Partly the Thoreau of 'Walden,' partly Johnny Appleseed, and partly the free-associating mind of ...
The natural world is tangible to Valentine as he prunes trees or watches 'ghostly columns of froz...
Han Glassman was born in Korea and grew up under the Japanese occupation, where she was forced to...
This volume of passionately intelligent essays laments the extent and enormous damage of the cove...
An expression of gratitude for a life lived away from the madding crowd. This poetry collection w...
Broccoli for breakfast is not recommended unless it puts you in touch with central truths about h...
More than a century has passed since the collapse and extinction of the American Nation, that mas...
Larsen stretches conventional fiction's reach with this story of a character whose childhood and ...
A long poem by the late feminist, historian, and poet Barbara Mor looks unflinchingly at the end-...
Salant's poetic explorations are surreal, comic, deep, towering, and allusive, effortlessly movin...
Mor imagines Kantian nauseous allegories growing out of a David Lynchian southwest American deser...
Reading the Iliad with an open rather than a pre-judging mind-that is, reading it 'whole'-brings ...
root (or ' ') begins with a mock tech manual replete with ridiculous acronyms regarding the Infor...
You fall quiet when you hear a great truth, and each one of Helen Tzagoloff's riveting poems in L...
Engel shares political satire in the form of biting and brilliant essays that appeared on the nat...
Millions of men served in the Army during the Cold War-many inside major American cities-in ARADC...
At age 21, Bendix was shot in a street robbery and paralyzed. This work chronicles the next four ...
George Haskel, a retired professor of German literature, decides to found an institute to promote...
The pieces here are neither poetry nor prose: They are unique in form, since their form is determ...
Ninety-eight black-and-white photographs, steeped in the pathos and predicament of the Afghan peo...