Alexander Dumas once wrote that all human wisdom could be summed up in two words, “wait and hope.” In his new book, Infinitely Full of Hope: Fatherhood and the Future in an Age of Crisis and Disaster, British philosopher Tom Whyman spends time dissecting the latter.
Read MoreFlorida sings. From Zora Neale Hurston and the Highwaymen, to Barry Jenkins and Tarell Alvin McCraney, to debut Black women fiction writers Dawnie Walton, Deesha Philyaw, and Dantiel W. Moniz, I continue to listen.
Read MoreAs one of the most formally innovative writers today, Sarah Minor is pushing past page-bound boundaries. Her essay collection, Bright Archive (Rescue Press, October 2020), investigates place and space, asking readers to flip the book upside-down while exploring a commune, travel down a textual river to make meaning through mapping, and nest inside tens of parentheticals to cocoon themselves in the concept of home.
Read MoreAt the 2019 Lambda Litfest in L.A., I listened to Sam Cohen read from “Sarahland,” the titular story of her linked collection from Grand Central Publishing, an imprint of Hachette Book Group (published March 2021). At one point, the writer friend sitting next to me leaned in, sighed, and whispered, “So good.”
Read MoreHope abounds in Adam Clay’s poems, but it arrives like sandpaper, rubbing the soul down to its truest form.
Read MoreIndian literature is extremely diverse, spreading over multiple vernaculars and dialects, each with vibrant histories. Indian writing in English also represents an old body of work that long precedes the country’s independence from British colonial rule in 1947.
Read MoreA Country for Dying by Abdellah Taïa (Seven Stories Press) and Straight from the Horse's Mouth by Meryem Alaoui (Other Press) seem similar at first glance, at least topically; they’re both accounts of Moroccan sex workers interested in ideas like survival, self-sufficiency, connection, isolation, and loss.
Read MoreLong before I met her, I read Alysia Sawchyn’s essays in Catapult, Brevity, Diagram, and elsewhere. I admired her ability to write with such confidence, sharing parts of herself that other essayists often shied away from or tiptoed around.
Read MoreThe Clearing, Allison Adair’s debut poetry collection and winner of Milkweed Editions 2020 Max Rivto Poetry Prize, is a fiery, magnificent, urgent debut that reminds us of poetry’s ability to clarify perception, create awareness, and make space for us to connect with our authentic selves as we grapple with life’s chaos.
Read MoreIn the opening sentence of her debut novel, Kept Animals, Kate Milliken doesn’t meander through florid establishing shots: she lights a wildfire.
Read MoreA tale as old as time: I first came across Claire Hopple’s fiction in a slush pile. I remember my foot tapping on the carpet in my old apartment as I read her story, “Talisman,” about a woman following another woman.
Read MoreSue William Silverman’s latest book, How to Survive Death and Other Inconveniences, isn’t as grim as the title makes it seem. In fact, it’s sarcastic throughout and downright funny in many places.
Read MoreOver the last few years, I’ve encountered Timothy J. Hillegonds’ writing in such publications as Brevity, RHINO, and Baltimore Review, and I’ve always been impressed by his ability to tell personal stories with rich detail and a deep emotional impact.
Read MoreJune Sylvester Saraceno grew up in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, among storytelling aunties and preachers and all the conflicts that riddled the rural South.
Read MoreI first met Katie M. Flynn at the 2018 AWP conference in Tampa, when she was the Fiction Editor for Split Lip Magazine (she has since left the magazine to focus on her writing) and I was the newly enlisted Reviews/Interviews Editor.
Read MoreFrequent readers of Split Lip Magazine are likely already fans of Megan Giddings, whose 2018 flash fiction contribution, “A Husband Should Be Eaten and Not Heard,” earned the distinction of being included in the 2018 Best of the Net anthology.
Read MoreAt AWP ‘19 in Portland, I went to a reading at a Western-themed bar to see a friend read poetry. The lineup was long, as anyone who’s been to AWP offsites can attest.
Read MoreMary South’s writing has an attention to language, a dark, off-kilter humor, and an emotional urgency that makes her stories a great pleasure to read. Her debut collection of short fiction, You Will Never Be Forgotten, published this month by FSG Originals, centers on characters for whom technology is both an encumbrance and a means of potential fulfillment or escape.
Read MoreThe In-Betweens explores the spaces Davon has occupied throughout his life as the child of a Black mother and White father, as a stepson and son, as a person with roots in Alabama and New Jersey, as a Black man in a world where “you fit the description” is offered as a sufficient enough reason to pull a driver over.
Read MoreOlivia Gatwood is a poet whom you’ve likely seen on the internet. Her spoken word videos, including “Manic Pixie Dream Girl” and “Ode to My Bitch Face,” have accumulated over 3 million views. As a queer, emerging poet myself, I’ve appreciated the issues she’s explored in her work.
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