VQR Profile Banner
Virginia Quarterly Review Profile
Virginia Quarterly Review

@VQR

Followers
25K
Following
1K
Media
2K
Statuses
11K

An award-winning national magazine at the University of Virginia. Established in 1925.

Charlottesville, VA
Joined April 2009
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
VQR has made the decision to sunset our X account. You can find us at the handles below:    Bluesky: https://t.co/YyKdLFN2Va   Instagram: vqreview Threads: vqreview  Facebook: vqreview    To get regular VQR updates, subscribe to our weekly email newsletter:
0
0
1
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“In the face of all this time-distress, I try to keep foremost in mind that this world is full of beautiful and true things rather than reasons to watch the clock and become anxious.” Read more from Carlo Rotella’s essay “A Tempo,” new in our Fall issue:
vqronline.org
In the face of all this time-distress, I try to keep foremost in mind that this world is full of beautiful and true things rather than reasons to watch the clock and become anxious, and one should be...
0
0
6
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“She wrote a poem about me too,” new poetry from Devon Brody in our Fall issue:
vqronline.org
I wouldn’t call it a masterpiece but its title was “I’m autistic and I love you” so I really couldn’t have asked for anything better I don’t think.
0
0
1
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“Imagining a place is a way of loving it.” See “Memories of Distant Mountains,” a portfolio of illustrated notebooks by Orhan Pamuk, introduced by Merve Emre (@Mervatim), in our latest issue:
vqronline.org
0
0
1
@khatrysarah
Sarah Khatry
1 year
I can now share a live link to this essay, included in VQR’s fall issue last week. It’s in no way about politics, but it is about glimpsing the possibility of other worlds, other lives contained within the here and now.
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“We don’t exist in a soup of probabilities. We each carve a narrow path through the breadth of the possible—the sum of all choices we’ve made and all that were made for us.” Read @KhatrySarah’s essay “Experiments in Light” in our Fall issue:
1
6
10
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“We don’t exist in a soup of probabilities. We each carve a narrow path through the breadth of the possible—the sum of all choices we’ve made and all that were made for us.” Read @KhatrySarah’s essay “Experiments in Light” in our Fall issue:
vqronline.org
We don’t exist in a soup of probabilities. We each carve a narrow path through the breadth of the possible—the sum of all choices we’ve made and all that were made for us.
0
0
2
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
Read “Accomack Spit, The Protected Land,” new poetry from Forrest Gander in our Fall 2024 issue:
vqronline.org
Bay-facing scarps to the east bound beds of yellow-orange sand and sedge. And broken mollusk valves
0
0
3
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“Gratitude is a hard emotion to hold on to. So is ethical ecstasy. Days slip by, then years, and you go on living. Even the scars that mark how you earned it fade.” Read more from @MeeraTweets in “A Measure of Gratitude,” an essay in our Fall issue:
vqronline.org
We were two women on either side of thirty throwing punches at one another’s faces in a concrete stairwell abuzz with florescent light. Our instructor showed us how to make a fist (thumbs on the...
0
0
1
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
Subscribe to our weekly poetry newsletter here:
0
0
0
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
"The election is over, but we trudge back to the phone bank with our clipboards and / scripts. We can still dial the swing states." Read "Victory" by D. Nurkse, featured in today's VQR Poetry newsletter:
vqronline.org
The election is over, but we trudge back to the phone bank with our clipboards and scripts. We can still dial the swing states. North Carolina, Florida, Nevada: Can we count on you? Have a blesséd...
1
0
0
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“Grief is a shell game. The first time I tried to write about not having children, someone put forward the specter of the unbearable grief I would experience if I did not.” Read @SandraBeasley’s “I Am Cat Lady,” new from our Songs of Myself issue:
vqronline.org
Abyssinians are to tabbies as caviar is to salmon roe: the expensive version. I was determined to find an Abyssinian as I walked the floor of The Cotillion Ballroom in Wichita, Kansas, on what was...
0
3
3
@Karen_Palmer
Karen Palmer
1 year
My beloved Bethanne has a fantastic essay in the current isue of @VQR. It's about Berlin in the 1980s, and life as a military spouse, Christa Wolf, and Jenny Erpenbeck, and accepting our dark side, and our desire—our need—to seen as fully human.
@TheBookMaven
Bethanne Patrick
1 year
Bucket List Item: Get published in @VQR. My essay/memoir about Berlin, “Time Out of Time,” is in the Fall 2024 issue. Saturday is the 35th anniversary of The Berlin Wall coming down. https://t.co/5EnBoFDpWr
0
1
1
@TheBookMaven
Bethanne Patrick
1 year
An essay that needed 35 years of reflection
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“I thought Berlin had nothing to teach me, when it actually taught me everything.” Read more from “Time Out of Time” by Bethanne Patrick (@TheBookMaven) in our Fall 2024 issue:
1
1
5
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
Read Devon Brody’s poem “There are flowers in the median on the way down to New Orleans,” new in our Fall issue:
vqronline.org
Katie said they were nettles and I guess she was right. I think they’re very pretty—taller than I am, thin-throated and headed with a pink bulb made of linear petals. I don’t know what they feel...
0
0
0
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“I thought Berlin had nothing to teach me, when it actually taught me everything.” Read more from “Time Out of Time” by Bethanne Patrick (@TheBookMaven) in our Fall 2024 issue:
vqronline.org
I was perched, fully clothed, on Erich Honecker’s toilet seat, hoping for the night to end. My friend Isa was turning fifty and she’d invited every Berliner of her acquaintance from the over three...
0
1
3
@SandraBeasley
Sandra Beasley
1 year
A two-for-one special for my friends who teach: just in case your syllabus needs include "an example of a double abecedarian essay" OR "the firsthand testimony of a cat lady."
vqronline.org
Abyssinians are to tabbies as caviar is to salmon roe: the expensive version. I was determined to find an Abyssinian as I walked the floor of The Cotillion Ballroom in Wichita, Kansas, on what was...
3
4
11
@TheBookMaven
Bethanne Patrick
1 year
Bucket List Item: Get published in @VQR. My essay/memoir about Berlin, “Time Out of Time,” is in the Fall 2024 issue. Saturday is the 35th anniversary of The Berlin Wall coming down. https://t.co/5EnBoFDpWr
3
4
18
@VQR
Virginia Quarterly Review
1 year
“When I met the man who would become my husband, what worried me most was the pair of cats he’d had earlier in life, and his memory that they’d scratched his vinyl records. Kids? Eh. But having cats was nonnegotiable.” “I Am Cat Lady” by @SandraBeasley:
vqronline.org
Abyssinians are to tabbies as caviar is to salmon roe: the expensive version. I was determined to find an Abyssinian as I walked the floor of The Cotillion Ballroom in Wichita, Kansas, on what was...
0
3
4