Alejandra Pizarnik, from ‘The Most Foreign Country,’ translated by Yvette Siegert
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Alejandra Pizarnik, from ‘The Most Foreign Country,’ translated by Yvette Siegert
Duriel Harris, from 'No Dictionary of a Living Tongue'
February 2004 | Amy Beeder, Anne-Marie Cusac, Carol Frost, Dabney Stuart, David Baker, David Swerdlow, Joel Brouwer, Linda Pastan, R. Smith, Ralph Sneeden, Reginald Gibbons, Robert Wrigley, William Olsen, Sandra Gilbert, Brian Phillips, Michael Hofmann
from our hircine, murine dopplegängers, mars (phafours 2013), edited by pearl pirie
"scandium," "lithium," "cadmium," and "zirconium," four new poems by Jordie Albiston from the special Poetics of Science KROnline issue.
green essence
April Bernard, from Brawl & Jag
Vi Khi Nao's writing embodies the currents and twists of desire, sensation, perception, language, and space. She is daring in her experimentation, yet very precise, even in the seeming flow and mus...
Vi Khi Nao’s “When You Let Down Your Hair Christine”
Inspired by the geometric properties of gemstones, this 12-part soundtrack—which incorporates acoustic guitar, double bass, clarinet, electric bass, saxophone, and synthesizer—provides an alternative
'Miracle baby' rescuer Khaled Omar Harrah, who was killed in Syria last week, was known for saving children.
“We never know what each day may hold.
Yesterday I slept at 11pm. My wife woke me up at 1am saying there was a very strange sound, and lots of shelling.
I was surprised to find out that al-Zibdiya, the area I live in, was hit with white phosphorous.
We went outside to look at the area, and we found that it was lit despite it being nighttime. There were flames everywhere . . . .
. . . . [Khaled] was dubbed the "child rescuer" because of the number of children he pulled out from the rubble. And most of the ones he was able to pull out would be alive, even after they'd been under huge piles of rubble for very long periods of time.”
Nancy Princethal's, from Agnes Martin: Her Life and Art
Charles Simic, from Dismantling the Silence
Mark Nowak, from. Coal Mountain Elementary
Carolyn Forché, from The Country Between Us
Tui Scanlan, excerpt, from the New Pacific Islander Poetry folio, Poetry (July/August 2016)
Titanium on Quartz