Martin Ott is the author of eleven books of fiction and poetry. He won the De Novo and Sandeen prizes […]
Kristina Marie Darling
Adrie Kusserow is a cultural anthropologist whose ethnographic fieldwork has focused on refugees from Uganda, South Sudan, Bhutan, […]
“The Trauma Mantras: A Conversation with Adrie Kusserow” — curated ...
Ana T. Kralj was born and grew up in Yugoslavia. She studied comparative literature. She writes in prose […]
The Visit: A Conversation with Ana T. Kralj – ...
Awarded Guggenheim and, three times, National Endowment fellowships for fiction and creative nonfiction, Thomas Farber has been a […]
Penultimates: A Conversation with Thomas Farber – curated by Kristina ...
Sybil Baker’s latest novel is Apparitionspublished by Signal 8 Press. Her short novella The Picture Vanishes is available as a free […]
Apparitions: A Conversation with Sybil Baker – curated by ...
Kristine Langley Mahler’s A Calendar is a Snakeskin is a practice in meaning-making, one that invites the reader […]
Haunt/Hearth: Kristine Langley Mahler’s A Calendar is a Snakeskin
Dear Reader of This Review, Don’t you love when the final poem in a collection shuttles you swiftly […]
“What lies below/is what persists”: Anne Myles’s Late Epistle
Inscribing poems with Greek myth, especially in the West, is a cultural habit. The Greek tragedies somehow speak […]
Veronica Golos on Jennifer Franklin’s If Some God Shakes Your ...
Keith Pilapil Lesmeister’s Mississippi River Museum, published by WTAW Press, is a rumination on internal distance. The story’s […]
A Piece of Northeast Iowa from Keith Pilapil Lesmeister’s Mississippi ...
The poems in Arrowsmith Press’s most recent Ukrainian poetry anthology In the Hour of War: Poetry from Ukraine, […]
War, Reality, and the Darkest Periods of Ukrainian History by ...
You’re The Woods Too by Dennis James Sweeney, published by Essay Press, is nearly impossible to categorize. It […]
Before the Woods, There Is Nameless Desire: You’re The ...
In this extraordinary portfolio of poetry, J. Hope Stein evokes the disorienting wonder and awe of early motherhood. […]