Category: Reviews & Criticism
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Fiction Review: Arreshy Young Reads Joachim Glage’s Apocryphal Story Collection The Devil’s Library
There is an unraveling in the testamental helices of the AJPD which speaks: “A man is a scream, smothered by the avalanche.” And from that strand there breeds this gonadal fiqh: “the blood of those who submit to the squeeze—the breeders, the feeders, the readers corresponding to the serfs, the megalopolis and the monastery—evaporate communally.…
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Poetry Review: Toni Hornes Sullivan Reads Liz Worth’s Collection Inside Every Dream, a Raging Sea
Liz Worth’s Inside Every Dream, a Raging Sea is a lovely book of poetry that’s sure to intrigue those who are interested in the natural world, the otherworldly, and the emotional realm. Across 80 plus pages, Worth writes us through an experiential landscape, hoping in and out of experiences, mixing them it with spiritualism and…
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Poetry Review: Candice Louisa Daquin Reads Hilary King’s Collection Stitched on Me
I have heard it said, too often, that nobody wants to read about middle-aged-women. Political candidates in 2025 are still asking why women “past 50” are worried about abortion and why should they have an opinion on abortion because they can no longer get pregnant? Stitched on Me, by poet Hilary King, is a blistering…
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Fiction Review: Ashley Honeysett Reads Stephen D. Gutierrez’s Novel Captain Chicano Draws a Line in the American Sand
Stephen D. Gutierrez—Steve—is trying to write a short story. He’ll get around to changing the characters’ names to disguise his real-life self and his real-life friends and loved ones. In brackets he notes [deal with name later]. He’s so excited by the prospect of writing his story that he sends his first drafts to Harper’s…
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Fiction Review: Ria Dhull Reads Dan Tremaglio’s Lyric Noir The Only Wolf Is Time
Dan Tremaglio’s The Only Wolf Is Time is a novel told through fragments. These fragments initially seem like discrete objects, pulled in from all sorts of sources—some of these scraps are graffiti tags, some are photographs of sculpture, some are dictionary definitions or screenplay dialogue. There’s a little of everything. But the beauty of Tremaglio’s…
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Poetry Review: Candice Louisa Daquin Reads Courtney LeBlanc’s New Collection Her Dark Everything
Deeply personal threads shine through this collection, concerning the deaths of LeBlanc’s father and best friend—yet these narratives are not linear, but always wrapped in further messages, not strictly elegiac, but more a passing through of notes, as we see in music. Sometimes we are unable to assess the poem’s stakes, but the structure brings…
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Fiction Review: Dave Fitzgerald on Stefan O. Rak’s Paranoic Novel New Roses
Paranoia is a tricky beast to capture. I think we can all recognize and relate to it from the outside easily enough, whether in the wild-eyed monologuing of Macbeth and Raskolnikov or the slow-burn panic of classic alienation thrillers like The Conversation and The Parallax View, or the countless ongoing explorations of our evolving surveillance…
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Fiction Review: Ria Dhull Reads Scott Daughtridge DeMer’s Debut Novel Then Then Then
Scott Daughtridge DeMer’s debut novel, Then Then Then, is told in fragmentary manner. Fragmentary is not quite the right word—it’s hard to describe the pieces, the moments that make up Then Then Then as fragments, because they’re something different. They are layers. DeMer has attempted to create a novel in the form of a mixed-media…
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Fiction Review: Ashley Honeysett Reads Jeff Alessandrelli’s Novel about Sex & Shyness & Society And Yet
And Yet is a written record of a nameless narrator’s effort to make sense of his romantic life. He’s a young adult, busy developing a sense of self, and he sees the way his relationships affect that development. He sees that romantic relationships can foster his selfhood, and also that they can warp it. So…
