Ordinary Girls is a Las Comrades pick for summer reads
Las Comrades selects Díaz's memoir as one of their titles that will "thrill, entertain and inspire readers of all ages."
News and Reviews
Las Comrades selects Díaz's memoir as one of their titles that will "thrill, entertain and inspire readers of all ages."
The journalist recommends Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi's latest novel in an interview with the Bagri Foundation.
Mehta is interviewed on Reverberation Radio's "Quarantine Tapes" series about why, after the pandemic, the world needs more migration, not less.
The Cut's new series features advice for fledgling writers from authors including Sigrid Nunez and Alexander Chee, who advises, "I have always asked my students to focus on the stories only they can tell."
The new play by Rajiv Joseph, a mystery from a series of letters between strangers, friends, daughters, and lovers, is set to appear on stage next year.
In a piece about her daughter's birth for Romper, Greenidge wonders, "In that hospital room, back in the land of emotional peaks and valleys, I kept checking, over and over again: would my daughter be born on a good day?".
On Cave Canem's blog, Kearney shares an open letter about George Floyd and the current world moment. "I would like to invite more white people," he writes, "to stop preferring that we keep producing new work when it’s they who have work to do."
"I think," Adjmi muses, "loneliness and alienation are really—I hate to say this—a kind of sustenance for artists and writers" in a new interview about his memoir, Lot Six.
For the fiction podcast, Wray imagines what the border barrier will look like long after Trump — what will be standing, whom it will protect, how much it will matter.
In Zora magazine, the writers discuss what it means to learn about your ancestors "with all of their complications," online Blackness, and more.