For our series Making of a Poem, we’re asking poets and translators to dissect the poems they’ve published in our pages. A ...
The cowboys bowed their heads—some wept—as the announcer beseeched God to keep them safe. John Crimber, the nineteen-year-old ...
GERALD MURNANE WITH HIS WIFE, CATHERINE, IN BENDIGO, 1989.
Edward Gorey (1925–2000) was born in Chicago. He studied briefly at the Art Institute of Chicago, spent three years in the ...
For our series Making of a Poem, we’re asking poets and translators to dissect the poems they’ve published in our pages. A selection from Emily Osborne’s translation of Egill Skallagrímsson’s “Cruel ...
Extracts from new books by Antonio diBenedetto, Peter Szendy, Thomas Piketty and Michael Sandel, Saidiya Hartman, and Lyndsy ...
I want to live a beautiful life but I can’t help but notice there is something fundamentally disgusting about it all.” ...
The last time I was in Siena there was an earthquake. The first time I was nineteen. My boyfriend, who had already graduated from college, had been in Italy most of the year, in Perugia. The plan was ...
“The laws of gravity can be figured out much more easily with intuition than anything else. It's a way of having experience without having to struggle through it.” I saw Margarito Duarte, after twenty ...
On poetry’s power to suspend violence: “It can entrance you for a moment above the pool of your own consciousness and your own possibilities.” ...
Italian artist Francesco Clemente circumvented higher education in art, instead using his intrepid curiosity and penchant for travel to enrich his natural talent. Born in Naples in 1952, Clemente ...