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To Poets of Color Whose Work Has Been Called 'Healing'

To Poets of Color Whose Work Has Been Called 'Healing'

Shayla Lawson: It Is Not Your Job to Fix White People

By Shayla Lawson | July 1, 2020

Why Do Some Mathematicians Think They’re Poets?

Why Do Some Mathematicians Think They’re Poets?

Susan D'Agostino on the Search for Symmetry

By Susan D’Agostino | July 1, 2020

In Praise of the Dream-Logic of Speculative Fiction

In Praise of the Dream-Logic of Speculative Fiction

Sophie Mackintosh on the Art That Takes Us Into Uncharted Territory

By Sophie MacKintosh | June 30, 2020

How Photographing a Dumb Paper Bag Led to Writing <br>a Novel

How Photographing a Dumb Paper Bag Led to Writing
a Novel

Anna Cox on the Radical Act of Being Seen

By Anna Cox | June 26, 2020

How Flight Embodies Our Deepest Yearning

How Flight Embodies Our Deepest Yearning

Richard Farrell on Writing, Yearning, Flying, and Falling

By Richard Farrell | June 25, 2020

Wandering Through Literary Lisbon in Search of Pessoa's Disquiet

Wandering Through Literary Lisbon in Search of Pessoa's Disquiet

Thomas Swick on the Unlikely Success of a Summer Writing Program

By Thomas Swick | June 24, 2020

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Permanence
  • No Way Home
  • Muskism: A Guide for the Perplexed
  • Small Town Girls: A Writer's Memoir
  • Last Night in Brooklyn
  • If This Be Magic: The Unlikely Art of Shakespeare in Translation

I Can't Believe Readers Are Still Getting Upset Over F*cking Swearing

By Amy Poeppel | June 22, 2020

Someone is Wrong on the Internet: A Study in Pandemic Distraction

By Irina Dumitrescu | June 19, 2020

Emily Temple on Translating a Decade of Internet Writing into a Debut Novel

By Emily Temple | June 16, 2020

Changing Me to We: We Should All Try Writing in the First Person Plural

Changing Me to We: We Should All Try Writing in the First Person Plural

Sharon Harrigan Recommends Stories Told From the Collective Perspective

By Sharon Harrigan | June 12, 2020

How Do You Write About a Woman Who Loathed the Spotlight?

How Do You Write About a Woman Who Loathed the Spotlight?

Alice Miller on Georgie Hyde-Lees, Who Was Married to a Famous Irish Poet

By Alice Miller | June 11, 2020

On the Radical Afterlives of William Wordsworth

On the Radical Afterlives of William Wordsworth

A Poet Who Inspired a Generation of Naturalists and Artists

By Jonathan Bate | June 10, 2020

In Praise of Digression, Both Literary and Culinary

In Praise of Digression, Both Literary and Culinary

Thom Eagle on 'Being Alive to Other Possibilities'

By Thom Eagle | June 5, 2020

Sejal Shah on the Tricky Work of Giving Shape to an Essay Collection

Sejal Shah on the Tricky Work of Giving Shape to an Essay Collection

Anjali Enjeti in Conversation with the Author of This Is One Way to Dance

By Anjali Enjeti | June 1, 2020

My Detroit Novel Was Shelved Until the Millennials Came

My Detroit Novel Was Shelved Until the Millennials Came

Michael Zadoorian on Writing About Detroit's "Creative Class"

By Michael Zadoorian | May 29, 2020

How Mary Oppen Rewrote the Role of the Artist’s Wife

How Mary Oppen Rewrote the Role of the Artist’s Wife

In Just One Book She Wrote a Life's Worth of Energy

By Abby Walthausen | May 28, 2020

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Page 262 of 338
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    • Lynn Cahoon on Choosing Whether to Set Cozies in Real or Fictional PlacesMay 1, 2026 by Lynn Cahoon
    • Permanence
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Mackintosh has a spare and confident hand Her work is sometimes described as dreamlike certainly…"
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