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WInter 2015

We started The Worcester Journal with the belief that young writers deserved an attractive and professionally produced magazine to showcase their works, and because of this we found the warm and engaged response by readers to the first issue both pleasing and heartening. We wanted to produce a general-interest magazine that was interesting, entertaining, and instructive, one that didn’t dumb-down its topics and  one that didn’t accept the tiresome and widely-held belief that the younger generations lack attention and discipline. In short, we wanted to give people a good read. We’re delighted that you seem to think we did.

Our second issue also has plenty of good reads. It features an essay on bridging the gap between immigrants and their grandchildren, a discourse on punk and its place in today’s pop culture, a backgrounder on that granddaddy of geeky sci-fi TV shows, Doctor Who, a contemplation on three classic movies of the modern period, an introduction to the weird and wonderful culture of steampunk, an odyssey in search of used books, a memoir on watching a beloved grandparent grow frail and forgetful, reviews of a book on decision-making and musical releases by Knife Party and Weatherbox, poems on (we think) having your school picture taken, sitting in a railway station, and the struggle between ice and fire (with a haunting illustration by Scott Holloway), and finally an article on the modern-day relevance of a short story on postnatal depression published at the turn of the last century. This last piece, by the way, was written by our outgoing intern/contributing editor Sloane Perron, to whom we offer our best wishes as she moves onto another chapter in her career.

We are always interested in talking with young writers who would like to see their work in the magazine. Finished manuscripts are welcome (although we should remember Paul Valery’s dictum that a poem is “never finished, only abandoned” also applies to prose). If you don’t have a subject to write about, we’d still like to talk with you. We have plenty of assignments waiting for the pen (or keyboard) of an eager and creative writer. 

James Dempsey


Music

Featured



Daughters of Punk


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment

Daughters of Punk


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment

And then there’s Miley … first ridding herself of the long, luscious, Hannah Montana locks in favor of a Twiggy-inspired shaved head and bleach blonde bangs, and now crowned as “Princess of Twerk” by tabloids everywhere.


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment



Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Thomas Matthews


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Thomas Matthews


Comment

Weatherbox Takes Flight


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Thomas Matthews


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Thomas Matthews


Comment

Weatherbox has made a triumphant step forward in the evolution of its sound with Flies In All Directions.


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Thomas Matthews


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Thomas Matthews


Comment


Abandon Ship by Knife Party


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Ajey Pandey


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Ajey Pandey


Comment

Abandon Ship by Knife Party


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Ajey Pandey


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Ajey Pandey


Comment

Imagine Transformers 8: MegaÜber Dance Fight taking place in a haunted house in space, add some lasers, and you’ll have idea of where this album can go.


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Ajey Pandey


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Music, Review


Ajey Pandey


Comment


Culture

Featured



The Doctor Is In


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Alexandra D’Ordine


1 Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Alexandra D’Ordine


1 Comment

The Doctor Is In


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Alexandra D’Ordine


1 Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Alexandra D’Ordine


1 Comment

[The] 50th anniversary special was shown in 94 countries on six continents, achieving the Guinness World Record for the largest simulcast of a TV drama. Many of these viewers were in the U.S., one of the few countries in which the special was also shown in theaters. 


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Alexandra D’Ordine


1 Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Alexandra D’Ordine


1 Comment


Full Steam Ahead to the Past


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Kieran Sheldon


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Kieran Sheldon


2 Comments

Full Steam Ahead to the Past


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Kieran Sheldon


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Kieran Sheldon


2 Comments

I’d visited London before, and thoroughly enjoyed it. However, real-world London had nothing on Hodder’s version, which was populated not only by the expected lofty lords and cursing cabbies, but also by genetically engineered werewolves, clockwork automatons, and a man who had transplanted his brain into an orangutan.


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Kieran Sheldon


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Culture, Review


Kieran Sheldon


2 Comments


Books

Featured



Doing the Right Thing


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Books, Review


Warren Singh


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Books, Review


Warren Singh


Comment

Doing the Right Thing


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Books, Review


Warren Singh


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Books, Review


Warren Singh


Comment

The Right Decision doesn’t pretend to deal a winning hand, much less guarantee a good payoff. But it does teach one how to assess the odds, which is oddly liberating.


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Books, Review


Warren Singh


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Books, Review


Warren Singh


Comment


Poetry

Featured



Casually, Over the Armrest


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Gloria Cadder


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Gloria Cadder


Comment

Casually, Over the Armrest


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Gloria Cadder


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Gloria Cadder


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Gloria Cadder


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Gloria Cadder


Comment


School Pictures


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Dylan Dodd


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Dylan Dodd


Comment

School Pictures


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Dylan Dodd


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Dylan Dodd


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Dylan Dodd


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Dylan Dodd


Comment


At the Train Station


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Sam Hark


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Sam Hark


Comment

At the Train Station


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Sam Hark


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Sam Hark


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Sam Hark


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Poetry


Sam Hark


Comment


Movies

Featured



Upstream Color


Jan 15, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies


Warren Singh


Comment


Jan 15, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies


Warren Singh


Comment

Upstream Color


Jan 15, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies


Warren Singh


Comment


Jan 15, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies


Warren Singh


Comment

Upstream Color is …. a complex film that defies quick explanation, rife with alternative approaches to direction, narrative, writing, and sound.


Jan 15, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies


Warren Singh


Comment


Jan 15, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies


Warren Singh


Comment


Bikers, Birds,  and Blue Velvet: The American Bad Dream


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment

Bikers, Birds, and Blue Velvet: The American Bad Dream


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment

I’ve seen a man with bloodstained holes where his eyes used to be, another gruesomely stabbed to death in a sleeping blanket, and a group of gangsters moved to tears by a lip-synched rendition of “In Dreams.”


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Movies, Review


Sasha Kohan


Comment


Memoir

Featured




Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Abby Frias


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Abby Frias


2 Comments

What Separates and What Binds


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Abby Frias


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Abby Frias


2 Comments

Like fairy dust, the perfume would billow through the cracks and spread down the retirement home’s hallway, putting every other apartment under my grandparents’ velvety, Dominican spell.


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Abby Frias


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Abby Frias


2 Comments


A Bibliophile’s Odyssey


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Images, Memoir, Review


Nick Porcella


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Images, Memoir, Review


Nick Porcella


2 Comments

A Bibliophile’s Odyssey


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Images, Memoir, Review


Nick Porcella


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Images, Memoir, Review


Nick Porcella


2 Comments

I remember that first weekend kicking around my apartment, unsure of what to do with myself.

“Get used to it,” my Dad said, laughing. He’s been doing this for decades.


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Images, Memoir, Review


Nick Porcella


2 Comments


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Images, Memoir, Review


Nick Porcella


2 Comments


Autumn Leaves


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Julia D’Arcy


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Julia D’Arcy


Comment

Autumn Leaves


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Julia D’Arcy


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Julia D’Arcy


Comment

Why is it that some things stick with us like that? … Other things pass us by like autumn leaves in the wind, never to be thought or spoken of again.


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Julia D’Arcy


Comment


Jan 14, 2015


Winter 2015


Memoir


Julia D’Arcy


Comment

© 2014-2015 The Worcester Journal. All Rights Reserved.

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