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American literary magazine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fourteen Hills is the San Francisco State University literary magazine associated with the MFA degree program. Founded in 1994, it publishes poetry, fiction, short plays, and literary nonfiction.[1] The semiannual journal includes experimental and progressive work by emerging and cross-genre writers, as well as by award-winning and established authors.[2]
Categories | Poetry, Fiction, Essays, Art, Interviews |
---|---|
Frequency | Biannually (print) |
Publisher | San Francisco State University |
First issue | 1994 |
Based in | San Francisco, California, United States |
Language | English |
Website | http://14hills.net/ |
Fourteen Hills publishes one issue every year of the Fourteen Hills: the SFSU review, as well as the manuscript of the annual winner of the Michael Rubin Book Award.
Fourteen Hills Vol. 6, No. 1 sold out within a few months, and Kate Small's award-winning chapbook, also published by Fourteen Hills, is now in its second printing. Pieces first published in Fourteen Hills have won the following literary awards:
Fourteen Hills also hosts a number of literary events each year. The most awaited is the Fourteen Hills release party. Last year, Stephen Elliott gave a reading at the release, which was met with much enthusiasm. This year too Fourteen Hills will host a number of literary events. An upcoming event is the release of Fourteen Hills' Fiction anthology- New Standards. The event will be held at SFSU's Poetry Center and will feature authors like Peter Orner, Nona Caspers, Eireene Nealand and John Cleary.
Fourteen Hills and SFSU administer the Stacy Doris Memorial Poetry Award, named after late writing professor Stacy Doris. The prize, which was first awarded in 2014, awards the winning poet with a $500 prize and publication in the Spring issue of Fourteen Hills.[3]
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