The Southern Literary Review celebrates Southern authors and their contributions to American literature. We feature classic writers who have defined Southern literature, and we highlight emerging authors with interviews, profiles, and book reviews. We support independent bookstores. If you subscribe to our newsletter, please add southernliteraryreview@comcast.net to your email contacts list so that the newsletter doesn’t […]
Read of the Month: “The Walls Are Closing In On Us” by Joshua Trent Brown
What would your life look like if it were played back for you in your final moments, watched from a lofty vantage like heaven, or the more oblique angle of purgatory? Would you see yourself being carried along, pinged from vertex to vertex as the polygon of your life develops? Could you name the forces […]
“Visual Cords” and “Dreaminations” poetry collections by Jianqing Zheng
Jianqing Zheng’s Visual Cords (Broken Tribe Press 2025) and Dreaminations (Madville Publishing 2026) capture discrete moments in time with seamless beauty and often echo imagistic poetry with Zheng’s striking use of images and precise, concrete language. The poet, who spent his first thirty-some years in China and the last thirty-plus years in Mississippi, displays considerable […]
“The Swellest Wife Anyone Ever Had,” Poems by Jennifer Schomburg Kanke
The Swellest Wife Anyone Ever Had (Kelsay Books, 2024) by Jennifer Schomburg Kanke chronicles the life of Enid, an Appalachian housewife born in 1919, through vivid imagery and keenly observed detail. The poet creates rich portraits not only of Enid’s personality and growth, but also of the people, landscape, and culture that shape her life […]
“Words Alone Are Certain Good” by Trenton McKay Judson
“You can dance in a hurricane, but only if you’re standing in the eye,” sings Brandi Carlile. No one was dancing in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. In Words Alone Are Certain Good (Pen & Leaf Press, 2025), Trenton Judson writes of characters paddling, swimming, crawling, clinging, but rarely dancing, during the storm and its […]
“A History of Heartache” by Patrick Strickland
The first story in A History of Heartache, Patrick Strickland’s debut short story collection, gives away the title when we learn an alcoholic mother “has a history of heartache, most of which she drums up all on her own nowadays.” The question that arises again and again in these loosely-interconnected stories is this: Is heartache […]







