The Saturday Evening Quill was a short-lived (1928–1930) African-American literary magazine of the Harlem Renaissance.
Out of this grew an annual literary magazine, Saturday Evening Quill, which Gordon edited.
[1][2] It was intended mainly for the benefit of club members, and only the third and final issue was available for sale to the public.
[2] The Saturday Evening Quill published stories, poems, essays, and plays.
In addition to Gordon, Johnson, and West themselves, it published such noted writers as Gertrude Schalk, Florida Ruffin Ridley, Edythe Mae Gordon, Lois Mailou Jones, Lewis Grandison Alexander, Alvira Hazzard,[3] Alice E. Furlong,[4] and Roscoe Wright (who also designed its monogram).