"In stunningly elegant couplets, Neil Aitken transposes the dreams of
machines and humans into musical, sonically deft lyrics that sing songs of
ccreation, vision, possibility, futurity. These beautifully crafted poems --
evoking the designs of nineteenth-century mathematic...
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Twenty years ago, while working as a security guard in an art museum, Peter
Rock staved off the job’s inherent boredom and loneliness by trying to make
up a story for each photograph, painting and object in the museum. A few
years ago, reminded of the pleasures and play ...
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"Safiya Sinclair, a 2016 Whiting Writers’ Award–winner, crafts her
stunning debut collection around the beauty and brutality of the word
cannibal, whose origins derive from Christopher Columbus’s belief that the
Carib people he encountered consumed human flesh. Attacking...
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Jacqueline Woodson's latest novel, "Another Brooklyn" recently out in trade
paper, was a 2016 National Book Award finalist. She talks about this poetic
tale of four African American girls growing up in Brooklyn in the 1970s with
host Richard Wolinsky.
Running into a l...
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In Why Poetry, award-winning poet Matthew Zapruder takes on what it is that
poetry—and poetry alone—can do. Zapruder argues that the way we have been
taught to read poetry is the very thing that prevents us from enjoying it. In
lively, lilting prose, he shows us how that...
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Jake Vermaas speaks to poet Lauren Camp about her collection One Hundred
Hungers.
In her new collection, Lauren Camp explores the lives of a first-generation
Arab-American girl and her Jewish-Iraqi parent. One Hundred Hungers tells
overlapping stories of food and ritual...
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"As a descendent of Chantal Akerman and Unica Zürn—among others—Yanara
Friedland reimagines the origin myth. Friedland’s permeable pages allow the
reader entryway into a “mirror [that] becomes an open door,” a door
through which we hear the echo of Ana Mendieta telling u...
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Host Bethany Grabow talks with Jamie Harrison, author of the new book The
Widow Nash. A young woman is called in to uncover the missing profits after
her dying father returns from a business deal empty-handed. Her father’s
business partner, who also happens to be her ex-...
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Host Bethany Grabow talks with Julie Israel, author of the new book Juniper
Lemon’s Happiness Index. It is the story of a teen girl struggling to look
on the bright side while dealing with the loss of her charismatic older
sister and navigating the perils of high school....
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"Mary Ruefle is, in this humble bookseller’s opinion, the best
prose-writing poet in America. (And one of our best poets, too.) My Private
Property, her latest collection of stories, essays, and asides, is as joyous
and singular a book as you’ll read... "--Stephen Sparks...
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