INTERVIEW: Shawna Kay Rodenberg, Author of Kin June 8, 2021 I didn’t encounter Appalachian literature until I was an adult, and even then it was clear there were so few female Appalachian voices. Read the full story →
REVIEW: Negative Space by Lilly Dancyger June 8, 2021 Through art critiques, interviews, and personal memories, Lilly Dancyger attempts to answer questions about her late father—and herself. Read the full story →
CRAFT: The Grant Application as a Writing Exercise by Yolande House June 7, 2021 A long time ago, I accepted that I would likely never make much income from my creative writing. Read the full story →
WRITING LIFE: Solo Retreat (S)Log by Debra Leishear-King June 7, 2021 Pack car. Ignore heavy, untouched tub of books and writing supplies. Scowl at ruined vegetables. Read the full story →
REVIEW: Between Inca Walls: A Peace Corps Memoir by Evelyn Kohl La Torre June 7, 2021 There was a time, not that long ago, when it was rare for a young woman from the United States to move to a remote village in another nation… Read the full story →
REVIEW: Wife | Daughter | Self : A memoir in essays by Beth Kephart June 7, 2021 “Memoir is the life wanting to be transformed. It is the life we have been waiting for.” Read the full story →
REVIEW: Bad Tourist: Misadventures in Love and Travel by Suzanne Roberts June 7, 2021 The essays in Bad Tourist are less about describing the superficial details of someone’s travels than they are about a more intimate set of adventures. Read the full story →
REVIEW: Kissing Fidel: A Memoir of Cuban American Terrorism in the United States by Magda Montiel Davis June 7, 2021 Many Cuban exiliados — exiles — in the U.S. joke that their “BC” is “Before Castro,” the years before Fidel Castro took power. Read the full story →
INTERVIEW: Kathryn Nuernberger, Author of The Witch of Eye May 10, 2021 I just had this profound feeling of wonder reading about these women… Read the full story →
INTERVIEW: Carol Smith, Author of Crossing the River May 10, 2021 I didn’t come to journalism through a traditional path—I was a student of the sciences. Read the full story →