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Moon Man Walk

Upon hearing about the sudden death of his mother, Monarch returns to his home in Philadelphia to plan her funeral. Along the way Monarch falls in love, discovers the truth about his absent father and learns that his past is also the making of his present. This magical journey through space and time takes us literally from Philadelphia to the moon and back.

Dramatists Play Service
Premiere Year
2015
Premiere Theater
Orbiter 3 / Prince Theater
Premiere City
Philadelphia, PA
Premiere Creative

Cast: Carlo Campbell, Aimé Donna Kelly, Jaylene Clark Owens, and Lindsay Smiling; Director: Ed Sobel

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WHITE

Gus wants to be a famous artist. His desire to be acquired by a major contemporary art museum drives him to hire an actress to present his work as her own in order to meet the museum’s demand for “new perspectives.” This hilarious and thought-provoking premiere examines race, gender, sexuality, and art.

 

Dramatists Play Service
Premiere Year
2017
Premiere Theater
Theatre Horizon
Premiere City
Philadelphia, PA
Premiere Creative

Cast: Jessica Bedford, Jamison Foreman, Justin Jain, and Jaylene Clark Owens; Director: Malika Oyetimein

Major Production Year
2018
Major Production Theater
Shotgun Players
Major Production City
Berkeley, CA
Major Production Creative

Cast: Adam Donovan, Santoya Fields,  Luisa Frasconi, and Jed Parsario; Director: M. Graham Smith

Major Production 2 Year
2019
Major Production 2 Theater
Coachella Valley Repertory Theatre
Major Production 2 City
Rancho Mirage, CA
Major Production 2 Date
January 23, 2019
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I'll Never Love Again

Do you remember your first cup of coffee? Or how intense it was the first time you took your pants off with someone? Or all the things you promised yourself before you got distracted by the Adult World? Part concert and part archaeological dig about first love, first heartbreak, and how those formative teenage experiences haunt the rest of our lives, I'll Never Love Again (a chamber piece) is created from Barron's actual teenage diary. We track the emotional ups-and-downs of "Clare" as she goes through her very first relationship. It's a chance to spend some time in a real-life teenage brain and with real-life teenage artifacts (drawings from Clare's journals, the actual purple iridescent choir robes from her high school, her baby teeth...), but the goal is to jog the audience's memories and inspire their own personal reflection.

Premiere Year
2016
Premiere Theater
The Buckwick Starr
Premiere City
Brooklyn
Premiere Creative

Cast: Clare Barron, Joie Bauer, Kate Benson, Monica Hope, Mia Katigbak, Nana Mensah, Oona Montandon, Amanda Phelan, Jeremy Rafal, Maggie Robinson, Shawn Shafner, Richard Toth, and Peter Mills Weiss
Director: Michael Leibenluft

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The Best American Essays 2016

A true essay is “something hazarded, not definitive, not authoritative; something ventured on the basis of the author’s personal experience and subjectivity,” writes guest editor Jonathan Franzen in his introduction. However, his main criterion for selecting The Best American Essays 2016 was, in a word, risk. Whether the risks involved championing an unpopular opinion, the possibility of ruining a professional career, or irrevocably offending family, for Franzen, “the writer has to be like the firefighter, whose job, while everyone else is fleeing the flames, is to run straight into them.”

Includes "Bajadas" by Francisco Cantú, originally published in Ploughshares.

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The Paris Review
Number 174, Summer 2005

Features include as interview with Salman Rushdie, poetry by Jesse Ball and Dan Chiasson, and Lisa Halliday's short story, "Stump Louie."

“Luigi's infinite repertoire had transformed him into a boy Orpheus. No minefield of consonants to worry about: he didn't have to speak. Even his appearance had begun to change.” Read the full story here.

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New People
A Novel

As the twentieth century draws to a close, Maria is at the start of a life she never thought possible. She and Khalil, her college sweetheart, are planning their wedding. They are the perfect couple, "King and Queen of the Racially Nebulous Prom." Their skin is the same shade of beige. They live together in a black bohemian enclave in Brooklyn, where Khalil is riding the wave of the first dot-com boom and Maria is plugging away at her dissertation, on the Jonestown massacre. They've even landed a starring role in a documentary about "new people" like them, who are blurring the old boundaries as a brave new era dawns. Everything Maria knows she should want lies before her—yet she can't stop daydreaming about another man, a poet she barely knows. As fantasy escalates to fixation, it dredges up secrets from the past and threatens to unravel not only Maria's perfect new life but her very persona. 

Heartbreaking and darkly comic, New People is a bold and unfettered page-turner that challenges our every assumption about how we define one another, and ourselves.

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A Life of Adventure and Delight
Stories

Akhil Sharma’s masterful stories focus on Indian protagonists at home and abroad and plunge the reader into the unpredictable workings of the human heart. A young woman in an arranged marriage awakens one day surprised to find herself in love with her husband. A retired divorcé tries to become the perfect partner by reading women’s magazines. A man’s long-standing contempt for his cousin suddenly shifts inward when he witnesses his cousin caring for a sick woman. The protagonists in A Life of Adventure and Delight deceive themselves and engage in odd behaviors as they navigate how to be good, how to make meaningful relationships, and the strengths and pitfalls of self-interest. Elegantly written and emotionally immediate, the stories provide an intimate and profound assessment of human relationships between mothers and sons, sons and lovers, and husband and wives.

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The Chalk Artist
A Novel

Collin James is young, creative, and unhappy. A college dropout, he waits tables and spends his free time beautifying the streets of Cambridge, Massachusetts, with his medium of choice: chalk. Collin’s art captivates passersby with its vibrant colors and intricate lines—until the moment he wipes it all away. Nothing in Collin’s life is meant to last. Then he meets Nina. . . .
     
The daughter of a tech mogul who is revolutionizing virtual reality, Nina Lazare is trying to give back as a high school teacher—but her students won’t listen to her. When Collin enters her world, he inspires her to think bigger. Nina wants to return the favor—even if it means losing him. Against this poignant backdrop, Allegra Goodman paints a tableau of students, neighbors, and colleagues: Diana, a teenage girl trying to make herself invisible; her twin brother, Aidan, who’s addicted to the games produced by Nina’s father; and Daphne, a viral-marketing trickster who unites them all, for better or worse.

Wise, warm, and enchanting, The Chalk Artist is both a finely rendered portrait of modern love and a celebration of all the realms we inhabit: real and imagined, visual and virtual, seemingly independent yet hopelessly tangled.

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In the Language of My Captor
Poems

Acclaimed poet Shane McCrae’s latest collection is a book about freedom told through stories of captivity. Historical persona poems and a prose memoir at the center of the book address the illusory freedom of both black and white Americans. In the book’s three sequences, McCrae explores the role mass entertainment plays in oppression, he confronts the myth that freedom can be based upon the power to dominate others, and, in poems about the mixed-race child adopted by Jefferson Davis in the last year of the Civil War, he interrogates the infrequently examined connections between racism and love.

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My Darling Detective
A Novel

Jacob Rigolet, a soon-to-be former assistant to a wealthy art collector, looks up from his seat at an auction—his mother, former head librarian at the Halifax Free Library, is walking almost casually up the aisle. Before a stunned audience, she flings an open jar of black ink at master photographer Robert Capa’s “Death on a Leipzig Balcony.” Jacob’s police detective fiancée, Martha Crauchet, is assigned to the ensuing interrogation. In My Darling Detective, Howard Norman delivers adelivers a fond nod to classic noir, as Jacob’s understanding of the man he has always assumed to be his father unravels against the darker truth of Robert Emil, a Halifax police officer suspected but never convicted of murdering two Jewish residents during the shocking upswing of anti-Semitism in 1945. The denouement, involving a dire shootout and an emergency delivery—it’s the second Rigolet to be born in the Halifax Free Library in a span of three decades—is Howard Norman at his uncannily moving best.

 

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