Jennifer Lang’s Landed: A yogi’s memoir in pieces and poses looks at the struggle of integrating into Israel, the effort it takes to sustain a long-term relationship, and the challenge of confronting oneself—even the parts we wish to ignore. The book’s experimental structure weaves yoga lessons from each of the seven chakras through seven years […]
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When I was considering American University’s MFA program, it was then-student Patricia Coral who convinced me to come. You can study across genres here, she told me, which was a departure from the vast majority of programs, which did not make room for such exploration. Oftentimes writing between genres means picking one—classifying a work as […]
Read More - Women Surrounded by Water
Christy Tending’s High Priestess of the Apocalypse: A Memoir of Disobedience brings together thirty-nine short essays on climate grief, environmental activism, and becoming a parent in fraught times. These pieces, presented in a variety of formats, range from lyrical to instructive, from reminiscent to angry. Central themes of political protest and organizing carry us on […]
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Don’t read Christopher Izant’s memoir if you’re looking for answers. The author served as a marine combat advisor for a unit of the Afghan Border Police, and in the wake of Kabul’s disastrous fall in 2021, everyone has the same question: Was it worth it? “I hate that question,” Izant writes. “Most days, I just […]
Read More - Final Engagement
In The Body Alone, Nina Lohman doesn’t shrink from the conundrum inherent in writing a memoir of chronic pain: “I need more words because none of these do the work I need them to,” she tells us. “Nothing, it seems, not my brightest words, not your sincerest empathy, communicates my inner world to your outer […]
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“Ostensibly I write novels and stories,” Danielle Dutton writes at the start of “A Picture Held Us Captive,” the long essay on ekphrastic writing that makes up the third section, “Art,” of her book Prairie, Dresses, Art, Other, “yet I often find myself more interested in spaces and things than in plots. The world is […]
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Long ago, my mother lost her French, and with it all memory of her upbringing in Franco-American Lewiston, Maine. This was why we had come to Maine that summer—not so much to capture a frisson of lost language but to recover memories, as if to grasp them like so much detritus sprayed upon the shore. […]
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To read Paul Lindholdt’s Interrogating Travel is to receive a wellspring of lived experience about traveling the land and seas of planet Earth: this blue marble floating in space, our “home globe.” Having passed the critical carbon marker point of 4.24 ppm in May of 2023, we find it increasingly difficult to remain optimistic about […]
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Kristine Langley Mahler, a married, thirty-eight year old mother of daughters, has reached a point of reckoning. She has worked as an administrative assistant at a university though her young adulthood, a job she describes as “golden handcuffs of half-time job with benefits.” Now it’s time for change. This lyrical memoir chronicles her journey. Kristine […]
Read More - A Calendar Is a Snakeskin
Losing a child. As you read those words, do you have a visceral reaction? A tightening of the belly? A gasp? One does not have to be a parent to feel the fear, the pain. One just has to be human. Children die—of illness, accidents, violence—but when a child dies of suicide, as did Eileen […]
Read More - Love in the Archives