Ten Questions for Ellen Cooney
“Everything in my life is material.” —Ellen Cooney, author of One Night Two Souls Went Walking
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“Everything in my life is material.” —Ellen Cooney, author of One Night Two Souls Went Walking
The author of When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities explores personal and collective nightmares.
Robbie Arnott’s The Rain Heron, forthcoming from FSG Originals on February 9, 2021.
“My Muse is with me always, everywhere.” —Valzhyna Mort, author of Music for the Dead and Resurrected
The author of When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities traces his origins as a poet.
Lauren Oyler’s Fake Accounts, forthcoming from Catapult on February 2, 2021.
Valuable lessons about characterization, the fundamental core of storytelling, can be found in the panels of superhero comics.
“I am never without pen and paper.” —Erica Hunt, author of Jump the Clock
Natalie Shapero’s Popular Longing, forthcoming from Copper Canyon Press on February 16, 2021.
“Don’t ever find your voice.” —Khaled Mattawa, author of Fugitive Atlas
Brandon Hobson’s The Removed, forthcoming from Ecco on February 16, 2021.
“There are so many ways.” —Destiny O. Birdsong, author of Negotiations
The author of Each of Us Killers reflects on how music has informed her fiction.
Te-Ping Chen’s Land of Big Numbers, forthcoming from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt on February 2, 2021.
The author finds solace in rereading George Saunders’s novel, Lincoln in the Bardo, while mourning the death of her father during the pandemic.
The fiction writer on five journals that published stories from her debut collection, If the Body Allows It.
The Texas press publishes poetry, fiction, and nonfiction that is “not only invested in self but also community” by writers from the United States, Latin America, and beyond.
Two new notable anthologies, And We Came Outside and Saw the Stars Again and African American Poetry, published in the second half of 2020.
For the first time in its 113-year history, MacDowell launches a virtual residency in an effort to build artistic community and fellowship during a time of social distancing.
Big Shoulders Books publishes writing from and about Chicagoans whose stories are overlooked—and then gives its books away for free.
The first lines of a dozen noteworthy books, including Dearly by Margaret Atwood and Memorial by Bryan Washington.
Sidney Clifton, the eldest daughter of poet Lucille Clifton, has purchased her childhood home in Baltimore with plans to recreate the space as a haven for emerging and established artists.
Five authors over the age of fifty—Elizabeth Wetmore, Vivian Gibson, A. H. Kim, Susan Buttenwieser, and Daniel Becker—share excerpts from their first books.
Ten years after her debut story collection was published, Danielle Evans returns with her second book, The Office of Historical Corrections, a timely reckoning with, among other things, America’s history of racialized violence.
In response to libraries shutting down during the pandemic, artists Katie Garth and Tracy Honn have collected a series of short artists’ books that can be downloaded for free and printed at home.