The New York Times reviews The Lost Time Accidents by John Wray
The New York Times praises Wray’s complex depictions of family, time, and space, proclaiming the novel "unfailingly thoughtful and gorgeously written."
News and Reviews
The New York Times praises Wray’s complex depictions of family, time, and space, proclaiming the novel "unfailingly thoughtful and gorgeously written."
In the New York Times feature, Pinckney discusses how the role of race in Othello impacted him and which famous female writer he would want as his biographer.
The New York Times applauds the strong narrative voice of Chee’s novel, proclaiming that The Queen of the Night “is a celebration of women of creativity, ingenuity, endurance, mastery and grace.”
In The New Inquiry, writer Yahdon Israel talks to Row about why race is “a fiction with very real consequences.”
In Harper’s magazine, a new poem by the late Wright details the experience of what happens when a person “forgets oneself.”
New York Times Live praises Gurira’s “powerful” depiction of Liberian women at a rebel camp during the civil war of 2003, declaring “Gurira is a force.”
Diabolique lauds LaValle’s novella as “packed with potency and poignancy,” praising LaValle's ability to pay tribute to iconic horror writer H.P. Lovecraft while "beautifully tackling" the racist undertones of Lovecraft's work.
Pancake talks about why it took leaving West Virginia for her to learn how to love it.
Li explains why she prefers not to write in Chinese, her native language, and the “fatal weaknesses” of both China and America.
On Poets.org, a tribute to the late C.D. Wright gathers poems, essays, and tributes by those who knew the beloved poet and teacher.