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Reviews

2651 posts
Graphic art featuring the words The Rumpus Prize
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  • Poetry
  • Reviews

The Rumpus Prize in Poetry, First Place: Georgio Russell

  • Georgio Russell
  • June 5, 2025
"Ode to the Black Man Nod"
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  • Reviews

Misperceptions, Assumptions, and Slurs: Jackie Domenus’s No Offense

  • J Brooke
  • June 3, 2025
Even when doing the work to figure ourselves out, even within the seemingly safest of spaces, we must grapple with how others contain and label us.
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  • Reviews

A Summertime Swoon Tash Aw’s The South

  • Aaron Hamburger
  • May 27, 2025
The relationship helps Jay achieve a sense of selfhood that promises to outlast the usual parameters of a summer romance. In a sense, he’s coming out to himself.
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  • Poetry
  • Reviews

Contrast, Rumination, and Metamorphosis: Diannely Antigua’s Good Monster

  • Aiden Hunt
  • May 21, 2025
As in her debut, Antigua heads off any feelings of confessional monotony by mixing her diary poems with an elegant variety of lesser confessional, more expositional poems.
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  • Reviews

Why a Happy Ending Matters: A Review of John Vercher’s Novels

  • Maya Williams
  • May 20, 2025
To appreciate John Vercher’s complete oeuvre of fiction, we have to appreciate what has remained throughout his work and what has shifted.
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  • Reviews

“Three Initiates”: On Jeanne Thornton’s A/S/L

  • Erin Vachon
  • May 13, 2025
When Thornton’s characters’ lives on and off screen drastically diverge, A/S/L not only satisfies nostalgia, but catapults the narrative to a whole new level.
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  • Poetry
  • Reviews

Sacred Mire and the Cutting Edge of Anti-: Tawahum Bige’s Cut to Fortress

  • Robert Manaster
  • May 7, 2025
Bige as an in-your-face activist-poet resists the colonizer through a poetry they themselves appropriate and transform mainly via language play and voice into an indigenous poetry of personal redemption.
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  • Reviews

Little by Little: Naomi Cohn’s The Braille Encyclopedia

  • Esa Grigsby
  • May 6, 2025
...disability will likely affect everyone in one way or another as they age—which is why regressive policies, revoked support, and limited accessibility are personal issues for us all.
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  • Reviews

We Must All Transition: Paul B. Preciado’s Dysphoria Mundi

  • Acree Graham Macam
  • April 29, 2025
Here we see dysphoria’s root: not an internal mental imbalance but external injustice and material harm caused by systems of hierarchy and domination.
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  • Reviews

Unfun: Mariah Stovall’s I Love You So Much It’s Killing Us Both

  • Seán Carlson
  • April 22, 2025
There’s a temptation to look for narrative redemption, a sense of completeness, some reassurance that the trouble was worthwhile, that all will be okay.
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  • Poetry
  • Reviews

The Wildness of Grief: Sarah Giragosian’s Mother Octopus

  • Barbara Ungar
  • April 16, 2025
...mothering is entwined with dying throughout this wide-ranging volume, as birth and death are revealed as two sides of one leaf. 
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  • Reviews

LittlePuss Press Double Release: On Vivian Blaxell’s Worthy of the Event: An Essay & Anton Solomonik’s Realistic Fiction

  • Erin Vachon
  • April 15, 2025
If the LittlePuss books are advanced exercises in cognitive dissonance, Blaxell and Solomonik insist on returning to matters of the heart.
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