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Living In Your Light

A slim novel in three parts, Living in Your Light centers on Malika, an indomitable Moroccan woman modeled on the author’s mother. Visiting the souk with her father at Béni-Mallal, south of Rabat, in the mid-1950s, seventeen-year-old Malika falls headlong in love with Allal, the son of a distant relative. Her father leaves the pair…

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Recent posts

  • A Physical Education

    Our Research Notes series invites authors to describe their process for a recent book, with “research” defined as broadly as they like. This week, Jonathan Taylor writes about A Physical Education: On Bullying, Discipline & Other Lessons from Goldsmiths Press. + “We’ll look back on this and laugh”: What I learned about memoir in writing…


  • Favor

    Siobhan was thinking about her breasts. This was no good.  In the books she edited, women thought about them all the time. Or if not all the time—these women were also much concerned with dimensional portals, untrustworthy cyborgs—far more often than Siobhan did. They compared these breasts (busts, bosoms, mammaries, and once, alarmingly, fronts; she’d…


  • True Failure

    In Alex Higley’s True Failure, if the American Dream survives anywhere, it’s in the realm of reality TV, where shrewd producers create a social microcosm in which small windfalls come to those bold enough to compete for them. True Failure centers on the fictitious Big Shot, a Shark Tank-esque production where aspiring contestants pitch business…


  • Trashlot

    It happened the way things these days do: a text from my mother with a link to Facebook. The Washington County Sheriff’s Department posted a missing person’s notice. A face familiar at once, but from memories I would’ve thought atrophied completely by now…


  • Sister Deborah

    Sister Deborah by French-Rwandan writer Scholastique Mukasonga, translated from the French by Mark Polizzotti, begins in 1930s Rwanda with the arrival from the United States of a group of Black evangelical Christians preaching of a Black Jesus who will arrive on a cloud. The Americans bring with them Sister Deborah, a young woman noted for…


  • The Theme Park of Women’s Bodies

    Our Research Notes series invites authors to describe their process for a recent book, with “research” defined as broadly as they like. This week, Maggie Cooper writes about The Theme Park of Women’s Bodies from Bull City Press. + I am an inveterate googler. I try to control myself: I don’t google during theatrical performances,…


  • In The Skin Of A Fig

    “Did you know there is always a dead wasp hidden inside a fig?” Vera asks, sinking her teeth into the pink and green flesh. I’m sure it’s a myth but won’t say so. This summer we’re exploring sex with the enthusiasm a dedicated entomologist affords a newly discovered species. Sex is a red splash of…


  • Interview With Miles Harvey

    Miles Harvey’s debut collection The Registry of Forgotten Objects (Mad Creek Books, 2024)looks at the stories of the objects in our lives, how they change meanings, and tie the past to the present in new ways as they drift between and among people’s lives. Each of these stories explore how objects evoke strange and interesting…


  • Sad Grownups

    What an apt title for this memorable debut collection! Stuber’s grownups are often sad, both in terms of their affect and in performance of grownup tasks—notably, parenting. Happily, though, a wry humor and compassion give these well-crafted, moving stories balance and warmth. Stuber has created characters who are our contemporaries—strangers in a strange time—making it…


  • Over is Under is Everywhere

    Every day when we wake up in Hazel’s bed, our phones let out a collective beep in symphony. It is always the same message: Excessive Heat Warning. Degrees of up to 100 reported across the valley, cooling centers available around the city. Do not go outside. Do not stand in direct sunlight. If you do…