It looks like you've stumbled upon a page meant to be read by our code instead of viewed directly. You're probably looking for this page.

Book Review

The Invisible Drama

by Amy O'Loughlin

"The Invisible Drama" shows women that when they control their anxiety, they can “become all they dare to imagine.” Carol Becker’s "The Invisible Drama" is a richly insightful analysis of women’s collective psyche and the ways in... Read More

Book Review

Brother and the Dancer

by Amy O'Loughlin

Norris’s writing is meticulous and incisive. His convincing passages convey philosophic truths about the consequence of choice and the quest for self-awareness. Keenan Norris’s debut novel is an engaging, eloquent, and insightful... Read More

Book Review

Being Dead in South Carolina

by Amy O'Loughlin

Bewilderment, frustration, and despair keep the men in these stories on edge with only brief moments of hope to move them forward. Male protagonists in crisis comprise the majority of heartrending short stories in Jacob White’s debut... Read More

Book Review

This Close

by Amy O'Loughlin

Jessica Francis Kane’s second collection of short stories confronts identity, self-perception, and the struggle that besets the soul when we find ourselves lost in our own lives. Kane’s characters are not on any grand journey toward... Read More

Book Review

Slouching Towards Sirte

by Amy O'Loughlin

In Slouching Towards Sirte: NATO’s War on Libya and Africa, Maximilian Forte dissects the purposes, justifications, myths, and consequences of NATO’s military intervention in Libya in 2011. Publicized for world consumption as a... Read More

Book Review

The Caning

by Amy O'Loughlin

When Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, a bill that allowed slavery to extend into the western territories by popular sovereignty, Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts seethed in outrage, fearful that Kansas would enter... Read More

Load More

Book Reviews