Review of Afia Atakora's “Conjure Women”: An Exploration of the Uncharted American Civil War South

Book Review

“Throughout Conjure Women’s five parts, Atakora transports readers throughout the women’s lives before and after the Civil War, offering portraits of both the mundane and otherworldly, the joyful and heart-wrenching.” On the blog, Noreen Ocampo reviews Afia Atakora’s Conjure Women (Random House, 2020).

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Review of Marie Conlan's "Say Mother Say Hand”: An Anti-Memoir Plumbing Memory to its Depths

Book Review

Say Mother, Say Hand, is not quite an anti-memoir, but it’s not a traditional memoir, either. It is a visually alive, painful deconstructed recollection of Conlan’s life and the lives of her mother and grandmother… it explores her legacy of deeply flawed women who were, themselves, learning how to survive in a world that often seemed out to punish them.” Sophie Allen and Sarah Feng review Marie Conlan’s Say Mother, Say Hand (Half-Mystic Press, 2020).

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Review of Zalika Reid-Benta's “Frying Plantain”: How Do We Love?

Book Review

“Above all else, Frying Plantain is a coming-of-age story in which Reid-Benta carefully unfolds an abundance of themes, such as growth, connection, belonging and the lack thereof, that will undoubtedly hit home for readers of all backgrounds.” On the blog, Noreen Ocampo reviews Zalika Reid-Benta’s Frying Plantain (House of Anansi Press, 2019).

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APA Writer Series: Q&A with Iris A. Law

APA Writer Series | Iris A. Law

“I think there’s just a need out there for poetry to be introduced earlier in classrooms, and for it to be something that’s just part of the way we live and breathe…And the earlier and more broadly we expose people to multiple voices and different kinds of poetry, I do think it’s possible to change the system.”

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Review of Katie Flynn's “The Companions”: What Does It Mean to be Human?

Book Review

“Flynn effectively encourages sympathy for all of her characters, leaving the reader both in awe and horror at the history she writes—the history that feels more emotional than artificial, more lifelike than fiction.” On the blog, Noreen Ocampo reviews Katie Flynn’s The Companions (Scout/Gallery Press, 2020).

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Q&A with Peter LaBerge | Arts Collective

Q&A | Arts Collective

“I identify as a lyric poet, so I really look to music to maintain a level of lyricism in my work. My poetry, I think, is very bodily. It’s concerned about the body, and the body’s relationship with the world – and I think that dance gets at that very naturally.” An interview with poet Peter LaBerge.

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