Back on July 15, 2010,  I had high praise for the Evening Street Review. Let me add to that. Today, this is a grateful shout-out to Gordon Grigsby and Barbara Bergmann. Why? A couple of months ago, when I saw the Spring 2010 issue, a printing glitch led to my name migrating to the middle of one page of my story and the same thing happened in Adam Sturtevant's fine story. I've seen a lot worse mistakes in layouts. It was no big deal, I was impressed with the journal and had no complaint, but today, a freshly printed corrected copy arrived in the mail. How often do we writers see such care and concern? Thank you!
And I can't figure out why the blog isn't allowing me to post a link to Evening Street Review, so here's the address: http://eveningstreetpress.com/evening_street_review.html
 
 
Evening Street Press is centered on Elizabeth Cady Stanton's 1848 revision of the Declaration of Independence: "that all men -- and women -- are created equal," with equal rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." It focuses on the realities of experience, personal and historical, from the most gritty to the most dreamlike, including awareness of the personal and social forces that block or develop the possibilities of this new culture.

Well, I just read the current issue of the Evening Street Review and admired every piece in it (not counting my own). Does the mission copied from their website and pasted above prove the editors have good taste, or does the mission simply attract fine writing?