The New York Times reviews The Other Paris by Luc Sante
“Sprawling,” “intimate,” and “absorbing”: The New York Times reviews The Other Paris and declares "Sante is in a class by himself.”
News and Reviews
“Sprawling,” “intimate,” and “absorbing”: The New York Times reviews The Other Paris and declares "Sante is in a class by himself.”
McDermott talks to the Syracuse news site about why she’s proud to write books she calls “ordinary.”
Slate delves into how David Adjmi’s 3C, based on TV hit “Three’s Company,” beat a copyright lawsuit and proved the importance of parody.
From the New World by Jorie Graham and Hayes' How to Be Drawn are two of Publishers Weekly’s picks for best poetry books 2015.
On Literary Hub, Pulitzer Prize-winners Gregory Pardlo and Tracy K. Smith discuss parenting as poets and the power of first-person narrative.
In The Paris Review, Sante discusses lost cities and why his first visit to the Louvre was terrifying - in a good way.
Marra discusses writing two books simultaneously, the influence of Ann Patchett on his work, and the “cheesy” mixtapes he made in high school.
In an essay for Literary Hub, Chee delves into the second lives of used books.
A new poem by Jackson, featured in the Boston Review, is an ode to the beauty of New York in autumn.
In The New Yorker, Chiasson articulates how the use of poetry to explore perverse worlds unites the seemingly disparate work of John Wieners and John Updike.