A Conversation with Serkan Görkemli, Author of Sweet Tooth and Other Stories / As a storytelling platform, the short story offers intriguing possibilities for both writers and readers, in a similar way to its nonfiction cousin, the... Read More
Phanopoeia, explained Ezra Pound, is “the throwing of an image on the mind’s retina” on the “visual imagination.” When she flits between wolves and space trash, glass eyes and does and “bruised skin of milk,” Maria Williams... Read More
Black lesbian feminist Cheryl Clarke’s five-decade poetry career accommodated a second pursuit—a little matter of changing the world to be a better place for Black women, the LGBTQ+ community, and the disenfranchised. A veteran of... Read More
In whatever she does on the page, Katie Prince practices a subtle, omnipresent cadence of syllables so physically pleasing as to cause a blush. Linguistics, science fiction, philosophy, grief—polymathematician at ease—in this debut... Read More
Wherever souls reside, all the rules of time and space, language and thought succumb to an older way of being—and that is where Ricky Ray hangs out with Addie, his old brown dog. An ecomystic animist, Ray’s work explores their... Read More
The good poet’s body slowly leaves one sex for another and she wonders what else, if anything, will change—the Jewishness that influences so much of her world; the Holocaust memories of twelve murdered ancestors; love and sex; fear... Read More
Executive Editor Interviews Amnon Kabatchnik, Author of Horror on the Stage: Monsters, Murders, and Terrifying Moments in Theater / Fearphilia—it’s not a word but it’s obviously a thing judging by all the people who line up at... Read More
Executive Editor Matt Sutherland Interviews Anne Abel, Author of Mattie, Milo, and Me / In her deeply personal memoir, Mattie, Milo, and Me, Anne Abel explores the importance of loving another being—two-legged or four—and how that... Read More