Cynan Jones on Nature and Nonlinear Love

Cynan Jones on Nature and Nonlinear Love

This week’s story is about a couple that fears that a fierce storm is going to bring a tree down on the power lines near their cabin in the countryside, potentially endangering them and their young daughter. When did this scenario first come to you? Although readers will receive this story very much through the […]

An (Ongoing) Taxonomy of the Sad Rich Girls of Literature

An (Ongoing) Taxonomy of the Sad Rich Girls of Literature

(Spoilers follow.) Some readers love thrillers, others love mysteries—my idea of a page-turner is a Sad Rich Girl novel. Show me a discontented daughter of privilege who wiles away her days agonizing over how dull life is, complaining about nepobaby accusations, or—most deliciously—wishing she were poor so there was some damn romance in her life, […]

These Books Might Make You Happier

These Books Might Make You Happier

This illustration shows a human in various stages of movement, occasionally moving underneath a rain cloud. With the pandemic receding and a fraught election season looming, Americans seem more concerned than ever about mental health — yours, mine and that of the next leader of the free world. According to the C.D.C., a whopping 57.2 […]

The PEN World Voices Festival has been canceled.

The PEN World Voices Festival has been canceled.

Following months of escalating protests over its response to Israel’s war on Gaza, and just four days on from the cancellation of its annual literary awards , embattled free expression organization PEN America has now also announced the cancelation of its World Voices Festival. According to a press release published on the organization’s website in […]

“Debris”

“Debris”

The following is a story from Uche Okonkwo’s collection A Kind of Madness . Okonkwo’s stories have been published in A Public Space, One Story, the Kenyon Review, Ploughshares, The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2019 , and Lagos Noir . She is a recipient of the George Bennett Fellowship at Phillips Exeter Academy, a Steinbeck […]

Making of a Poem: Maureen N. McLane on “Haptographic Interface”

Making of a Poem: Maureen N. McLane on “Haptographic Interface”

The poem begins. Photograph courtesy of Maureen McLane. For our series Making of a Poem, we’re asking poets to dissect the poems they’ve published in our pages. Maureen N. McLane’s poem “ Haptographic Interface ” appears in the new Spring issue of the Review. How did this poem start for you? Was it with an […]

How to Think with Robert Pogue Harrison

How to Think with Robert Pogue Harrison

He’s been called one of the America’s leading humanists , and now he’s taking a step back. Robert Pogue Harrison , Rosina Pierotti Professor in Italian Literature in the Department of French & Italian at Stanford and has formally retired and is now professor emeritus – but thank goodness he promises not to go away! […]

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