• Heal Together

    The Internet may have irreversibly altered the forms activism takes, but there is still room for change. Christopher Soto reflects on activist frameworks used in 2015 and offers their strategies for working toward a more inclusive poetry community in the…

  • Short Revolution

    Great novels also experiment and innovate, but a short story can make a never-before-seen formal leap and then peace out, before you’re even sure what’s happened. At Electric Literature, Rebecca Schiff introduces us to the authors who have revolutionized the…

  • National Poetry Month Day 19: Aziza Barnes

    Steeple Talk didn’t know what they were called those white poles jutting out of baptist rooves. they want you to know from a mile away that’s a church, go the real estate agent. in water valley the houses are a…

  • This Week in Indie Bookstores

    The world’s largest bookstore is set to open in Iran. A pornography bookstore in Alaska is transitioning to a general interest bookstore with a sex-themed art show. Censorship is a growing problem in Thailand, warns a bookstore owner. North Carolina…

  • Hill by Jean Giono

    Hill by Jean Giono

    Salvatore Ruggiero reviews Hill by Jean Giono today in Rumpus Books.

  • Your Regularly Scheduled Gratification

    At the Atlantic, Megan Garber explores the revival of the serial with the recent release of Belgravia, a serial novel-and-app from Julian Fellowes, the creator of Downton Abbey.

  • Dan Weiss’s Morning Coffee

    Great moments in librarians. Photographing wild Chernobyl (is a cool thing to do). Contrarian watch: are people really that much smarter than apes? Your coins are filthy, and that is beautiful. Your oceans are filled with plastic and it’s horrible…

  • Baltimore, Offline

    Baltimore, Offline

    Social media’s role in all this is especially strange in that it makes people feel obligated to speak out, whether they’ve thought hard about their place in the discourse or not.

  • The Limits of Horror

    At SF Signal, Victor LaValle discusses his horror novella, The Ballad of Black Tom, and writers using the constraints/limitations of genre to their advantage. Want more? Check out our own recent interview with LaValle here.

  • Remaking Jane Austen

    At the New York Times, Alexandra Alter interviews Curtis Sittenfield, author of a modern re-write of Pride and Prejudice, on why she decided to tackle the famous novel, and more: The novel has already proved polarizing among Austen fans. “Sadly disappointing, this…

  • Tennis, Both Metaphor and Not

    The writer, existing only in reflection, is of all beings most excluded from the highest realms. Over at the New Yorker, John Jeremiah Sullivan writes about the prominence of tennis in the works of David Foster Wallace—in both Wallace’s fiction…

  • A City’s Responsibility to Its Creative Spaces

    Following the closure of Dance Tunnel, the latest in a slew of venues widely thought important to London’s club scene, a question seems to be emerging: exactly whose responsibility is it to support these venues and prevent high rents from driving…

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