us.
lincolnreview.org
“He reopened the book after five or ten minutes.”
Some stories flow like rivers, drawing you back no matter how far you drift. 🌊 “The Book of Water” by Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos is one of them.
Published in the second edition of The Lincoln Review. Read now at lincolnreview.org
We’re excited to announce that submissions are now open for The Lincoln Review 7th edition.
🔗 Check our website to submit your work.
lincolnreview.org
Thank you for considering The Lincoln Review.
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#poetry #prose #art #photography #fiction
The Truth of It
"Turns out forgetting everyone you know is just the tip of it. No one warns you about the stink of it.”
— Claire Jean Kim
Read now at lincolnreview.org
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#poetry #poems #writing #magazine #journal
“One look at me and the woman on the beach can tell I’m trouble.”
That’s the first line of Aga Maksimowska’s What Else Do You Come For.
Read the full piece now at: lincolnreview.org
#writing #fiction #reading #story
Have you taken a look at Issue 6 yet?
We’re incredibly proud of what our contributors have created and can’t wait for you to experience it.
Did you read something that moved you, or made you think differently? Tell us your favorite piece or moment from the issue.
“The boy runs laughing from the waves…”
In Issue 6, Phil Powrie traces the delicate imprint of memory and time through a single moment from the past.
🔗Read the full piece now at lincolnreview.org
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#writing #fiction #art #magazine
🟧 They appeared without warning.
Black rectangles that defy explanation.
Read “The Angled Terrors” by Tessa Glover. Now live in Issue 6.
🌐 lincolnreview.org
#literaryjournal #writing #fiction #story
I'm very happy indeed that my essay, "The Time of Suspense and the Time of Suspension" has found a home in issue six of the @thelincolnreview.bsky.social you can check out the other wonders within it here: www.lincolnreview.org/issue6
"The woman rubs the silver surface longer / as if a truer mirror would be kinder."
From Pause, a poem by Laura Sheahen, featured in Issue 6.
🌿 Gentle, reflective, with quiet truths.
Read more at www.lincolnreview.org
#poetry #literaryjournal #writing
“Textile, Layered Print on Fabriano Paper” by Imogen Reid.
Featured in Issue 6 of The Lincoln Review.
A delicate dance of geometry and texture, printed with quiet precision.
💬Explore more works like this in Issue 6, now live at lincolnreview.org
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#art #print #artists #magazine #journal
Poetry. Fiction. Essays. Visual Art.
A space for emerging and established voices alike.
Read the full issue 6 at lincolnreview.org
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#poetry #fiction #art #journal
Two new poems in the newest issue of @thelincolnreview.bsky.social. These are strange little poems. "le oiseau parts" fits great in the mouth; be sure to read it aloud. So glad this pair landed here. Thanks so much to editors & co. at The Lincoln Review. A beautiful gathering.
Thoroughly delighted that my essay "The Time of Suspense and The Time of Suspension" (p.12) has found a home in issue 6 of @thelincolnreview.bsky.social alongside @tomjenksuk.bsky.social @vikshirley.bsky.social et al. All thanks to Daniele Pantano and editors at TLR www.lincolnreview.org/issue6
Excited to have 2 meta-ekphrastic poems in issue 6 of @thelincolnreview.bsky.social Both constructed from museum visitor texts created as part of the @amgueddfacymru.bsky.social interactive poetry display - see pages 112 & 113 www.lincolnreview.org/issue6 #ekphrasis #ekphrasticpoetry
✨ ISSUE 6 IS HERE
Have you read it yet?
Our latest issue is filled with poetry that pulses, fiction that lingers.
Plus: visual art that speaks without a single word.
🌐 Read now at www.lincolnreview.org
#literaryjournal #journal #magazine
#poetry #art #writing
🎙 ISSUE 6 IS NOW LIVE
Bold voices. Fresh perspectives. Timeless art.
Explore new poetry, fiction, essays, and visual work in our June 2025 issue.
🔗 Read now: www.lincolnreview.org
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#poetry #prose #art #journal #magazine