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In coastal Catalonia’s wine country, families have owned vineyards for centuries. But the land was never completely devoted to grapes. Other crops have long provided sustenance and supplemented family incomes. As the monoculture that came with the twentieth century drove down profits, farmers took second jobs to support their vineyards. The death blow to the…
I was in the car on a road trip with my husband in 2014 when we heard a story about children with past life memories on National Public Radio. The story centered on a research program at the University of Virginia and the work of neuroscientist who explored the phenomena of young children with past…
Sita in Exile is a surrealist painting made not on canvas but in words. From the opening lines, “The sun was horrific. It spread itself over the fjord like an overturned pot of buttermilk,” Rashi Rohatgi creates a disorienting world inhabited by Sita, an Indian American who has recently relocated from Chicago to Norway. As…
In The Corner of East and Dreams, Joan Connor’s sixth book, readers are intrepid travelers in the author’s fictional wilderness. At least half of the collection’s thirty stories are laced with fabulism, images and developments drawn from a deep well of allusion and myth. Connor’s prose is so precise and elegant, her fabulous fictional wilderness…
Our Translation Notes series invites translators to describe some element of their process for a recent translation. This week, Jamie Richards introduces an essay on craft by Marosia Castaldi, whose book The Hunger of Women Jamie recently translated for publisher And Other Stories. + Jamie Richards: To introduce this essay by Marosia Castaldi, I want…
In Heading North (Braddock Avenue Books), Viktor has high hopes of playing for the NHL in America. When a plane crash kills all his teammates, including his secret boyfriend, Nikolai, Viktor is left alone to gather up his grief. There is no triumph over pain, but like any aging athlete knows, learning to live with the hurt makes…
Reading Aimee LaBrie’s award-winning collection, Rage and Other Cages, is like hanging out with a whip-smart best friend who can read a room and throw out a zinger while everyone else is still shrugging off their coats. Unfiltered, cringy, hilarious, LaBrie’s stories center on women who can no longer contain the stew of regret, fear…
It’s shocking how long ago I began writing my novel Waiting for Al Gore. I am not patient, persistent, persevering, or any of those commendable qualities ascribed to authors who doggedly toil away, draft after plodding draft, year after year.