Andrew Lam is featured on KQED
Date: February 27, 2013
Radio host Michael Krasny from KQED talks with Andrew Lam about Birds of Paradise Lost. To listen to the full interview, click
Date: February 27, 2013
Radio host Michael Krasny from KQED talks with Andrew Lam about Birds of Paradise Lost. To listen to the full interview, click
Date: February 24, 2013
Fellow writer Dini Karasik chats with Dan Vera about Speaking Wiri Wiri for her blog. To watch the full video interview, click
Date: January 22, 2013
Kansas City's KCUR featured selections from William Trowbridge's Ship of Fool: The Musical on an edition of their show New Letters on the Air that highlighted new approaches to intertwining […]
Date: January 3, 2013
Red Hen has a lot to look foward to this year: "Our two top fiction spring releases, B.H. James's, Parnucklian for Chocolate and Andrew Lam's Birds of Paradise Lost… are […]
Date: December 19, 2012
Brynn's debut poetry collection will be released in March, 2013. To listen to her read, click
Date: December 6, 2012
Kelly Barth's My Almost Certainly Real Imaginary Jesus makes Library Journal's Best Books 2012 list for Spiritual Living.- To see the full article, click
Date: November 19, 2012
Alice Derry reads her poem "Fooling Around" from Tremolo for KUOW. To read the full article and listen to the reading, click
Date: November 13, 2012
Elizabeth Austin features Alice Derry's Tremolo on the KUOW website.- "In "Finding the Poem," Port Angeles poet Alice Derry sees in the salmon's efforts a parallel with the way we […]
Date: October 23, 2012
Anna King from the Sherman Oaks Patch interviews Eloise Klein Healy about her latest book A Wild Surmise: New & Selected Poems & Recordings.- To read the full interview, click
Date: October 12, 2012
Annalee Newitz from i09 praises Jessy Randall's work in Injecting Dreams Into Cows. – "The best science poem you’ll read this month." To get the full article, click
Date: February 3, 2026
This week’s Thirst Quencher doesn’t tiptoe, it kicks the door in. Kill Dick by Luke Goebel is dark, unsettling, and unexpectedly funny, driven by characters and ideas that refuse to […]
Date: February 3, 2026
Abi Pollokoff’s debut poetry collection night myths • • before the body, released this year from Red Hen Press with much advanced praise, is so deft in execution, so consistent […]
Date: February 3, 2026
The daughter of a pharmaceutical executive gets ensnared in criminal mischief in this ambitious blend of social satire and sunshine noir from Goebel (Fourteen Stories, None of Them Are Yours). […]
Date: January 27, 2026
Helen Benedict’s THE SOLDIER’S HOUSE (2026) completes her Iraq war trilogy, that began with SAND QUEEN (2011) and was followed by WOLF SEASON (2017). But the new book is actually […]
Date: January 27, 2026
“…Shot through with the sort of pseudo-profundity endemic to youthful privilege, Susie’s rambling, terminally jaundiced narrative paints a darkly surreal Lynch- and Kubrick-inspired portrait of LA.”
Date: January 21, 2026
Luke B. Goebel’s winking satirical novel Kill Dick parodies contemporary literary and cultural forms. Set against sun-bleached Los Angeles—a place marked by wealth, addiction, and apathy—the book accumulates exaggerations of […]
Date: January 20, 2026
How does one build an identity? It’s an ongoing venture of discerning and refining, discarding narratives as much as creating them. For a poet, especially one who writes autobiographically, that […]
Date: December 17, 2025
…In his latest collection Stories from the Edge of the Sea, Andrew Lam delivers work far beyond that narrow definition of the form. The settings are complex. Even a five-page […]
Date: December 17, 2025
…Dr. Adela Najarro’s fifth book of poetry, Variations in Blue, is bright blue, black and blue, with dark reaching light. This bicultural-bilingual author “stands on the edge of volcanoes” to […]
Date: November 4, 2025
This book encourages children to use their imagination. Throughout the book there are photos that encourage readers to really examine and appreciate. Just like cloud watching, you’ll eventually see something […]