The Telegraph reviews The Sport of Kings by C. E. Morgan
The Telegraph deems Morgan’s novel “an audacious fiction that breathes new life into the American canon.”
News and Reviews
The Telegraph deems Morgan’s novel “an audacious fiction that breathes new life into the American canon.”
Glock talks to the team behind new film The Founders, the story of 13 women golfers who were the first female athletes to be recognized as such, about why female athletic role models are so crucial today.
In The New Yorker, Kathryn Schulz deems Morgan’s novel about the intricacies of the horse-racing world “beautiful and strange” and “urgent.”
On Literary Hub, King details how reading Judy Blume helped her get through her parents’ divorce and taught her that writing about families is “vital.”
On KCET, Waldie explores the stories of an array of California residents, from Joan Didion to migrant workers during World War II.
In Amtrak's Arrive magazine, Abrams reflects on the rewards of becoming guardian to her two young siblings.
LaValle discusses his upcoming project, an exploration of modern terrors of the Internet, and why "human violence" is realer than any other monster in horror writing.
Hood received the prize, presented biennially to a Georgia writer who has published an outstanding work of fiction, for her collection A Clear View of the Southern Sky. Hood previously won the prize in 1988.
In The Rumpus, McCrae’s poem, dedicated to Tamir Rice, is a meditation on race.
Cronin talks about action scenes, writing with his daughter, and why, when it comes to his novels, "some things are just mysterious."