The Day The Sky Broke Open
Lily Alvarado Lily Alvarado

The Day The Sky Broke Open

The Day the Sky Broke Open, by Keith T. Hoerner, is a compelling memoir about a survivor. It focuses on Hoerner as the “target child” of his mother’s emotional and physical abuse. He tells his story through fragmented snippets of nearly 60 years of his life.

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Messiahs
Lily Alvarado Lily Alvarado

Messiahs

Marc Anthony Richardson’s Messiahs focuses on two lovers whose names we never learn, a Black man who was formerly on death row and incarcerated and an East Asian woman who is the mother of a dead child and has been disowned by her family.

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Fleeing Father
Kait Walser Kait Walser

Fleeing Father

Fleeing Father is a bilingual novel, in English and German, by Romanian-born author Carmen-Francesca Banciu. Narrated by a Romanian girl who comes of age as her country marches toward revolution, this bildungsroman is the first in a trilogy newly translated from German into English by Elena Mancini and Catharine J. Nicely.

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but the flames
Benjamin Schmitt Benjamin Schmitt

but the flames

Poetry is having a moment in the United States. Perhaps it is the collective search for meaning as we all experience these myriad crises together, but poetic expression feels more relevant now. After Amanda Gorman’s reading at the presidential inauguration, I received a flood of text messages and emails from people excited about the possibilities for American poetry in the twenty-first century. It could be that they are on to something.

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Fires of Heaven
Benjamin Schmitt Benjamin Schmitt

Fires of Heaven

There is often an assumption that people of faith do not struggle with their beliefs, that they have wholeheartedly bought into an ideology to cast away their doubt and blindly assuage their pain. As someone who came upon my own spiritual beliefs rather late in life, I find the opposite to be true. I struggle far more as a believer than I did as an agnostic. In his latest book, Fires of Heaven, James B. Nicola investigates the myriad struggles of the religious life.

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The Invention of Love
Elizabeth Cohen Elizabeth Cohen

The Invention of Love

I’m thinking about death. I am thinking about love. I am thinking about death and love, intertwining. This is what happens to your brain when you read Sara Schaff’s newest book, The Invention of Love. Opposites attract and mix and slyly become one another in the perspective of the wry and self-effacing narrator of the title story.

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Friday Night Knife & Gun Club: Episodes 1-5
Benjamin Schmitt Benjamin Schmitt

Friday Night Knife & Gun Club: Episodes 1-5

For a while now I have held the position that for an American college (or better yet high school) student to graduate it should be required that they spend at least a few weeks abroad. Traveling away from one’s home country provides a priceless perspective on that country’s culture, economy, and politics. For instance, in my travels I learned that even though Hollywood is in the U.S. it is certainly debatable whether American movies are the best; that there are other countries in the world where it is simply more affordable for an average worker to live; and that in some cases our foreign policy has done real damage across the globe. American insularity is partly to blame for the myriad crises pushing our country to the tipping point. In her fiction series Friday Night Knife and Gun Club, Linda Collison chronicles these crises with a true love for pulp.

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