The Seaplane on Final Approach – Rebecca Rukeyser
Mountains and bears and ice floes are hardly cheap lipstick and pleather jackets, but to a hormone-addled teenager, anything and everything looks like sex.
Prophetess – Baharan Baniahmadi
Slowly, she begins to sense the presence of all the world’s women in her own body, women who have been wronged by men or society in general. These voices fill her, erasing her own.
Beloved of the Dawn – Franz Fühmann
[Fühmann’s collection] taps into the depths of the human condition—the grotesque and the intimate, the proud and the petty, the mortal and immortal.
Somewhere between mathematics as melodramatic caricature and migraine-inducing combinatorial, what about a third way?
Writings on the Other Animals – Manuel Becerra
It isn’t intuitive to love the toad.
Shope’s strength is marking the marginal shifts and mechanisms of power between patient and doctor.
Hypermobilities – Ellen Samuels
The symptoms could be hers; they could also be ours.
The Secret Adventures of Order – Vincent Czyz
Czyz remains on guard against prose writers whose search for the poetic slides into squashy self-indulgence, like someone picking up a karaoke microphone with a mistaken confidence that they really can sing.
A Dream of a Woman – Casey Plett
The stories in A Dream of a Woman, much like the characters, hold each other up.
Kids in America: A Gen X Reckoning – Liz Prato
Truth and reconciliation: it’s not something we do well here in the United States.
