Mass Reviews
July 4, 2019 - By Marsha Bryant
Some poets are wine poets. Walt Whitman is a beer poet. In a Brooklyniana piece from 1862, he describes the Eastern District breweries as “sources of the mighty outpourings of ale and lager beer, refreshing the thirsty lovers of those liquids in hot or cold weather.” In American literature, the boisterous and sprawling poem that . . .
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June 17, 2019 - By Brad Crenshaw
A review of The Book of Delights: Essays by Ross Gay (Algonquin Books, 2019) The 2019 Conference of the Association of Writers and Writing Programs concluded this spring, after nearly six hundred panels, readings and celebrations, and over eight hundred vendors and literary presses on display at the book fair—all crammed into three . . .
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May 1, 2019 - By Allison Bird Treacy
A review of Moxie by Alex Poppe (Tortoise Books, 2018) Scott Hamilton was wrong when he said that the only disability in life is a bad attitude. In fact, you ask many self-described disabled people, a bad attitude is just our other disability. That’s why, when an abled writer puts a disabled character at the . . .
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March 26, 2019 - By Allison Bird Treacy
Kill Class by Nomi Stone (Tupelo, 2019) Living as we do in a time of ceaseless, overlapping wars, I would venture that most Americans believe that we know how soldiers prepare for war, through basic training and boot camp, the persistent physical trials of young men to ensure their strength. In order to . . .
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December 14, 2018 - By Edward Moran
A review of SADAKICHI HARTMANN: COLLECTED POEMS, 1886-1944, edited by Floyd Cheung, Little Island Press, 2017. Despite approving nods from Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound, Karl Sadakichi Hartmann (1867-1944) remains one of the most eccentric—some say, dilettantish—figures in American literature. In that crepuscular, liminal era between Victorianism and Modernism, Hartmann held court . . .
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November 16, 2018 - By David DeGusta
A review of Accomplice to Memory, by Q. M. Zhang (Kaya Press, 2017) Editor’s Note: Given that this magazine was the first to publish pages from Zhang’s book, and that, since that time, the author has herself joined our masthead as fiction and nonfiction editor, this magazine certainly can make no pretense to . . .
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August 16, 2018 - by Jim Hicks
If you’re reading this blog, one of two things can be assumed: either that you made a point of seeing the new Spike Lee film this past weekend, during the first anniversary of the march on Charlottesville, or that you’ve read at least a review or two, and so already suspect that . . .
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August 6, 2018 - By Nil Santiáñez
I am posting this blog entry on 6 August 2018. At 8:15 a.m. local time, exactly seventy-three years ago, a Boeing B-29 Superfortress piloted by Colonel Paul W. Tibbets dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima. This is a fact. In three days we are going to commemorate the seventy-third anniversary of the . . .
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December 22, 2017 - By Leslie J. Harkema
A review of Uncertain Glory by Joan Sales, translated by Peter Bush (NYRB Classics, 2017) Joan Sales’s Incerta glòria is a novel about precariousness. Its account of the Spanish Civil War, refracted in the experience of various characters living in Barcelona and on the Aragonese front in 1937 and 1938, draws its power and beauty . . .
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November 2, 2017 - by Katherine Keenan
A review of Girl, World by Alex Poppe (Laughing Fire Press, 2017) For better or for worse, “feminism” is in fashion. Spunky shirts proclaiming feminist slogans have become mass-market staples, allowing anyone (who can afford it) to “try on” feminism in a dressing room. Celebrity feminists tweet one-line proclamations to show their support . . .
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