New Pages reviews Hardly War by Don Mee Choi
New Pages reflects on Choi’s upcoming collection and the poet’s ability to create her own language and translation.
News and Reviews
New Pages reflects on Choi’s upcoming collection and the poet’s ability to create her own language and translation.
In his Paris Review basketball column, Phillips recounts the reasons a recent Knicks versus Nets face-off was “no tale of two cities.”
On online journal Ohio Edit, a piece on Elena Passarello’s Let Me Clear My Throat explores how YouTube videos brought the collection to life for one reader.
Lauded by the magazine as “clearly superhuman,” Gurira shares stories of her theater beginnings in Zimbabwe and discusses the need for diverse stories and characters on stage.
American Theatre explores playwrights and TV writing and how “Shameless” writer and accomplished artist Sheila Callaghan “balances it all.”
Lerner writes of the beloved, fearless poet: "What her example taught us was the necessity of going our own way, of being one with others."
In The New York Review of Books, Pinckney delves into the role of anger in Between the World and Me.
Pollitt discusses the importance of young women's involvement in reproductive rights and her personal ties to the fight for legal abortions.
In the New York Times feature, Alarcón discusses what he’s reading with his 10-year-old son and the Joseph Roth novel that inspired his DJ name.
Hayes is nominated for his poetry collection How to Be Drawn and Marra is a fiction nominee for The Tsar of Love and Techno.