REVIEW: Anything Will Be Easy after This: A Western Identity Crisis by Bethany Maile July 7, 2021 Bethany Maile confronts the fabled American West with a sharp journalistic eye and deep personal insight. Read the full story →
REVIEW: Crossing the River: Seven Stories that Saved My Life by Carol Smith July 7, 2021 The wisdom Carol Smith renders from these experiences reads like a gripping “how to” on coping with loss. 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 →
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: 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 →
Review: The Art of Memoir by Mary Karr October 1, 2015 In The Art of Memoir Karr combines practical advice with intangible wisdom, which fuses together beautifully to create a useful guide that also inspires. Read the full story →