Midwestern Gothic (ISSN 2159-8827) 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. Issue 2 features fiction and poetry by Jeffrey Alfier, Nina Badzin, Molly Brodak, Aaron Burch, Renee Cohn, Elizabeth J. Colen, Nancy Devine, Anne Earney, Noah Falck, Rachel Contreni Flynn, Casey Francis, Scott Garson, Deborah Garwood, Carter Goodwin, Aaron Hamburger, Andy Hobin, Emily Howorth, Kate Jenkins, Allen Kopp, Sean Lovelace, Emily Tamayo Maher, Court Merrigan, Jim Miller, Dan Moore, James O’Brien, Adam Peterson, Alexis Pope, Suzanne Scanlon Ian Singleton, Keith Taylor, Robert Vaughan and Kelsey Yoder.
Midwestern Gothic (ISSN 2159-8827) 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 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. Don’t be fooled by our name. Gothic fiction is often defined as the inclusion of deeply flawed, often “grotesque” characters in realistic (and, oftentimes unpleasant) settings/situations. At Midwestern Gothic, we take to heart the realistic aspects of Gothic fiction. Not every piece needs to be dark or twisted or full of despair, but we are looking for real life, inspired by the region, good, bad, or ugly. Ultimately, we’re striving to catalog the best of Midwestern writers, and whether it be pieces physically set in the Midwest, or work inspired by your time living here, we want it.