• David Biespiel’s Poetry Wire: Old Friends Or Lovers

    David Biespiel’s Poetry Wire: Old Friends Or Lovers

    I was becoming awed by the wide horizon of the speech that arose out of an individual life lived in a single era and generation. I was becoming attracted to the writer’s creativity.

  • Retracing Steps

    Like so many silenced publications before them, Esquire has gone the way of the ear with a new Classics podcast that unearths articles from the magazine’s illustrious eighty-year history. In their latest installment, Rumpus friend and contributor Nick Flynn discusses…

  • Weekly Geekery

    The technological reinvention of the NYPL. The morality of Uber. All those times science took the supernatural seriously. The parables of Pavlov.

  • Consider the Ellipsis

    In the latest installment of Lexicon Valley over at Slate, Katy Waldman considers how to use an ellipsis with the aid of F. Scott Fitzgerald, James Joyce, and T.S. Eliot.

  • This Week in Indie Bookstores

    A bookstore-themed hostel will open in Tokyo this month allowing guests to sleep inside bookshelves. Kate Gavino launched her illustrated bookstore tribute Last Night’s Reading and she offers up some illustrated advice for attending readings at bookstores. An Indian duo…

  • “We Are Not Robots. We Do What We Can.”

    Without readers, for better or worse, writers would have no one to answer to but themselves. But readers sure do ask a lot of questions. Now, writers are asking this question: Shouldn’t there be a way to say, without any…

  • Vertigo and Hotel by Joanna Walsh

    Vertigo and Hotel by Joanna Walsh

    Darcie Dennigan reviews Vertigo and Hotel by Joanna Walsh today in Rumpus Books.

  • Exposure Doesn’t Pay Your Rent

    Last week, author and Star Trek actor Wil Wheaton wrote an essay about the seven things he did to reboot his life. The Huffington Post, a publisher recently purchased by Verizon Communications for $4.4 billion, offered Wheaton the opportunity to…

  • Dan Weiss’s Morning Coffe

    Inside the world of Amazon penny book sellers. Or, you know, maybe it WASN’T a sign of alien megacivilization. Sup with geoglyphs tho? Let’s all move into a housetruck. On the elusive language of David Lynch.

  • Whole Lotta (Middle-Aged) Love

    Whole Lotta (Middle-Aged) Love

    The first time I saw Adam on television, on American Idol, past and present collided, as if psychedelic clothes, gnawed by moths, are suddenly rewoven, resurrected.

  • The Poetry of Liu Xia

    Liu Xia’s burden has become too heavy. Her heart is beginning to fail. In isolation, she can only stare at a tree through her window, a tree that a bird can only dwell on: Is it a tree? It’s me,…

  • “Performing” Toxic Masculinity

    Genevieve Valentine explores the performance of toxic masculinity for Strange Horizons. Valentine uses the horror movie The Guest to deconstruct both the camp and the too-real danger of toxic masculinity: The film’s most suspense-generating disconnect is between the degree to which…