Latest

The Love Parade – Sergio Pitol

by

“The talk in The Love Parade is motivated by the classic structure of the detective plot.”

Someone Told Me – Jay Ponteri

by

In Someone Told Me, Jay Ponteri writes toward change, with freedom being his primary literary device.

The Moon Over Edgar – Ian Felice

by

This collection advocates for attention to dreams, the uncanny, the mundane, and the moon as if now is the time to devote ourselves to that possibility rather than, like Edgar, letting our life pass before us.

Bed – Elizabeth Metzger

by

The bed serves as a vantage point, a site of deep self-knowledge, and a realm of attentive care.

A Little More Red Sun on the Human: New and Selected Poems – Gillian Conoley

by

Gillian Conoley’s oeuvre celebrates an animated sense of multiple engagements not unlike the art of cinema.

The Employees – Olga Ravn

by

“In Olga Ravn’s The Employees humans and humanoids show a way forward for a calamitous earth.”

Jerry Stahl

w/

What do you wear to the greatest crime scene of the twentieth century?

The Life and Death of a Minke Whale in the Amazon and Other Stories of the Brazilian Rainforest – Fábio Zuker

by

An interesting consequence occurs in the titular tale, when time seems to proceed not along any linear or standardized path, but according to the Minke Whale’s appearance, disappearance, reappearance.

Teenager- Bud Smith

by

Teenager shreds the American dream during its long embrace.

Screwball Behavior

by

Dundy’s novels fit our times well while also existing blissfully without any of this baggage. Her characters are often selfish and reckless, but there’s nothing forced in these stories.