Camille Dungy's latest reviewed–check it out here.
“News & Review Type: News
Suck on the Marrow reviewed at Barnes & Noble
Ron Egatz interviewed over at the OnCreativity Podcast
Check it out here. Good listening.
“David Mason Interviewed by Kaite Hillenbrand
… at Connotation Press. Check it out here. Wide ranging subject matter. Is art another church? What's it like to be the Poet Laureate of Colorado? Read to find out.
“Nickole Brown wins the Orlando Poetry Prize!
Congratulations, Nickole! Announcement here.
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Cerise Press Reviews Give, Eat, and Live
Thomas Pruiksma's translation of 12th century Tamil poet Avvaiyar gets is reviewed by Akshay Ahuja. Here.
“Tongue on The Rumpus
Sean Singer reviews Tongue over at The Rumpus. Check it out.
“Suck on the Marrow on National Book Critics Circle Blog
Camille Dungy's Suck on the Marrow is featured on the National Book Critics Circle blog! You can find the article here
“Rachel Contreni Flynn featured on Verse Daily
"Awake," from Rachel's collection Tongue, was recently featured on Verse Daily.
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Elise Paschen on NPR (again!)
This time on Chicago's WBEZ.
“Pasadena Open House
A few pictures from our May 1st open house at our new location in the wonderful city of Pasadena! Click here to view them.
“Iowa City Press Citizen reviews Suck on the Marrow
Vershawn Ashanti Young reviews Camille Dungy's Suck on the Marrow
“PBS profiles David Mason
PBS Newshour spotlights David Mason's Ludlow.
“Camille Dungy interviewed on NBCC’s blog
Suck on the Marrow is featured on the blog of the National Book Critics Circle.
“Tennessee Waltz: John Bowers Looks Homeward
Chronogram Magazine reveiws Love in Tennessee
Tennessee WaltzJohn Bowers Looks Homewardby Nina Shengold and photographs by Jennifer May, November 25, 2009American literature has its own railroad map, with tracks that meander from Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio, through Willa Cather’s Nebraska to Jack London’s Alaska. Readers can add a new whistle-stop: John Bowers’s Tennessee.It’s no accident that the railroad looms large in Love in Tennessee (Red Hen, 2009): The narrator’s father, like Bowers’ own, is a night telegrapher at a small-city depot in east Tennessee; his young son carries his dinner down the tracks in an old Christmas fruitcake tin. But Love in Tennessee, overflowing with idiosyncratic town characters whose lives and loves feel authentic as denim, is billed as a novel, not a memoir.Read more.“Holiday Sale on all Red Hen titles!
Now through December 15th receive free shipping on all orders over $50. Use code: DEC09 on checkout to receive free shipping!
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