“Leni Zumas here proves she can do almost anything. Her tale feels part Melvillian, part Lydia Davis, part Octavia Butler—but really Zumas’s vision is entirely her own. Red Clocks is funny, mordant, political, poetic, alarming, and inspiring—not to mention a way forward for fiction now.”—Maggie Nelson “Move over Atwood, Leni Zumas’s Red Clocks is a […]
The post Leni Zumas : Red Clocks appeared first on Tin House.
Sheila Heti : Motherhood
Azareen Van Der Vliet Oloomi : Call Me Zebra
Jen Bervin : Silk Poems
Cheston Knapp : Up Up Down Down
John Keene : Counternarratives, Playland, and Grind
Vi Khi Nao : Umbilical Hospital & A Brief Alphabet of Torture
Micheline Aharonian Marcom : The Brick House
Terese Marie Mailhot : Heart Berries
Carmen Maria Machado : Her Body and Other Parties
Eunsong Kim : Gospel of Regicide
David Biespiel : The Education of a Young Poet
Rae Armantrout : Partly – New & Selected Poems
Eileen Myles : Afterglow
Celeste Ng : Little Fires Everywhere
Peter Rock : Spells
Safiya Sinclair : Cannibal
Matthew Zapruder : Why Poetry
Yanara Friedland : Uncountry
Mary Ruefle : My Private Property
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