Skip to content
  • Home
  • Masthead
  • Submissions
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Email
The Bangalore Review

The Bangalore Review

Vol. XIII | Issue 3 | October 2025

  • Non-Fiction
    • Art
    • Book Reviews
    • Cinema
    • Creative Non-Fiction
    • Culture
    • Literature
    • Memoirs
    • Music
    • Nature & Environment
    • Philosophy
  • Specials
    • Editorial
    • TBR Recommends
    • TBR Roundtable
    • Translations
    • Fiction Special 2024
      • Peripheries – of Being and Living
      • Promises Made and Promises Broken – the NATURE of Things
      • Writing From the Peripheries of Language
      • Queering Language
      • Anthologies – The Editorial Perspective
  • Fiction
    • Flash Fiction
    • Short Fiction
  • Poetry
T
Categories
  • Specials
  • TBR Recommends
March, 2022

TBR Recommends – March 2022

Every month, The Bangalore Review recommends a reading list, also mentioning in brief why each book must be read. This month’s list has been compiled by writer, Çiler İlhan.
Read More
W
Categories
  • Book Reviews
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2022

Witnesses of Remembrance by Kunwar Narain

Sucharita Dutta-Asane reviews Kunwar Narain's selected poetry collection, Witnesses of Remembrances.
Read More
T
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2022

The Princess: A Parable

‘Who am I?’ The Princess asked the breeze. She asked the coloured waters, she asked the jewelled sky. She leant against the tree trunks, and sought her answers there. All she saw was beauty, all she saw was life though she didn’t recognize it so.
Read More
B
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Flash Fiction
March, 2022

Butch Learns to Write

The student teacher was substituting that day in 11th grade English. This pleased Butch Warner, a tough guy who resented authority. He expected a lame..
Read More
A
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2022

A Long Time Ago, at a McDonald’s in West Columbia, SC

The McDonald’s, bright and beautiful,is a coloring book filled in bya comic book artist. Yellow doesn’tstay inside the lines of the GoldenArches. Yellow doesn’t spill..
Read More
S
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2022

Suitcases

Brenda sat on the edge of the bed in her dead father’s room. She could still smell his piss. The staff at the nursing home..
Read More
S
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2022

Shaker Dreams

We should do everything as if we had a thousand yearsto live and as if we were going to die tomorrow.-Mother Ann Lee Down below..
Read More
T
Categories
  • Creative Non-Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2022

The Girls, The Ladies, The Rack

My best friend, Lee, and I have shared nearly 50 years of friendship. We have supported each other through childbirth, are godmothers to each other’s..
Read More
O
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2022

Outside the Laundromat: A Forward

Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, 2008 In mottled cotton, shambling toe-heel, toe-heel,Bass-ackwardsWith Zen concentration and breathing down the neck Of the square’sPath, sinking under the shards of bruised..
Read More
L
Categories
  • Book Reviews
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2022

Light of the Sabbath by Kavita Ezekiel Mendonca

Neera Kashyap reviews Light of the Sabbath by Kavita Ezekiel Mendonca.
Read More
C
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2022

Clothesline

I blink at sky, fiery yellowthis time of afternoon, as I unpinlaundry flapping in an intermentbreeze like flags of surrender.  Clothes have wrapped around themselves,knotted into..
Read More
P
Categories
  • Creative Non-Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2022

Postcards

Before the 2021 fall election, I agreed to write messages on 100 postcards to a list of strangers in Virginia to encourage them to vote...
Read More
M
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2022

Mrs. Munro is Heading Home

Each day, after breakfast, but before lunch, I’d see her old car making its way up the dirt road, great clouds of dust surrounding the..
Read More
A
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2022

An Ad I Wrote As A Child for a Ghost to Live in the Attic

I show my dead grandmothers the map I drew: here is woman, there is queer, here is my dot on gender ave. Wish you’d braid..
Read More
I
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Flash Fiction
March, 2022

In Hopes of Returning

There is a Japanese folk tale about a palace under the sea, a palace made of crystal and ruled by a Dragon King, where time..
Read More
W
Categories
  • Editorial
February, 2022

What’s Next for Publishing?

Our editor responds to the dismal news of Westland's closing.
Read More
T
Categories
  • Specials
  • TBR Recommends
February, 2022

TBR Recommends – February 2022

Every month, The Bangalore Review recommends a reading list, also mentioning in brief why each book must be read. This month’s list has been compiled by award-winning writer and poet, Priya Sarukkai Chabria.
Read More
G
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
February, 2022

Ghost Walk of the Hermitage Ruins

“Okay, mister. I’m intrigued. I should have known it would be something romantic.” Before leaving the house, I’d said, “Bring your boots and a sweater,” but I wouldn’t let on what I had planned. I should have told her, but communication was one of my weaknesses.
Read More
W
Categories
  • Poetry
February, 2022

What I Might Have Said

When I came to say goodbye,I brought a pocketful of poems,not mine, but some which I meant to comfort you,and I hope they did,hope you..
Read More
F
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Flash Fiction
February, 2022

Free Will

Please enter into the simulator and prepare for the memory reconstruction workflow. Sofia’s humanoid voice rippled through her mind. She stole a glance at the..
Read More
Y
Categories
  • Literature
  • Non-Fiction
February, 2022

Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing: The Uses and Manipulation of Bodies

“… teachers are very serious because they do all their work with their minds and so sometimes they have to be reminded that they must use their bodies.” - Yaa Gyasi, Homegoing
Read More
S
Categories
  • Poetry
February, 2022

Separation

In the spirit of all things we are not, I should be honest. Demand:take your cardigan off first, then my pantyhose, use your tongue to..
Read More

Posts navigation

  • « Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 26
  • 27
  • 28
  • 29
  • 30
  • …
  • 60
  • Next »

The Bangalore Review
Vol. XIII | Issue 4 | December 2025

ISSN 2770-0828

Published online every month by Spanning Minds, Inc.

Archives

  • Home
  • About the Review
  • Masthead
  • Submissions
  • Archived Issues
Back to Top
  • Home
  • About the Review
  • Masthead
  • Submissions
  • Archived Issues
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Email
© 2025 The Bangalore Review. Theme: Felt by Pixelgrade.

Begin typing your search above and press return to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Menu