PUSHCART PRIZE NOMINATION ↓
NEW LETTERS Literary Award finalist
CONCORD UNIV. Freshman Comp pick ↓
PETE'S CANDY STORE/Reading ↓
THE CENTER FOR FICTION/ Reading ↓
MORE PRINT JOURNALS
"Wonderful, Horrid, Divine," North American Review
"Wonderful, Horrid, Divine," North American Review Karen Regen-Tuero, Wonderful, Horrid, Divine, The North American Review, Vol. 287, No. 2, The National Poetry Month Issue (Mar. - Apr., 2002), pp. 12-17
"Learning to Cook." TBR Rouge 10/25 – The Brussels Review
"Learning to Cook." TBR Rouge 10/25 – The Brussels Review Rouge is an act of exposure. Like the color it’s named for, this collection reveals rather than conceals—turning its light on what is usually left unsaid: the quiet pulse of desire, the guilt folded into tenderness, and the moments when longing rewrites a life. Built around one idea—that passion is not a genre but a te
"Care," The Literary Review"
"Care," The Literary Review" The Literary Review: Machismo: A Field Guide: 53 : Kathryn Nuernberger, R.A. Villanueva, Jay Baron Nicorvo, Martin Jude Farawell, Ricardo Pau-Llosa, Lance Olsen, Margaux Fragoso, David Licata, Becca Klaver, T.J. Forrester, Adam Haslett, Zachary Lazar, The Literary Review, Minna Proctor, Stephen Ferry: Amazon.in: Books
"Rosa's Baby," Chiricú Journal
"Rosa's Baby," Chiricú Journal Karen Regen-Tuero, ROSA'S BABY, Chiricú Journal: Latina/o Literatures, Arts, and Cultures, Vol. 7, No. 3 (1995), pp. 73-83
ONLINE JOURNALS
"Floaters," Hawaii Pacific Review, February 2025
"Floaters," Hawaii Pacific Review, February 2025 by Karen Regen Tuero Johnny helped me move out of our apartment, the one I’d found us two years and one month earlier. It was a decent-sized studio on Bleeker before it hits the Bowery, affordable …
"Slackers Rule," Lunch Ticket
"Slackers Rule," Lunch Ticket A short story that explores the parental balancing act between freedom and discipline through skateboarding.
"On the Corner of August and 19th," New World Writing
"On the Corner of August and 19th," New World Writing I was on my way to the office one morning, walking up August Avenue, wearing my gray suit cut so narrow I had to take short steps. With my paisley silk scarf tied in a bow, I suppose I looked like …
BOOKS