News:

Skylit Interview: Kristen Millares Young, SUBDUCTION

Date: July 20, 2020

Fleeing the shattered remains of her marriage and a betrayal by her sister, in the throes of a midlife freefall, Latina anthropologist Claudia Ranks retreats from Seattle to Neah Bay, […]

AN AMERICAN HISTORY SUMMER READING LIST

Date: July 20, 2020

This remarkable novel, just published in April 2020, opens with a 1968 Detroit anti–Vietnam War peace march when “guerrilla theater tactics” that results in an injured policeman, and the two […]

Poet Lory Bedikian says poetry is her release

Date: July 16, 2020

When Lory Bedikian was a girl, she sat under her parents’ orange tree in the backyard and collected flowers and took the leaves and blossoms and rolled them up like […]

Hoopla: July Riveting Reads

Date: July 16, 2020

Hoopla featured Aimee Liu’s Glorious Boy on their list of Riveting Reads for July 2020. Find the entire list here.

Read Your Way Around the World

Date: July 15, 2020

With travel plans cancelled for the foreseeable future, we’re all looking for new ways to feel transported from our homes, without putting our families at risk. That’s where these book […]

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Reviews:

Rain Taxi on Modern Love and Other Tall Tales

Date: May 30, 2012

With prose as clean as Hemingway's and a Kafka-esque sense of the absurd, Greg Boyd delivers a memorable book in Modern Love and Other Tall Tales. But these tales are […]

The Boston Review on Lucid Suitcase

Date: May 30, 2012

Red Hen Press, a small nonprofit press in Los Angeles, continues to expand its poetry list with the publication of Diane Wald’s first full-length collection. (Wald’s chapbook publications include My […]

Praise for Interpretive Work

Date: May 30, 2012

"Bradfield [has a] keen eye for intertwining the narrative of the natural world and her human narrative. This is what is breathtaking about Interpretive Work… here are the poems of […]

The Hollins Critic on Glass Town

Date: May 29, 2012

This first full-length collection by Lisa Russ Spear is a mature work, wrought with honed skill and diligent truth telling. Glass Town appropriately begins with “Scenes from Childhood,” a cycle […]

The Virginia Quarterly Review on Glass Town

Date: May 29, 2012

Emerson argued that one’s body belongs to the Not me rather than the Me, and Whitman countered that our identities derive from our bodies. These opposing views define the two […]

Asianweek.com on Glacier Lily

Date: May 29, 2012

A collection of poems that captures the experiences of a Korean American writer living in two worlds — her native Korea, her contemporary America. Neither and both are quite home […]

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