Skip to main content
WHITING WHITING WHITING WHITING WHITING
  • Foundation ▼ ▲
    • Home
    • People
    • History
    • Contact
  • Literature ▼ ▲
    • Whiting Award
      • About
      • Current Winners
      • Browse Winners
      • Search All Winners
      • Keynotes
    • Nonfiction Grant
      • About
      • Grantees
    • Magazine Prizes
      • About
      • Winners
    • Discover Writing
      • New Books
      • Chapbooks
      • Videos
      • Random Winner
  • Humanities ▼ ▲
    • Preserving Heritage
    • High Schools
    • Past Programs
      • About
      • PEP Fellows
      • PEP Seed Grantees
      • Dissertation Fellows
The Tsar of Love and Techno
Stories

This stunning, exquisitely written collection introduces a cast of remarkable characters whose lives intersect in ways both life-affirming and heartbreaking. A 1930s Soviet censor painstakingly corrects offending photographs, deep underneath Leningrad, bewitched by the image of a disgraced prima ballerina. A chorus of women recount their stories and those of their grandmothers, former gulag prisoners who settled their Siberian mining town. Two pairs of brothers share a fierce, protective love. Young men across the former USSR face violence at home and in the military. And great sacrifices are made in the name of an oil landscape unremarkable except for the almost incomprehensibly peaceful past it depicts. In stunning prose, with rich character portraits and a sense of history reverberating into the present, The Tsar of Love and Techno is a captivating work from one of our greatest new talents.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
The Animal Too Big to Kill
Poems

This collection, winner of the 2014 Lexi Rudnitsky Editor’s Choice Award, further establishes Shane McCrae as an indispensible poetic voice. With his unmistakable cadences, he probes insistently yet big-heartedly into some paradoxes of belief and righteousness, confronting God from the quagmire of his upbringing: half-Black and raised by White supremacists. 

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
The Lost Time Accidents
A Novel

In his ambitious and fiercely inventive new novel, The Lost Time Accidents, John Wray takes us from turn-of-the-century Viennese salons buzzing with rumors about Einstein's radical new theory to the death camps of World War Two, from the golden age of postwar pulp science fiction to a startling discovery in a Manhattan apartment packed to the ceiling with artifacts of modern life.

Haunted by a failed love affair and the darkest of family secrets, Waldemar 'Waldy' Tolliver wakes one morning to discover that he has been exiled from the flow of time. The world continues to turn, and Waldy is desperate to find his way back—a journey that forces him to reckon not only with the betrayal at the heart of his doomed romance but also the legacy of his great-grandfather's fatal pursuit of the hidden nature of time itself.

Part madcap adventure, part harrowing family drama, part scientific mystery—and never less than wildly entertaining—The Lost Time Accidents is a bold and epic saga set against the greatest upheavals of the twentieth century.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
Swallowed by the Great Land
And Other Dispatches from Alaska's Frontier

Swallowed by the Great Land features slice-of-life essays that further reveal the duality in the author's own life today, and also in the village and community that he inhabits: a mosaic of all life on the tundra. Unique characters, village life, wilderness and the larger landscape, a warming Arctic, and hunting and other aspects of subsistence living are all explored in varied yet intimate stories.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
Cabinet of Curiosities
Collecting and Understanding the Wonders of the Natural World

Exactly the book for every young explorer who loves finding stuff in nature and bringing it home. Cabinet of Curiosities is a lavishly illustrated introduction to the wonders of natural history and the joys of being an amateur scientist and collector.

Nature writer Gordon Grice, who started his first cabinet of curiosities at age six when he found a skunk’s skull, explains how scientists classify all living things through the Linnaeus system; how to tell real gold from fool’s gold; how to preserve butterflies, crab shells, feathers, a robin’s egg, spider specimens, and honeycombs; how to identify seashells; the difference between antlers and horns; how to read animal tracks. And then, what to do with your specimens, including how to build a cabinet of curiosities out of common household objects, like a desk organizer or a box for fishing tackle.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
If You Can Tell
Poems
If You Can Tell, the new book of poems by James McMichael, a finalist for the National Book Award in 2006, takes up what it might mean that the word was in the beginning, before which there may not have been "empty / space, / even, / nor the thought of it." A baby is conceived after a verbal exchange between his parents. He's born and learns to talk. Told that the grandfather he cherishes has died, he unknowingly silences any memory of the man. To his Sunday school class a few years later, he tells the lie that he himself was born in China. The boy grows up into a vexing faith. Though he expects his own death will be final, God is no less God to him in the life he's been given and must in time give back.
  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
A Wild Swan
And Other Tales

A poisoned apple and a monkey's paw with the power to change fate; a girl whose extraordinarily long hair causes catastrophe; a man with one human arm and one swan's wing; and a house deep in the forest, constructed of gumdrops and gingerbread, vanilla frosting and boiled sugar. In A Wild Swan and Other Tales, the people and the talismans of lands far, far away—the mythic figures of our childhoods and the source of so much of our wonder—are transformed by Michael Cunningham into stories of sublime revelation.

Here are the moments that our fairy tales forgot or deliberately concealed: the years after a spell is broken, the rapturous instant of a miracle unexpectedly realized, or the fate of a prince only half cured of a curse. The Beast stands ahead of you in line at the convenience store, buying smokes and a Slim Jim, his devouring smile aimed at the cashier. A malformed little man with a knack for minor acts of wizardry goes to disastrous lengths to procure a child. A loutish and lazy Jack prefers living in his mother's basement to getting a job, until the day he trades a cow for a handful of magic beans.

Reimagined by one of the most gifted storytellers of his generation, and exquisitely illustrated by Yuko Shimizu, rarely have our bedtime stories been this dark, this perverse, or this true.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
In a Mist
Poems

In a Mist is Geoffrey O'Brien's seventh collection of poems. It brings together scenes recovered from dream or experience, transmuted fragments of myth, passages retrieved from lost libraries and recollected conversations, the story lines of imaginary films, snapshots of lake and street corner and darkened construction site, the inventions of sleeplessness, transcriptions of chime tones and birdsong, and the memory of faces.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
  • Shearsman Books Store
Early Autumn
Poems
Two long poems on aspects of loss frame O'Brien's collection. "Elegy for My Brother" starkly describes the physical process of dying and evokes the afterlife of memory, dream, and art. The final poem is a single long sentence in which glancing at a painting of ruins triggers confrontation with catastrophe.
  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books
The Art of Memoir

Credited with sparking the current memoir explosion, Mary Karr’s The Liars’ Club spent more than a year at the top of the New York Times list. She followed with two other smash bestsellers: Cherry and Lit, which were critical hits as well.

For thirty years Karr has also taught the form, winning graduate teaching prizes for her highly selective seminar at Syracuse, where she mentored such future hit authors as Cheryl Strayed, Keith Gessen, and Koren Zailckas. In The Art of Memoir, she synthesizes her expertise as professor and therapy patient, writer and spiritual seeker, recovered alcoholic and “black belt sinner,” providing a unique window into the mechanics and art of the form that is as irreverent, insightful, and entertaining as her own work in the genre.

Anchored by excerpts from her favorite memoirs and anecdotes from fellow writers’ experience, The Art of Memoir lays bare Karr’s own process. (Plus all those inside stories about how she dealt with family and friends get told—and the dark spaces in her own skull probed in depth.) As she breaks down the key elements of great literary memoir, she breaks open our concepts of memory and identity, and illuminates the cathartic power of reflecting on the past; anybody with an inner life or complicated history, whether writer or reader, will relate.

Joining such classics as Stephen King’s On Writing and Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird, The Art of Memoir is an elegant and accessible exploration of one of today’s most popular literary forms—a tour de force from an accomplished master pulling back the curtain on her craft.

  • Print Books
  • Find your local bookstore (via IndieBound)
  • Powell's
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Alibris
  • Abe Books

Pagination

  • Previous page ‹‹
  • Page 37
  • Next page ››
Subscribe to M

Sitemap Menu

  • Foundation
    • Home
    • People
    • History
    • Contact
  • Literature
    • Whiting Award
    • Nonfiction Grant
    • Magazine Prizes
    • Discover Writing
  • Humanities
    • Preserving Heritage
    • High Schools
    • Past Programs




  • Accessibility Notice Accessibility Notice
  • PRIVACY & TERMS
  • © WHITING FOUNDATION
  •  
Site by PASTPRESENTFUTURE, with design by Language Arts