Ten Questions for Devika Rege
“There is no point in learning how to sculpt if you don’t know where to get the clay.” —Devika Rege, author of Quarterlife.
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“There is no point in learning how to sculpt if you don’t know where to get the clay.” —Devika Rege, author of Quarterlife.
The author of Short War ponders the ways research can deepen a fiction project—and how to know when enough is enough.
“Growth shouldn’t only happen on the page.” —Zefyr Lisowski, author of Girl Work
“Write toward what you want to discover.” —Jim Redmond, author of Because You Previously Liked or Played
The author of Rachel to the Rescue and Ms. Demeanor explores the risky business of fictionalizing public figures.
The author of I Do Everything I’m Told explores the nuances of writing at the intersection of sex, love, queerness, and race.
“I believe that writing is just a form of dreaming.” —Nathan Go, author of Forgiving Imelda Marcos
“The more you write, the more there will be to write about—so you’ve just gotta cut it off at some point!” —Franny Choi, author of The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On
In her third novel, Our Missing Hearts, best-selling author Celeste Ng continues to explore the social and political pressures that shape family dynamics—this time in a story set in a contemporary dystopia that feels frighteningly familiar.
“This book has its own life force. All you have to do is allow it to come together.” —Marwa Helal, author of Ante body