• The Faces of The Face on the Milk Carton

    The YA novel The Face on The Milk Carton has marked a thrilling yet disturbing rite of passage for many young readers over the past 25 years, iconic right down to its simple, haunting cover—which many of those readers could…

  • Wiki One Percent

    Jennifer Ouellette reports on recent studies of Wikipedia’s editorial hierarchy. While the site was founded on democratic ideals, the reality has turned into something quite different: Their analysis demonstrates that Wikipedia is actually quite conservative from an evolutionary standpoint: it…

  • Intellectual Property’s Much-Needed Evolution

    World Intellectual Property Day, the greatest of all spring holidays, was this Tuesday, April 26th. In honor of the holiday, the UK’s Intellectual Property Minister Baroness Neville-Rolfe made a statement calling for an update in the legal concept, Billboard reports:…

  • This Week of Short Fiction

    New motherhood: it’s common but totally strange, completely natural yet weirdly alien, a beautiful miracle and absolutely disgusting. It can also have some strong effects on a woman’s perception of self and identity, as Helen Phillips (The Beautiful Bureaucrat) explores…

  • Striking a Nerve

    At Vela Magazine, Amy Bess Cook discusses living with epilepsy, and the problem with considering epilepsy as neurodiversity: While one of these—grand mal seizures—overlaps with Sylvie’s, our conditions differ. Seizure causes, auras (the body’s precursory warning state), and severity leave room…

  • A Japanese Heart

    A Japanese Heart

    If you follow the script, people will judge you as having a genuine Japanese heart.

  • Independent Bookstore Day: Q&A with Lauren Groff

    Independent Bookstore Day: Q&A with Lauren Groff

    To help kick off the celebrations, The Rumpus has an exclusive Q&A with Lauren Groff, 2016 Bookstore Day Author Ambassador.

  • Notable Chicago: 4/29–5/5

    Friday 4/29: Author and activist Ashton Applewhite talks about ageism in This Chair Rocks. City Lit Books, 6:30 p.m. Chicago Zine Fest begins with a panel discussion and exhibitor readings at Workshop Chicago, 6:30 p.m. Women & Children First hosts…

  • National Poetry Month Day 29: Danez Smith

    My Body is a Country & I Built A Wall Around It

  • When Life Gives Critics Lemons

    In the New Yorker, Richard Brody laments how little coverage there is of independent film in mainstream media. If film culture is to change for the better, he argues, critics need to step out of their comfort zone and focus…

  • The Taxidermist’s Cut by Rajiv Mohabir

    The Taxidermist’s Cut by Rajiv Mohabir

    Kenji Liu reviews Rajiv Mohabir’s The Taxidermist’s Cut today in Rumpus Poetry.

  • The Storytelling of 🙂 😉 D:

    It’s hard to imagine a book written entirely in emoji that isn’t just about the conceit of writing an entire book in emoji, perhaps marketed as an Urban Outfitters coffee table book for guests to alternately smirk and groan at.…

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