Rubik – Elizabeth Tan

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RUBIK is not the first to say that it is not the first to say what it is not the first to say; and yet, it nonetheless makes new.

The Eligible Age – Berta García Faet

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Comprised of mostly declarative sentences verging on aphorism, THE ELIGIBLE AGE as a whole reads like a tractate.

The Full Stop Reviews Supplement #3

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Instead of treating the pdf as a site of loss, a dematerialization of the codex, this issue of the Full Stop Reviews Supplement posits the pdf as a material site of possibility.

DIY’s Pied Piper Economy

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As evinced by the last four decades of DIY music, we already use the technology of tech-capitalists toward proto-revolutionary ends, even small-scale, revolutionary societies.

The Job of the Wasp – Colin Winnette

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When I pick up a work of literary horror, I expect something deeply disturbing, if not outright horrifying, and yet, a work that is more than a ghost story told around some midnight campfire, whose only purpose is to chill and thrill.

Simon Jacobs

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If you’re a person of extreme persuasion, what happens when the tools to be as extreme as you fantastically imagined yourself being suddenly show up in your hands?

The Changeling – Joy Williams

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By novel’s end, you’ve been swallowed up and spat out, doused in stinging wetness and covered in luminescent fur.

As Black as Resistance

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Grounding ourselves in the Black radical tradition offers the best path forward toward freedom and liberation.

A Good Day for Seppuku – Kate Braverman

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Experimental boomer fiction that may not have lost its bile, but has lost its bite.

Dana Villa

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Like Max Weber, I think it’s dishonest and somewhat cheesy to use the lecture platform to voice one’s own political leanings. Students deserve better than to be harangued or have their liberal or conservative prejudices confirmed.