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Newest edition of Alaska Quarterly Review is again a showcase of the best, most empathic writing of our time

Newest edition of Alaska Quarterly Review is again a showcase of the best, most empathic writing of our time Edited by Ron Spatz. 262 pages. $12. “Alaska Quarterly Review,” Vol. 37, No. 3 & 4, Winter and Spring 2021. Edited by Ron Spatz. “Alaska Quarterly Review,” founded 40 years ago at the University of Alaska, continues now under the flag of the nonprofit Center for the Narrative and Lyric Arts. Under the exceptional editorship of Ron Spatz, it remains one of the most admired literary journals in the country. In an interview last month with the CLMP Community of Literary Magazines and Presses Spatz explained that the journal is “of Alaska but not Alaskan.” That is, it applies “an active and attentive lens to our Northern region including its traditions of Indigenous stories and cultures, environmental concerns, and related social justice issues.” It serves as a gathering place for writers and poets from all over, accomplished and new, for bringing a

Verve {in} Verse: Jihyun Yun « Kenyon Review Blog

The Kenyon Review in which I converse with poets about their work and interests both on and off the page. Today’s feature is Jihyun Yun and her debut collection Some Are Always Hungry (University of Nebraska Press, 2020), which won the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Poetry and which Ada Limón calls “a reckoning with immigration and historical trauma and rooted in the sensorial world, these poems are timeless and ongoing.” A Fulbright research grant recipient, she has received degrees from the University of California–Davis and New York University. Her work has appeared in Narrative Magazine, Poetry Northwest,

Poetry Today: Emma Hine and Ignacio Carvajal « Kenyon Review Blog

Alaska Quarterly Review,  Guernica, and  Poets & Writers. Originally from Austin, Texas, she received an MFA from New York University and currently serves as the communications manager at the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses INTRODUCTION If I could go back ten years and tell myself one thing about writing, it might be this: You can continue believing in a poem while also questioning and pushing it into a wilder and more emotionally precise version of itself. (Have I learned this yet? I’m trying.) Muriel Rukeyser might have said it best in her 1949 essay collection The Life of Poetry: “We are poets; we can make the words. The emotional obstacle is the real one.” To me these sentences speak to the writer’s experience in two related ways. First: the hard part of being a writer isn’t just the actual writing it’s also the emotional obstacles, the anxiety and the self-doubt, that arise along the journey from idea to notes to draft to revision to revision to r

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