Features & Reviews
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The Other Home I Found is in the Art Itself: A Conversation with Richard Blanco
. . . it’s the poet or artist’s job to open up a new dialogue, to ask questions that aren’t being asked
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Sustaining Forces When Splintering: A Conversation with Leslie Jamison
All of life is simultaneity for everyone. We’re all inside of many different tracks of experience at once.
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Punctuating pseudo-realities: Daniel Lefferts’s Ways and Means
This is a world in which the “ways and means” of the novel’s title are no sure thing, in which the relationship of the protagonists to the money they have (or don’t have) easily exceeds tangible causality.
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Weighing the Risk of Love: A Conversation with Phillip B. Williams
I want my readers to get whatever comes to their hearts and minds as they read the novel.
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Out of the Silence Comes the Form: A Conversation with Linnea Axelsson
An oral tradition is something you can add to a story that already exists, and you can now retell in a way.
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The Potential Literature of Life: Alphabetical Diaries by Sheila Heti
Stop talking to anyone, everyone, about your new projects—just be quiet and think.
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The Tightrope Walk between Authenticity and Fraudulence: A Conversation with Diego Báez
Humor and self-deprecation can impose an ironizing distance, but at what cost?
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The First Book: Kate Brody
You have to advocate for your work and make sure that you aren’t waiting on some fairy godmother that isn’t coming.
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AI as Memoir: A Conversation with Amy Kurzweil
Identity is a pastiche. My identity is made up of my family identities, in addition to other things that I’m always struggling to find.
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Curiosity is the Devil’s Lure: Liliana Colanzi’s You Glow in the Dark
Colanzi is rebelling against the loss of collective memory of tragedy, against the unbearable fact that things go back to normal faster than they should.
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Writing a Poem as An Act of Faith: A Conversation with Yalie Saweda Kamara
Each day returning to this book teaches me something else. It teaches me about the height of my optimism.
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Let it tremble in riotous beauty: Ana Portnoy Brimmer’s To Love an Island
Our love should make us quake, quake like a storm, a storm that tears down “the whole blood-marbled edifice.”