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Author: Steve Himmer

  • An Interview With Angela Mitchell

    From a newly divorced woman employed by a front for illegal drugs, to a man who seeks revenge when the farm he loves is invaded by meth producers, to a shady Arkansas businessman wrestling with his own wildness (and that of his teen son) as he attempts to return a domesticated bobcat to its native…

  • An Interview with Sherrie Flick

    Sherrie Flick is is the author of the novel Reconsidering Happiness (University of Nebraska Press), the flash fiction chapbook I Call This Flirting (Flume Press), and two short story collections with Autumn House Press: Whiskey, Etc. (2016), and Thank Your Lucky Stars (Fall 2018). Her fiction appears in many anthologies including Norton’s Flash Fiction Forward,…

  • An Interview with Ivelisse Rodriguez

    Veronica looks at Ralfy’s bronze face and sees that beautiful grin, that smile that she really wants to believe exists only for her. It breaks the hardness of his face, and he seems like two boyfriends at once. Since she was thirteen, she’s seen him at all the parties, and even then she wanted to…

  • An interview with Tara Lynn Masih

    I first read Tara Masih’s work with the publication of her story collection Where the Dog Star Never Glows. I admired her language and voice and sense of structure. Next, she edited The Rose Metal Field Guide to Writing Flash Fiction, a volume which has helped many writers start or refine their skills in a…

  • Break.up

    I’ve been dipping in and out of Geert Mak’s mammoth In Europe (translated by Sam Garrett) for the past couple of months. Crisscrossing the continent, Mak follows many strands of the twentieth century: what led to conflicts and what resolved them; which cities were in ascendance and which in decline; what forces rippled across the…

  • An Interview With Kerry Neville

    Kerry Neville is the author of a previous story collection, Necessary Lies (BkMK Press Books). Her new story collection, Remember to Forget Me (Braddock Avenue Books), is a raw and beautiful collage of heartbreak, pain, loss, and remembrance. Neville creates characters who struggle with mental illness, failed marriages, and the challenges of parenthood, resulting ultimately…

  • An Interview With Marian Crotty

    Marian Crotty’s debut short story collection What Counts as Love was published by the University of Iowa Press as the winner of its 2017 John Simmons Short Fiction Award. The ten stories in this collection take place in self-healing houses, rehab facilities, expatriate communities in the United Arab Emirates and various unexpected locales. Featuring mostly…

  • Human: An Interview with Chauna Craig

    The very best stories have the ability to render the reader thrilled, understood, comforted. They promote growth and challenge us to closely examine our values. Chauna Craig’s debut story collection, A Widow’s Guide to Edible Mushrooms (Press 53, 2017), is just the place to find such stories. Here Craig delves deep into the realm of…

  • An interview with Susan Muaddi Darraj

    I first met Susan Muaddi Darraj at an MLA convention in Philadelphia, where she was speaking on an editor’s panel on publishing. Sometime after that I ran into her again, this time at the AWP conference, where she was signing copies of her linked short story collection Inheritance of Exile: Stories from South Philly (University…

  • A Spoonful of Dirt to The Mountain: An Interview with James Tadd Adcox

    James Tadd Adcox’s writing has appeared in Granta, TriQuarterly, The Literary Review, PANK, Barrelhouse, Mid-American Review, and Another Chicago Magazine, among many other places. He is the author of The Map of the System of Human Knowledge (Tiny Hardcore, 2012), Does Not Love (Curbside Splendor, 2014), and Repetition (Cobalt Press, 2016). In addition to being…

  • An interview with Amina Gautier

    If you haven’t run across Amina Gautier’s fiction yet, I feel safe in saying that you will. She’s the author of three award-winning short story collections, At-Risk, Now We Will Be Happy, and most recently, The Loss of All Lost Things, and continues to publish new work in a wide variety of literary journals. A…

  • An Interview With Margot Livesey

    Margot Livesey grew up in the Scottish Highlands, at a boys’ private school where her father taught. Her mother was the school nurse, but passed away when she was very young. After her formal education was finished, Livesey spent much of her twenties “working in shops and restaurants and learning to write.” She published her…