A crate full of chain falls got delivered. It was a glorious crate, made of sanded spruce. I unscrewed some of the planking ...
Jan Kerouac’s darker and more extreme brand of mischief make her father’s On the Road high jinks seem tame and even a tad ...
For our series Making of a Poem, we’re asking poets and translators to dissect the poems they’ve published in our pages.
For a long time, Edward P. Jones has been one of the two or three writers most important to me. When I teach his stories, ...
October 26, 2012 – “TRUE!—nervous—very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why will you say that I am mad?”Daniel Horowitz takes on Poe’s classic 1843 tale of ...
February 19, 2015 – André Breton’s poem “The Verb to Be” originally appeared in our Spring 1985 issue. I know the general outline of despair. Despair has no wings, it doesn’t ...
“What confuses me so much about those who have prescriptions for how to write is that they assume all humans experience the world the same way.” ...
Warhol’s resigned tone belies what he woke up to and lived in day after day: the great something that was his work, which is ...
All through the twenty years I knew you your new poems surprised. Unexpected colors, new materials. David Hockney comes to ...
Antique friendly robot. Photograph by Thomas Quine, via Wikimedia Commons. Licensed under CC BY 2.0. Read the first ...
Ernst Gombrich, likely the most influential art historian of the twentieth century, is ripe for revisiting. His outlook on what constituted important art was white, elite, male, and Eurocentric. In ...
I once saw a Lego metaphor for translation. On some online forum somewhere. that you have purchased the Hogwarts Castle Lego set. You have given up the dining room table for this project. You get ...