Rumpus Originals

Lie Down, Patriot. Don’t Ask.

Jeannine Hall Gailey  ·  May 26th, 2012

While the personal narrative poems still maintain a steady voice here, they are interwoven with lyric landscapes, fragments of historical documents and redacted government files turned into clever erasures, and meditations on the dangers of scientific hubris.

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All Past Was Once Now

Josh Cook  ·  May 25th, 2012

To Yang, poetry is capable of communicating the consumed during. It is a “library tablet found underground,” whose immediacy is not buried by the passage of time.

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Only After the Soiree

Laura E. Davis  ·  May 23rd, 2012

Kristina Marie Darling’s is a shadow box collection of antiques, each holding other worlds and histories.

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The Other Nabokov

Matthew Aquilone  ·  May 22nd, 2012

In The Unreal Life of Sergey Nabokov, Paul Russell imagines the life of the not-famous Nabokov and delivers a novel that lives outside the legacy. …more

Walkabout

Anisse Gross  ·  May 21st, 2012

Walkabout, NYRB, James Vance MarshallJames Vance Marshall’s 1959 book Walkabout tells a unique story of two stranded children who are rescued from the Australian outback by another young boy on a wilderness quest. …more

Why Did You Leave Me Open Like That?

Virginia Konchan  ·  May 18th, 2012

Emily Kendal Frey’s compact, laconic poems from her first collection, The Grief Performance, outwit, outlast, and, eponymously, outperform not only death, but failure, ennui, and despair.

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The Game of Art and Ideas

Catherine Tung  ·  May 17th, 2012

Joseph Masheck’s lively new essay collection Texts on (Texts on) Art traces artistic influences from unexpected corners. …more

Eyes Open to the Shifting Sky

T Fleischmann  ·  May 16th, 2012

In this collection, Fisher focuses on the tensions of bringing a child into a world of war— of living your regular, daily experience while knowing that others die by violence, both down the street and across oceans.

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Pehlwani, or “Pinholes of Light”

David Wescott  ·  May 15th, 2012

Tania James’s new short story collection, Aerogrammes, is infused with family discord, ethnic discrimination, and psychological trauma wrought from multicultural families in America and England. …more

Bemused Bystanders

Alicia Kennedy  ·  May 14th, 2012

The first English translation of Daniel Sada, Almost Never is a bright introduction of this Spanish star who brings humor and unmatched style to the ordinary. …more

My Mouse Field Was a Triumph

Leah Umansky  ·  May 12th, 2012

Tanning’s poetry is as unique as the artwork she’s produced over the years. It’s real and vibrant, even at the end of her life. This last book of poems is a simple treat – an embrace.

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Why Should Anything Be Inappropriate?

Melissa Ginsburg  ·  May 11th, 2012

At her best Lehmann exhibits a depth of sympathy and uncertainty paired with keen observation.

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The World Cracks Open

Malcolm Forbes  ·  May 10th, 2012

Bill Clegg’s new book, Ninety Days: A Memoir of Recovery, follows the recovering crack addict as he tries – and sometimes fails – to stay sober. …more

Snow Moves Like an Ancient Herd

Ellen Miller-Mack  ·  May 9th, 2012

Voices of the Rainbow: Contemporary Poetry by Native Americans is a reissue of an anthology first published in 1975. Sacred Clowns won’t jump off the pages, but you will be reminded whose land you may be parked on—if you arrived after Columbus, that is.

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The Fourth Dimension

Melissa Queen  ·  May 8th, 2012

Catherine Chung’s first novel, Forgotten Country, is a captivating flux of family history and cultural folklore that examines identity, immigration, and familial obligations in the face of loss. …more

Unknown Unknowns

Ed Winstead  ·  May 7th, 2012

Set in South Africa, Patrick Flanery’s debut novel Absolution weaves together four stories about the guilt that we all share, and the absolution that we are all seeking. …more

If You Walk In the Darkness

Barbara Berman  ·  May 5th, 2012

In restoring the words of Jesus to their rightful poetry, and making an excellent case for this necessity, Barnstone brings their music, passion, ethics and intellectual rigor into a more complete view.

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The Bitterness of Clove

Lois Bassen  ·  May 4th, 2012

Her new collection’s… perspectives are varied but unified by intense focus, much like the eyes of bees. Hive is a word that recurs, and the nervous energy of the poems gives the reader a non-alcoholic buzz.

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The Room We All Desire Though No One Dares Enter

Thomas Larson  ·  May 3rd, 2012

Zona, Geoff Dyer’s extended meditation on Andrei Tarkovsky’s film Stalker, meanders through this complex film about avoiding a confrontation with our soul. …more

Exiled in the Far North of Longing

Joey Connelly  ·  May 2nd, 2012

Howell surprises by not trying to surprise at all…. Once a reader takes these poems on their terms, the poems become really intricate and beautiful.

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The 1960s Revamped and Re-imagined

Gina Rodriguez  ·  May 1st, 2012

Terry Bisson’s new novel, Any Day Now, a blend of coming-of-age tropes and alternate history, sweeps us through the turbulent ’60s and imagines a 1968 that both RFK and MLK survived. …more

The Internet is the Machine

Kate Petersen  ·  April 30th, 2012

Elizabeth Ellen’s Fast Machine compiles 94 of the author’s rhythmic, sprawling stories. …more

A Brilliant Button Without Any Cloth

Lisa Wells  ·  April 28th, 2012

The promised west in The Oregon Trail IS The Oregon Trail is an amalgam of bootstrap romance, wilderness bordered by suburban sprawl, death, and the ferocity of natural processes.

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I Used to be Epic Spittle

Jim Zukowski  ·  April 27th, 2012

It’s the project of the impossible, then, that makes Yau’s new collection so provocative and provoking, so worth reading, even for a reader’s or poet’s temperament that might be different from Yau’s.

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The Greatest Show

Kevin Nolan  ·  April 26th, 2012

In this intricately woven short story collection, The Greatest Show, Michael Downs tells the sad long story of crumbling American cities through the lens of a tragic circus fire of 1944. …more

Held Together By Sinews

Kascha Semonovitch  ·  April 25th, 2012

Kinsella describes; he does not prescribe. He rests less comfortably in his retreat than Thoreau and without the surety that he lives an exemplary life.

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A History of Potential

Chris Lites  ·  April 24th, 2012

In his new history of the experimental writing movement, Oulipo, Many Subtle Channels, Daniel Levin Becker goes where few have gone. …more

From the Memoirs of a Non-Enemy Combatant

Ana Grouverman  ·  April 23rd, 2012

Alex Gilvarry’s debut novel throws us into a complex world of a young Filipino immigrant who is unexpectedly detained by Homeland Security. …more

A Beautiful Marsupial Afternoon

Sean Singer  ·  April 20th, 2012

I found this text to be profound, relentless, frustrating, inspiring, demanding, silly, pompous, elastic, and mind-expanding. That is what poetry is for, and this is for poetry.

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This is Real

Molly Gallentine  ·  April 19th, 2012

With dream-like language, Miranda Mellis’s latest book, None of This is Real, gives us a fantastical world with a haunting resemblance to our own. …more

THE RUMPUS BLOG

Hello, Happy Homeland

Ana Menendez’s new collection of short fiction, Adios, Happy Homeland, weaves together stories from diverse Cuban voices that all confront the history and lived reality of their conflicted homeland. …more

9 months ago (0)

How Judges Think

When it comes to trying to understand people, Richard Posner is an American Sigmund Freud. …more

3 years ago (0)

To Preserve One Life

A Review of Writing in the Dark, by David Grossman

BY BRIAN SCHWARTZ

In the Hebrew language, I am sure, there are several different ways to say “enemy.” I have little grasp of what these words might be. I imagine that there are milder entries …more

3 years ago (0)

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