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The southern writer Robert Penn Warren claimed that the Civil War was the United States’ ‘only “felt” history – history lived in the national imagination’. If ongoing debates about the management of Confederate statuary teach us anything, it is that its reverberations continue to be felt by Americans today. The grip of the Civil War certainly seems to have tightened in recent years as the rise of white supremacist violence and the efforts of the Black Lives Matter movement to challenge systemic racism remind us that, as Cody Marrs puts it, the Civil War is an ‘unsettled conflict that will continue to be refought as long as American civilization exists’.
Author Annie Peralta’s new book “The Drawing: A Romance Novel” is a touching work of romantic fiction and an affirmation of a true love that conquers distance and time
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Recent release “The Drawing: A Romance Novel” from Page Publishing author Annie Peralta is an uplifting novel introducing May Liza and Henry, whose close childhood friendship was cut short when they were twelve when Henry’s family moved from California to New York. Neither forgot the other, however, and both held a secret hope that their paths would somehow cross again. LOS ANGELES (PRWEB) January 26, 2021 Annie Peralta is a former professor of English and American Literature at the Philippine Women’s University and Central Escolar University now residing in California, where she has been a staff writer for various newspapers in Los Angeles. She has completed her new book “The Drawing: A Romance Novel”: a sweet love
When 22-year-old Amanda Gorman, the nation’s youngest inaugural poet, took to the podium in Washington D.C. last week, one local professor said she found herself watching in awe.
New Poetry Editor for NER
We are delighted to announce that Jennifer Chang will join us as poetry editor in March 2021.
Jennifer Chang brings to
NER her vision and experience as a deeply committed writer and literary citizen as well as, she says, “a judicious sense of pluralism and communion.”
While Jennifer will be new to this role, she has a longstanding connection to
New England Review. The magazine was among her first publications as a poet, in 2004, and more recently
NER published her essay “Looking for Wong May” (2020), as part of a special feature from the 2019 Asian American Literature Festival. She has held editorial roles at