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Shadow Narratives
Paisley Rekdal says writing her sixth poetry collection,Nightingale, out in May from Copper Canyon Press, was“like trying to conduct a whirlwind.” The result is a stunningbook about transformation that will change the way we readviolence, silence, and the stories handed down to us.
lit mag gives voice to homeless
its contributors are all part of boston’s homeless community.
The American Writers Museum
The American Writers Museum
Vagrant & Vulnerable
Two Of The Most Dynamic Poets Writing Today, Dawn Lundy Martin And Nicole Sealey, Both With New Collections Out, Explore Issues Of Poetry And Craft, Aesthetics And Language, Luxury And Yearning, Drag And Systematic Repression.
The Poet At Work
With a New Boo Ok of Nonfiction, Bunk, to Add to His Ten Acclaimed Poetry Collections, a New Job as Director of a Leading Research Center on Black Culture, and a New Role as Poetry Editor of the New Yorker, Kevin Young Is Fully Engaged in a Personal Program of Moving Multitudes.
The Hour Between Dog And Wolf
Harnessing the power of hypnagogia
Portraits Of Inspiration
Seven writers with books coming out in the first months of the new year share their thoughts about creativity, the transformative power of writing, and the infinite potential of the literary imagination.
Epic
Salman Rushdie’s New Novel, The Golden House, Marks A Triumphant Return To Realism For The Titan Of Letters Whose Insights On Everything From Novel-Writing And Magical Realism To Identity And Social Media Are As Fascinating As The Worlds He Creates In His Books.
The Emotional Realist Talks to Ghosts
Already established as a master of the short story,George Saunders turns to the long form in his debut novel, Lincoln in the Bardo,an imaginative tour de force in which nearly all the characters are dead.
Authors Thinking Outside The Book
Charles Theonia’s latest book looks nothing like a book. Instead it is a collection of twenty-one tiny glass bottles, each one with a poem inside.
Worth The Wait
Readers Have Anticipated a New Novel From the Author of the God of Small Things for Two Full Decades. Now, With the Release of Arundhati Roy’s the Ministry of Utmost Happiness , The Wait Is Over.
Zinzi Clemmons
whose debut novel, What We Lose, will be published in July by Viking.
Jess Arndt
whose debut story collection, Large Animals, was published in May by Catapult.
Lisa Ko
whose debut novel, The Leavers, winner of the 2016 PEN/Bellwether Prize, was published in May by Algonquin Books.
Diksha Basu
whose debut novel, The Windfall, was published in June by Crown.
turning the soil
how a year of farmwork yielded poems
freeman reimagines the journal
days before the second issue’s new york release, freeman talked about his vision for the journal.
the shakespeare sonnet project
the original deadline was shakespeare’s 450th birthday (april 23, 2014), but the project’s aim—to merge the literary and visual arts, and bring the poetry of william shakespeare to the poetry of new york city—quickly proved more ambitious than expected.
Bullets Into Bells
Bullets Into Bells
Making Connections Through Books
Making Connections Through Books
Sokolowski's Inspiring Word Work
Sokolowski's Inspiring Word Work
Agent Advice
Annie Hwang of Folio Literary Management
Reviewers & Critics
Reviewers & Critics
Still Dancing
Fifteen Years In The Making, Ilya Kaminsky’s Deaf Republic, Published This Month By Graywolf Press, Is A Dramatic Masterwork, A Parable-in-poems That Confronts The Darkness Of War And Terror With The Blazing Light Of “a Poet In Love With The World.”
My Past And Future Assassin
In his sixth book, a sonnet sequence published by Penguin in June, Terrance Hayes cuts deep, to the marrow of the American moment, in a form with a razor’s edge: Love poems for the forces trying to kill you.
Severe Weather In The Sunshine State
Florida isn’t just the title of Lauren Groff’s new story collection, published in June by Riverhead books; It’s also a bad joke, a good home, a source of inspiration, a set of contradictions, and, perhaps, ultimately a state of mind.
Dear Readers, You Are Not Alone
When you walk into a bar full of people silently on their phones, no one thinks anything of it,” says Guinevere de la Mare, founder of San Francisco–based Silent Book Club. “But when you walk into a bar full of people silently reading books? Now that’s an arresting image.” It’s also an image that’s becoming more common, as a new literary trend gains traction around the country: silent reading parties.
How Deep This Grief
How Deep This Grief
Wilson Leads The Feminist Press
In July writer, activist, and media commentator Jamia Wilson was named the new executive director and publisher of the Feminist Press (FP), a forty-seven-year-old nonprofit known for highlighting feminist perspectives and prose. Located at the City University of New York, the press has published books by writers such as Shahrnush Parsipur and Ama Ata Aidoo and public figures such as Anita Hill and Justin Vivian Bond.
I, Too Arts Collective
For nearly ten years the brownstone at 20 East 127th Street in Harlem was silent.