Robin Caudell from Press Republican chats with Charles Fort
Date: October 11, 2012
Robin Caudell from Press Republican chats with Charles Fort about his writing career and upcoming works. – To read the full piece, click
Date: October 11, 2012
Robin Caudell from Press Republican chats with Charles Fort about his writing career and upcoming works. – To read the full piece, click
Date: October 2, 2012
Making its first apperance, Carolyn Guinzio’s Spoke & Dark was number 30 on the Poetry Foundation's best sellers list this past week! – To read the full article, click
Date: September 28, 2012
David Maine’s An Age of Madness makes the Women’s National Book Association 2012 Great Group Reads list for the month of October which is National Reading Group Month. – "A […]
Date: September 28, 2012
William Trowbridge's Ship of Fool was number 24 on the Poetry Foundation's best sellers list for the week of September 16th and Lynnell Edwards's Covet was number 22. This week […]
Date: September 25, 2012
Kelly Barth just released the book trailer for her My Almost Certainly Real Imaginary Jesus – Check it out
Date: September 9, 2012
Nin Andrews from The Best American Poetry blog chats with Kate Gale about the history and the future of Red Hen Press. – "Our editorial direction has always been to […]
Date: September 6, 2012
In a recent article on LJWorld.com, Kelly Barth spoke with Gary Henry about religion, sexuality, and her memoir My Almost Certainly Real Imaginary Jesus. – "Advance notices from other authors […]
Date: August 28, 2012
In a recent article on Bagoodjohn.blogspot.com, Ellen Meeropol spoke with Bunny about House Arrest and her works in progress. – "Ideas for the next novel are always simmering in the […]
Date: August 21, 2012
Tess Taylor discusses poetry with NPR's Melissa Block for the station's NewsPoet project.- “As a poet I get to break the frame of the day and make it something different. […]
Date: August 16, 2012
Red Hen's Kate Gale speaks to Los Angeles Magazine about moving and LA literary culture. – "Pasadena is a city where arts and culture matter. I wanted Red Hen to […]
Date: January 24, 2023
Thiel’s third full-length poetry collection, and her twelfth book, arrives bristling with navigable strangeness and open-ended questions. The 67 sometimes otherworldly poems here weave through biology, parenting, the pandemic, world […]
Date: January 3, 2023
A new anthology of Indian authors writing in, and translating into, English, Future Library: Contemporary Indian Writing creates a new sense of contemporariness on the Indian literary scene. This arrangement distinguishes the […]
Date: January 3, 2023
A moving and musical set of poetic works. Bell’s second collection of poems offers a portrait of motherhood, devastation, and hope. The author’s first collection of poems, Bright Stain (2019),was a finalist […]
Date: January 3, 2023
Sometime Dead Can Dance drummer Peter Ulrich takes a detailed trip back in time, to catalogue the band’s journey from shoe-string budget experimentalists to internationally esteemed sound artists. Peter Ulrich […]
Date: January 3, 2023
Mason is a poet defined by place, if it is Southeast Asia on the Pacific Rim or Northwest America, his poems breathe life of the people around him as well […]
Date: December 13, 2022
Dead Can Dance formed in their native Australia in 1981. The core of the band was (and is) Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard. When they relocated to England and settled […]
Date: December 5, 2022
A refreshing book, I thought – a collection of short stories that this reviewer started from the beginning rather than picking and choosing which story to read next, based on […]
Date: November 30, 2022
Diane Thiel’s third collection of poetry, Questions from Outer Space, comes after an interlude during which the poet devoted her energies to a travel memoir (The White Horse) and the translation […]
Date: November 30, 2022
The evolution of blank verse from Milton to Wordsworth, via Cowper, was not solely a change in diction and subject matter. Even as classical and biblical themes were displaced by […]
Date: November 21, 2022
A POET KNOWN for his narratives, like Ludlow, the acclaimed historical-novel-in-verse turned opera, David Mason curates the archipelago of intensely satisfying lyric poems in Pacific Light with the skill of a consummate storyteller. […]