Bellevue Literary Review
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Bellevue Literary Review

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BLR BLOG

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— Everything BLR. —

 
  •  
    Creativity in Medicine: Navigating Uncertainty through Art and Literature

    Creativity in Medicine: Navigating Uncertainty through Art and Literature

    Explore how poetry, stories, and visual art can help us make sense of medicine’s complexities in this new online class.

  •  
    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 22 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 22 highlights

    A short history of nursing, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  •  
    BLR featured on PBS News Hour’s CANVAS Series

    BLR featured on PBS News Hour’s CANVAS Series

    Watch PBS News Hour’s Jeffrey Brown report on BLR’s 25th Anniversary, featuring BLR Editor Danielle Ofri and BLR writers reflecting on why poetry, storytelling, and writing matter, especially in moments of illness.

  •  
    What We’re Reading Now

    What We’re Reading Now

    Looking for your next literary escape? Here are some recommended reads from our editorial team.

  •  
    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 21 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 21 highlights

    A look back to our 10th anniversary, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  •  
    BLR BookTalk with Author Morgan Talty

    BLR BookTalk with Author Morgan Talty

    Join us on June 11 for a live conversation as we dive into Morgan’s book Fire Exit, which was the inaugural selection for BLR’s new Book Club. 

  •  
    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 20 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 20 highlights

    A special dedication, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  •  
    BLR Book Club |  “Fire Exit” Week 7

    BLR Book Club | “Fire Exit” Week 7

    In this final week of the BLR Book Club’s review of FIRE EXIT, the question of whether Charles will have a relationship with Elizabeth in the future persists.

  •  
    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 19 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 19 highlights

    Early writing from two best-selling authors in the BLR community, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

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— See what’s new with us at BLR. —

 
  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 22 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 22 highlights

    A short history of nursing, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 21 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 21 highlights

    A look back to our 10th anniversary, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 20 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 20 highlights

    A special dedication, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 19 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 19 highlights

    Early writing from two best-selling authors in the BLR community, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 18 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 18 highlights

    The stories that stay with us, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  • BLR Spring Reading with Authors from Issue 50

    BLR Spring Reading with Authors from Issue 50

    Join us on May 28 to celebrate the launch of Issue 50. We’ll hear from the issue’s authors live as they share their stories, essays, and poems.

  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 17 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 17 highlights

    The power of intimate storytelling, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 16 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 16 highlights

    Stories, poems, and essays on the immense emotional landscape of illness, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 15 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 15 highlights

    Thought-provoking reads on the vast range of abilities and disabilities, plus much more as we continue to share issue highlights throughout our 25th anniversary year.

  • BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 14 highlights

    BLR 25th anniversary ~~ Issue 14 highlights

    Throughout our 25th anniversary year, we’re marking this milestone by inviting you on a journey through the BLR archive, with special highlights — stories, poems, photos, and more — from each of our issues.

 
 

— Come join us, online, or in person. —

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

 
 
  • Creativity in Medicine: Navigating Uncertainty through Art and Literature

    Creativity in Medicine: Navigating Uncertainty through Art and Literature

 

 

WATCH OUR PAST EVENTS

 

Mapping the Mind


Mapping the Mind — part of BLR’s Conversations on Creative Writing in Healthcare series — is a dynamic conversation about writing the inner life. With Susannah Cahalan, Damon Tweedy, Sarah LaBrie, and Danielle Ofri

***

Writing the Body


Writing the Body — part of BLR’s Conversations on Creative Writing in Healthcare series — brings together four best-selling authors whose work confronts illness as it is lived in the body. With Porochista Khakpour, Meghan O’Rourke, Rebekah Taussig, and Danielle Ofri

***

BLR Fall Reading: Animalia


Watch writers and poets read their works from BLR‘s Issue 49, ‘Animalia,’ as part of BLR‘s live, online fall reading.

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BLR Book Salon with Anne Fadiman


Watch our exclusive BLR Book Salon with renowned writer Anne Fadiman, author of The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down.

***

BLR SPRING READING 2025: WINNING WORDS


Watch a celebration of BLR‘s 48th issue and the winners of the 2025 BLR literary prizes. Featuring exciting new works of fiction, nonfiction and poetry, plus interviews with our prizewinners.

***

BLR BookTalk with Venita Blackburn


Watch acclaimed writer Venita Blackburn and BLR editor Suzanne McConnell’s conversation on Venita’s award-winning debut novel, Dead in Long Beach, California.

***

BLR Writing Webinar: The Book Doctors Are In!


Watch medical writers Danielle Ofri, Damon Tweedy, Esther Choo, and Perri Klass discuss writing, careers, and ethical dilemmas as part of our workshop series.

***

Narrative Arc: The Journey from Writer to Reader


Watch Narrative Arc: The Journey from Writer to Reader, celebrating the unique relationship between the writers who bring words to the page and the readers who receive them.

 
see all past events
 
 
 

— Read interviews with BLR authors, editors, readers, and more. —

 
  • Interview: Lara Palmqvist

    Interview: Lara Palmqvist

    “The very idea that no story is final—be it the story of one’s own self, or the story of a nation—is ultimately something in which I find great hope.”

  • Interview: Sabah Parsa

    Interview: Sabah Parsa

    “Humor is the easiest for me to write in any piece, fiction or nonfiction.”

  • Interview: Jack Coulehan

    Interview: Jack Coulehan

    “Clinical care provides the subject matter for many of my poems, and some of the themes I explore in them…have driven a process of self-discovery that I think has made me a better doctor.”

  • Interview: Meredith Talusan

    Interview: Meredith Talusan

    Fiction allows me to further portray realities from perspectives outside the majority, not just at the level of my lived experience but in terms of a broad range of possible trans, BIPOC, immigrant, and disabled experiences.

  • Interview: Manini Nayar

    Interview: Manini Nayar

    I rarely know how a story ends until I get there. A story has its own life, and I am immersed in it and on the margins at the same time, both participant and recorder.

  • 20th Anniversary Editorial Roundtable

    20th Anniversary Editorial Roundtable

    In honor of BLR’s 20th anniversary, we’ve invited editors past and present to offer reflections on the BLR’s founding and its evolution over two decades of publishing.

  • Interview: Julia Levine

    Interview: Julia Levine

    I have loved the natural world since I was a small child and it is my inability to see it accurately that pains me.

  • Interview: Nina Adel

    Interview: Nina Adel

    Almost all of my work takes place in the realm of the hybrid… I myself am just a regular person and artist who finds rules very difficult to adhere to.

  • Interview: Yalitza Ferreras

    Interview: Yalitza Ferreras

    English has now become my primary language, although I experience it as a syllabic language, which I attribute to my brain being wired for Spanish.

 

— A new set of great reads with each click. Refresh for more. —

 
  • fiction
  • nonfiction
  • poetry
  • Storm Chasers

    Storm Chasers

    by Calvin Hennick. “During the week we have left in Hawaii, Liz occasionally mentions that maybe I should go back to the hospital to see my father, and I say no, and she says family is important, and then neither of us says anything for a while. My dad has managed to ruin the trip.”

    continue reading

  • Plazoleta

    Plazoleta

    by Eric Stener Carlson. “The ants climbed up the front of Macedonio’s sweater, circling the buttons.  They arrived at Macedonio’s chest, interested in a yogurt stain. “

    continue reading

  • Spectrum

    Spectrum

    by Ian MacLean. “In sleeping, Joseph’s eyes moved under their lids, as if he still searched the ward and the land out the window for phenomena. Planets churned in arcs and stars collapsed somewhere in that blackness, and he searched for this too, his eye movements aligning with the movement of heavenly bodies.”

    continue reading

  • Winston Speaks

    Winston Speaks

    by Jill Caputo. “Winston sold candy at the bus station on Wednesdays because that was the only day Georgia could give him a ride there. He kept the goods in the pack on the back of his chair: Snickers, Milky Ways, Reeses Peanut Butter Cups, M&Ms, both peanut and plain…”

    continue reading

  • The Hardest Parts

    The Hardest Parts

    by Fernando Álvarez-Perez. “Victor has evaded physical activity with crafty excuses his whole life, but he decides that boxing could be an acceptable diversion. He doesn’t have to hit anyone. There’s something thrilling about hammering away at the heavy bag in a hot warehouse under industrial fans, the contented exhaustion after.”

    continue reading

  • Housekeeping

    Housekeeping

    by Ryan Pollard. “I was coasting along like every other rudderless late adolescent…My particular drift happened to be tied to a disability I had yet to face, and it would be a while still before I finally found my footing.”

    continue reading

  • Thinking in Clichés

    Thinking in Clichés

    by Denitza Blagev. “After all the pain and blood, you almost begin to think of death as the next therapy, because that’s what it is, you realize. Death is part of the process.”

    continue reading

  • The Little Things

    The Little Things

    by Joan Malerba-Foran. “I’ve never been what you would call a good sleeper. I make it through the night about twice a week, and those nights are never consecutive.”

    continue reading

  • His Own Time 

    His Own Time 

    by John Thompson. “I did a little time once. It wasn’t a long bit, but that doesn’t matter much.  Time is time.”

    continue reading

  • Avtomat Kalashnikova

    Avtomat Kalashnikova

    by Rachel Hall. “Mikhail Timofeyevich Kalashnikov wakes in gray light to the sounds of the injured soldiers in the cots beside him moaning, crying out.”

    continue reading

see more fiction
  • How Air Moves

    How Air Moves

    by Leslie Roberts. “Underneath is a body cast, my new ectoskeleton, my nautilus, crawled into, where I live now.”

    continue reading

  • Radon Gas and the Believers

    Radon Gas and the Believers

    by Andrew C. Gottlieb. “But its impossible to go very far without seeing a sudden dark opening, the sloping, rotting framing of an abandoned mine entrance, or the colorful, dangerous scree sloping downhill: the remnant tailings from the ore processing that once happened here, spilling from a now filled-in shaft that one hundred years ago…

    continue reading

  • The Only Fat Man in Lascahobas

    The Only Fat Man in Lascahobas

    by Evan Lyon. “Georges, the owner of St. Gabriel’s Funeral Enterprise, is the only fat man in Lascahobas.”

    continue reading

  • The Father Shift

    The Father Shift

    by Trish Travieso. “I was twenty-three years old the first time I saw my father wearing a dress.”

    continue reading

  • Every Day Anew

    Every Day Anew

    by Pia Jee-Hae Baur. “I dislike switching doctors, primarily because every time I have to recount my medical history, I have to decide how much I should lie.”

    continue reading

  • You Know What She Means

    You Know What She Means

    by Elizabeth Schultz. “And here is another thing you do not remember: your parents telling you that you have polio, and that they are taking you to St. Margaret’s Hospital in Northridge.”

    continue reading

  • Flu Shot

    Flu Shot

    by David Watts. “She stands in my examining room unable to sit, pacing, then stopping tensely, as if paralyzed by the urge to pace. Three times she has made this appointment, three times a no-show.”

    continue reading

  • Cancer, So Far

    Cancer, So Far

    by Elizabeth Crowell. “Last summer, the moths clung to the shingles of our house. They fluttered right past us, mottled wings snapping, through our open door.”

    continue reading

  • Mental Health Days

    Mental Health Days

    by Sakena Jwan Washington. “With practiced pain, I delivered an Oscar-worthy performance of smiles and congratulations, and then escaped to the bathroom and sobbed until my eyes were bloodshot.”

    continue reading

  • Subway Stories

    Subway Stories

    by William Walker. “My son is a rule follower and rules generate endless questions, the answers to which often reflect the crushing reality that I cannot guarantee his safety, that there is an unsettling element of chance in a city of over eight million people.”

    continue reading

see more nonfiction
  • Relic

    Relic

    by Stacy Nigliazzo. “Quietly, they concede, / leaving pennies / at your feet.”

    continue reading

  • On Finding One Grey Pubic Hair Four Days Before My 48th Birthday

    On Finding One Grey Pubic Hair Four Days Before My 48th Birthday

    by Alison Townsend. “I didn’t know / one went grey down there too. / Hadn’t imagined / that even sex / might lose its color.”

    continue reading

  • Luggage

    Luggage

    by Ted Kooser. “I’ve given away the black Samsonite suitcase / that for thirty-five years enfolded my suits / like a wallet…”

    continue reading

  • Lithium and the Absence of Desire  

    Lithium and the Absence of Desire  

    by Virginia Chase Sutton. “It is not advertised on the pill bottle, merely mentioned / in the product description from the drug store. / You have no idea what you are giving away.”

    continue reading

  • The Christmas Patient

    The Christmas Patient

    by John Kay. “Blood draws dissolve into Christmas lights, / veins dizzy with the latest medications.”

    continue reading

  • A Spring Without Us

    A Spring Without Us

    by Talia Bloch. “The playground has been locked for months. / A swing coughs dryly in the shade.”

    continue reading

  • Papa (Bi-Polar) Bear

    Papa (Bi-Polar) Bear

    by Lila Dlaboha. “You didn’t come to bed until morning / You opened and closed doors all night / while I slept in the ambient soot…”

    continue reading

  • Blind Choreography

    Blind Choreography

    by Susan Buis. “They told me that other senses / would rush in. Now the atmosphere / is shredded through trees, each / fragmented scented, audible.”

    continue reading

  • The Oncologist

    The Oncologist

    by Carole Stone. “Do you have an appetite? / No. / Are you anxious? Yes. / Irritable? Yes. / I hand in the questionnaire.”

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  • Telephone

    Telephone

    by Judy Katz. “These days I think of you / on the yellow chaise / with your Parkinson’s / and hatred of telephones, / and make myself call.”

    continue reading

see more poetry
 

 

SOCIAL

Bellevue Literary Review Follow

An independent literary journal of fiction, nonfiction, & poetry about health, illness, & healing. Issue 50, featuring the 2026 BLR Prizewinners, coming soon.

BLReview
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warrenwilsonmfa Warren Wilson MFA @warrenwilsonmfa ·
14 Jun

Polish it up, send it out! Opportunities from...

@iselemagazine
@narrativemag
@blreview - specifically for work (all genres) on the themes of health, illness, and healing (note the amazing judges!)
@fourwaybooks
@storybottleco

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blreview Bellevue Literary Review @blreview ·
12 Jun

This week's featured issue — part of our 25th anniversary lookback— showcases winners of our annual contest and much more. The BLR Prizes for this issue were selected by judges Francine Prose, Cornelius Eady, and Susan Orlean.
https://blreview.org/issue-highlights/issue-22-highlights

4

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blreview Bellevue Literary Review @blreview ·
11 Jun

Tonight! 🔥 We're thrilled to host @Morgan_J_Talty for a BLR BookTalk about his riveting novel FIRE EXIT. Come if you love books, talking about books, and going behind the scenes with authors! (Free, 7pm ET)
https://www.tickettailor.com/events/bellevueliteraryreview/2226067

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blreview Bellevue Literary Review @blreview ·
10 Jun

Get those final edits done! 📢 Both general & contest submissions will be closing July 1. Submit your poetry, fiction, nonfiction on health, illness, & healing.

This year's contest judges are the remarkable Natalie Diaz, Daniel Mason, & Meghan O'Rourke.

https://blreview.org/submit/

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Bellevue Literary Review
  • About
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