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issue thirteen

Cover Art: Ann-Marie Brown

Lucky #13 ~ Autumn 2023

Released October 17th, 2023

Featuring:

Two Poems by Bob Hicok: Fire and Green Thumb
& Amazing by Nebraska State Poet Matt Mason

More in Poetry:

La Niña by Gathondu Mwangi
Limerence by Levi Cain
Mosaic by Muiz Ọpẹ́yẹmí Àjàyí

Flash Fiction:

Rock, Shore, Thunder by Maria S. Picone
Moon by Mrityunjay Mohan

FLASH NONFICTION:

Grandfathered by Haley Larson

FICTION:

Clam! by Jason Arias

Nonfiction:

Radio by Chelsea Yates
Life Must Go On by Cynthia Landesberg

Poetry to me is a medium by which I experience the world in its ability to elevate my consciousness beyond the faux limitation of my mind.

From “Emotional Resonance and Self-Discovery: A Conversation with Adesiyan Oluwapelumi

The emotion, feeling, and insight of the poem is conveyed down the poem and into the mind of the reader.

From TGLR Exclusive Interview with Jim Peterson

This year feels like a year of questions, for me. Maybe the prophecy lies somewhere inside that notion, like we can find the future in how we ask for it.

~ Jacqueline Goyette

I write in recognition of their courage, convictions, sense of justice, and what they stood for. I write to honor what they left behind, what they withstood, what they lost, and what we gained as a result.

~ Eneida Alcalde

Perhaps it’s important to me that we recognize the human-ness of these sort of lost individuals and acknowledge those traits in ourselves.

~ L.L. Babb

I listened to many people’s experiences around a particular issue, looked for themes in their answers, and drew conclusions. I bring that experience to my writing by examining how a character’s outward behavior reveals their inner life.

From our Q&A with Lea Pounds “Exploring Writing, Public Health, and Historical Fiction

I was talking to my mother on the phone when she told me that in the old days people used to buy birds and free them in the hope of having a wish fulfilled. That thought was in my mind when I wrote Razia Razia.

From our Author Q&A with Sara Siddiqui Chansarkar

I often felt like I had to lose my sense of humanity in order to continue working in customer service, especially food service. It might sound like an obvious sentiment but if there’s one thing I can get across with ‘smoke break,’ it’s to treat service workers with some grace – and perhaps to highlight the complex inner worlds experienced by all people, even those that are paid to serve you.

From TGLR Author Q&A with Cat Casey

I hope that their complicated relationship gets at the trauma behind the numbers of dead and injured at these mass shootings. Everyone means something to someone, and relationships can be complicated and tangled and messy, even between two guys.

From TGLR Exclusive Interview with Jacob Orlando: On Writing About Gun Violence and Human Relationships

Micro Monday

Features brief fiction, cnf, and poetry. It’s like a shot of literary adrenaline to jump start your week.

This week’s Feature…

The Echo of Footsteps by Ibrahim Abdulhakeem

Each step carried the weight of exhaustion, of dreams deferred and dignity swallowed in silence. Ayo would listen from his room, curled up with his homework, his hands clammy as he gripped his pen. Would today be different? Would the tension in the air dissipate, leaving room for laughter instead of raised voices?…

Keep reading

TGLR Spotlight…

Author Q&A with Sarah Schiff

We all know that fiction lies its way to the truth, so I want to promote truth in a world riddled with lies, and I want to add just a little bit of beauty to a world that, at times, can be heartbreakingly ugly…

Keep reading
For all the news, interviews, book reviews, and Micro Monday features visit The Buzz

TGLR 2023 Honeybee Prize Results

Finalists
Winners
The whole enchilada:
Issue #12 ~ Summer 2023

We are a 501C3 nonprofit and we pay our authors and artists

Nonprofit Announcement

from the archives:

Summer Elegy II by Todd Robinson

Summer Elegy II | Todd Robinson Nebraska’s bare branchespaw at skies full of pointless blue, mercurial daymoon.Powerless like me or my disabled wifewobbling our broken palace in cashmere and bracken. She…

read more

dear sister by Sequoia Maner

dear sister | Sequoia Maner   i’d like to think we never experienced a world where foster care fostered absence. we went to the roller rink for birthdays. later we…

read more

What They Carried With Them by Ellen June Wright

What They Carried With Them | Ellen June Wright They carried everything one can bring              when one can bring nothing. They carried everything they knew:              languages and dialects, songs mothers taught…

read more
For more good stuff from all our issues
visit our Archive


submissions:

We are currently open for all genres plus artwork! We nominate for Pushcart and Best of the Net and are a paying market ($25-$75 per published piece).

The Good Life Review is seeking previously unpublished work by writers from all walks of life. Please read submission guidelines and when you’re ready, head over to Submittable to submit your work.

Cover Art: Sarah Louise Wilson

The Good Life Review is a 501C nonprofit literary journal made with ♥ from Omaha, Nebraska. We are committed to exploring the overlooked and are taking active steps toward a more diverse and equitable publishing platform.