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Literary Issue Exchange Program

The Literary Issue Exchange Program (LitXPro), instituted in fall 2013, seeks to arrange exchanges of issues between Reunion and other participating literary journals in the U.S. and Canada. The journals received form the literary journal library, a resource for creative writing students at UT Dallas.

Participating LitXPro Journals

  • The Massachusetts Review
  • Mid-American Review
  • The Iowa Review
  • Nimrod International Journal
  • Fiction
  • New Plains Review
  • The Florida Review
  • Mississippi Review
  • Ninth Letter
  • The Literary Review
  • Santa Monica Review
  • Paper Darts 
  • The Finger
  • New Ohio Review
  • Passages North
  • Rio Grande Review
  • Rathalla Review
  • North American Review
  • High Grade
  • Lumina
  • Barely South Review
  • Waccamaw
  • St. Petersburg Review
  • The Allegheny Review
  • Salt Hill
  • Reed
  • Ponder Review
  • Mikrokosmos
  • Oyez Review
  • The Lascaux Prize
  • Santa Clara Review
  • American Poets
  • New Orleans Review
  • Subtropics
  • Black Fox Literary Magazine
  • Redivider
  • Prairie Schooner
  • eleven eleven
  • Evansville Review
  • Fairy Tale Review
  • Gulf Coast: A Journal of Literature and Fine Arts
  • Jabberwock Review
  • Mizna
  • Mom Egg Review
  • Nashville Review / Vanderbilt University
  • OPOSSUM Magazine
  • Spectrum Literary Journal
  • Sycamore Review / Purdue University MFA
  • University of Virginia / Meridan
  • The Pinch Journal

If you are interested in participating in the LitXPro, please contact us at reunion.editor@gmail.com.

Illustration of row houses

New York Queens Row

By Lindsey Morrison Grant

A self-identifying “creative,” Lindsey Morrison Grant is an award-winning poet, screenwriter, journalist, photographer, and mixed-media artist from Portland, Oregon.

Lindsey is an ordained minister and state-certified peer support specialist who obtained a bachelor’s degree in social work from Concordia University in Portland. While doing so, Lindsey was admitted for psychiatric hospitalizations twice a year, but defied stereotypes and self-doubt, graduating with honors.

Twenty years after their initial diagnosis, Lindsey attributes their current stability to an invaluable support network, personal accountability, mindfulness practice … and naturally, creative expression through words, sounds, and images.