Featuring fiction from John Biggs, William Blomstedt, Ken Brosky, Jennifer M. Colatosti, Matthew Fogarty, Hazel Foster, Matthew Guerruckey, Jason Marc Harris, Brandon Hobson, Joe Kapitan, Molly Laich, Justin Machnik, Angela Palm, John Scaggs, Sarah Elizabeth Schantz, Sacha Siskonen, Carol Smallwood, Richard Thomas, and Matt Young. Poetry from Thomas Cannon, Chris Crabtree, Jim Davis, Sadie Ducet, David Greenspan, Nathaniel Lee Hansen, Ryan Havely, Dale Patterson, Isaac Miller, Richard Newman, Lindy Obach, Andrew Ruzkowski, Kate E. Schultz, Sarah Snook, Helen Spica, Marydale Stewart, Taylor Supplee, Kerry Trautman, David Vodolazkiy, and Courtney Huse Wica.
Midwestern Gothic is a quarterly print literary journal out of Ann Arbor, Michigan, dedicated to featuring work about or inspired by the Midwest, by writers who live or have lived here. Midwestern Gothic aims to collect the very best in Midwestern fiction writing in a way that has never been done before, cataloging the oeuvre of an often-overlooked region of the United States ripe with its own mythologies and tall tales.
Featuring fiction from John Biggs, William Blomstedt, Ken Brosky, Jennifer M. Colatosti, Matthew Fogarty, Hazel Foster, Matthew Guerruckey, Jason Marc Harris, Brandon Hobson, Joe Kapitan, Molly Laich, Justin Machnik, Angela Palm, John Scaggs, Sarah Elizabeth Schantz, Sacha Siskonen, Carol Smallwood, Richard Thomas, and Matt Young. Poetry from Thomas Cannon, Chris Crabtree, Jim Davis, Sadie Ducet, David Greenspan, Nathaniel Lee Hansen, Ryan Havely, Dale Patterson, Isaac Miller, Richard Newman, Lindy Obach, Andrew Ruzkowski, Kate E. Schultz, Sarah Snook, Helen Spica, Marydale Stewart, Taylor Supplee, Kerry Trautman, David Vodolazkiy, and Courtney Huse Wica.
Midwestern Gothic is a quarterly print literary journal out of Ann Arbor, Michigan, dedicated to featuring work about or inspired by the Midwest, by writers who live or have lived here. Midwestern Gothic aims to collect the very best in Midwestern fiction writing in a way that has never been done before, cataloging the oeuvre of an often-overlooked region of the United States ripe with its own mythologies and tall tales.