This Valentine’s Day weekend, receive a FREE back issue of Hayden’s Ferry Review if you subscribe or resubscribe. That’s right—Friday through Sunday only, get in the holiday spirit and we’ll send you one of the 54 previous issues of HFR, selected entirely at random. Find out who and what we loved as far back as 1986! We know it’s sudden, that it might be moving too fast to take an issue home when you’ve only just met, but who knows? You might just fall in love.
Read MoreWhen we're not reading, we're writing. This is where the magic happens.
"This chair was my husband's grandpa's. The sun hits it perfectly in the late afternoon and I just sink in and scribble away before everyone else gets home at night. At least one dog is usually around to lay on my feet and its close to the record player so I can be swallowed up by tunes while I work." -Chelsea H., Editor
Read MoreHayden’s Ferry Review, founded in 1986, is a semi-annual international literary journal edited by the Creative Writing program at Arizona State University. Our mission is to showcase emerging talents in the literary community. While we also focus on tradition, our main purpose is to introduce the world to up and coming writers.
Read MoreI enjoy a brisk hike from time to time, a hike that’ll have me sitting in a cozy diner a few hours later with an awesome grilled cheese sandwich in my hands and a plate of greasy French Fries before me. Maybe a strong coffee. Food and drink to replenish my weary body. I don’t know that I’ll ever take a hike tantamount to the one that brings the characters of “This Place of Great Peril” to the summit of the 84th highest mountain in the world.
Read MoreWinter is our favorite season in the Sonoran Desert. Get inspired by our editors' super trendy winter fashions. What are your favorite Arizona winter trends?
Read MoreIn Tim Burton’s film “Corpse Bride,” my favorite movie when I was sixteen, a young man accidentally proposes marriage to a dead woman. After a ceremony in a moonlit winter woods, he leaves his drab Victorian village and enters the land of the dead. In the end, he almost prefers what he finds to the lot of the living.
Read MoreAlmost Famous Women, as the title promises, delivers entertaining, touching, and very absorbing short stories based on the lives of women who in their time found a marginal fame, were written about, talked about, and seen, but then were almost lost to history, almost forgotten, and almost became invisible.
Read MoreHappy New Year! Enjoy our poem of the month, a lovely piece by Valerie Hsiung.
HFR: Lastly, this poem feels very true to human nature—"How to talk to ourselves again/ When I was a little immolating plant/ And everything could hurt/ It still can." The fragility is so evident in this excerpt and yet there is reassurance. Can you speak about how this theme developed?