Pulitzer Prize winners and never-before-published writers are equals during our manuscript evaluation process, whose goal is to identify and print works that promise to be, in the famous words of Ezra Pound, "news that stays news." Through its commitment to excellence, The Georgia Review has won numerous awards and earned an international reputation, and selections from its pages are regularly reprinted in the nation’s most prestigious prize anthologies. Kate Harris’ debut work, Lands of Lost Borders, opens with a Virginia Woolf epigraph declaring, We are forever mixing ourselves with unknown quantities, which is the essential mission behind Harris’ plan to bicycle across Asia, tracing the ancient Silk Road. Never stuffy and never shallow, The Georgia Review seeks a broad audience of intellectually open and curious readers-and strives to give those readers rich content that invites and sustains repeated attention and consideration. As a bookish yet fiercely adventurous child, Kate. Each quarterly issue offers a diverse, thoughtfully orchestrated gathering of short stories, general-interest essays, poems, reviews, and visual art. From an early age, Kate Harris dreamed of being an explorer the trouble was she was born a century too late. Founded at the University of Georgia in 1947 and published there ever since, The Georgia Review is one of America’s most highly regarded journals of arts and letters.
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