Reading Archive

The Best Poem I Read This Month: “A performance for intimate space with strangers” by Saretta Morgan

Author: | Categories: Reading, Series No comments
  Saretta Morgan participates in “text-based writing,” and currently attends the interdisciplinary graduate writing program at Pratt Institute. Additionally, she’s a member of the Belladonna* Collective, a feminist avant-garde group founded in New York City. These affiliations begin to orient lenses and traditions through which to read her work; but

Erotic Parodies of Women

Author: | Categories: Reading, Writing, Writing Advice No comments
A writer and I were on the sunny plaza outside the Nobel Museum in central Stockholm and she was telling me about an erotic parody project she’d collaborated on. The project was called Fifty Shelves of Grey and involved a dozen or so British authors doing erotic rewrites of

Preserving Intent: What’s Lost in the Cinematic Translation of Mrs. Dalloway

Author: | Categories: Reading No comments
I like to follow up my reading of a text with its cinematic counterpart. After finishing Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway, I rented the DVD of the same name with great anticipation. But after the credits rolled, I was unsatisfied: while the cinematic version of Woolf’s novel provides a touching

As the Train of Fiction Rolls On, the Space Between

Author: | Categories: Interviews, Reading, Writing No comments
Last year, I interviewed Pam Houston about her novel Contents May Have Shifted and the fine line between fact and fiction. “Well, I don’t think of it as a fine line,” she wrote to me in an email. My task as a writer has always been to take the

The Best Short Story I Read in a Lit Mag This Week: “The Hen of God” by Ashley Hutson

Author: | Categories: Reading, Series No comments
  Rituals, especially those practiced for a long time, often lose meaning for an adherer. Even those rituals that at first glance might seem strange can, over time, have their profundity sucked dry and their practices turn rote. In Ashley Hutson’s flash fiction piece, “The Hen of God,” (The

Who Speaks How

Author: | Categories: Reading, Writing No comments
I love when people ask my friend Jenny and I how we know each other, because long before we co-taught a queer theory elective and drove cross-country and made parallel moves to Pittsburgh, she was one of my first writing teachers. It was in her Xeroxed handout of eclectic

Origin Stories: Kathryn Davis’s DUPLEX

Author: | Categories: Reading No comments
  Duplex begins with a suburban street, a woman walking her dog, fireflies prickling in the gathering dark, boys playing stick ball, and headlights rounding the curb. Totally normal, except that the dog walker likes to go out “when the blue-green lights of the scows, those slow-moving heralds of

Indigenous Taiwanese Lit: From One Island Comes Global History

Author: | Categories: Reading No comments
  The deeper you go into reading indigenous literature the greater your understanding of the human condition. Such is the case with Indigenous Writers of Taiwan: An Anthology of Stories, Essays and Poems. In these contemporary and compelling pieces we see beyond skin color, religion, and geographic location by

The Food Memoir: Harking Back to Childhood

Author: | Categories: Reading, Writing No comments
One of the most profound depictions of memory in literature is immortalized in Marcel Proust’s In Search of Lost Time. The Madeleine Moment, as it is often called, exists in Proust’s seven-volume novel, where the narrator is swamped by memories when he dunks a madeleine, a sort of cake,

The Best Short Story I Read in a Lit Mag This Week: “The Storm” by Maria Kuznetsova

Author: | Categories: Reading, Series No comments
Despite humanity’s ever-expanding realms of knowledge and increasing mastery over planet earth and its inhabitants, there is still so much beyond our grasp, so much of which we’re ignorant. In “The Storm” (Ninth Letter) by Maria Kuznetsova, a young narrator Sashie must reckon with a world that is becoming more