Tag: articles


  • REVIEW: Held Collectively by Rebecca N. Thompson

    Reviewed by Emily Webber Within the preface to Held Collectively: A Shared Memoir of Motherhood, Drugs, and Imperfect Love (HarperOne; 2025), creator Rebecca N. Thompson emphasizes that the ladies in these pages refuse to “settle for the insupportable assertion we too usually foist on the grieving—that all the things occurs for a cause—however they’re making…

  • INTERVIEW: Michelle Yang, Creator of Phoenix Lady: How a Fats Asian with Bipolar Discovered Love

    Interviewed by Lara Lillbridge A staunch and extremely vocal advocate for psychological well being consciousness, Michelle Yang has made a reputation for herself within the nationwide dialog about bipolar dysfunction. However her journey can also be deeply influenced by her id, and he or she creates dialog on the intersection of Asian American id, feminism,…

  • INTERVIEW: Marty Ross-Dolen, At all times There, At all times Gone

    Interviewed by Leslie Lindsay In two days, I will probably be on the airport. I assure you, nobody will probably be ‘dressed up’ like cohorts of Marty Ross-Dolen’s grandparents. They have been govt leaders of the household enterprise, Highlights for Youngsters. Again then, in1960, it might have been pastel fits and scarves, tweed jackets, though…

  • INTERVIEW: Bonny Reichert, Writer of Find out how to Share An Egg

    Interviewed by Amy Fish Bonny Reichert is a Nationwide Journal Award profitable journalist, a chef, and a debut memoirist. Her memoir, Find out how to Share an Egg: A True Story of Starvation, Love and Lots, received the Dave Greber Award for social justice writing in 2022, and was revealed in January by Urge for…

  • INTERVIEW: Elissa Altman, Creator of Permission: The New Memoirist and the Braveness to Create

    Interviewed by Michèle Dawson Haber Elissa Altman’s hybrid craft/hybrid memoir, Permission: The New Memoirist and the Braveness to Create, is the e book writers new to memoir have been ready for, even when they don’t but comprehend it. Who owns a shared story and when is permission essential are questions that may immobilize any memoirist,…

  • REVIEW: Eminent Jews: Bernstein, Brooks, Freidan, Mailer by David Denby

    Reviewed by J. Michael Lennon David Denby took on fairly a job of labor when he determined to depict the lives of 4 well-known Twentieth-Century Individuals: Leonard Bernstein, Mel Brooks, Betty Friedan, and Norman Mailer in Eminent Jews (Henry Holt and Co.; April 2025). Pretty presenting the event-laden, controversy-crammed lives of this gifted quartet, all…

  • It All Felt Unimaginable by Tom McAllister| Hippocampus Journal

    Reviewed by Emily Webber In Tom McAllister’s assortment, It All Felt Unimaginable: 42 Years in 42 Essays, he challenges himself to write down an essay for yearly of his life. There’s a hazard this might come throughout as compelled and really feel like a response to a writing train. But, McAllister pulls off one thing…

  • REVIEW: Son of a Hen by Nin Andrews

    Reviewed by Sarah Evans Not all of us nonetheless see our childhood houses regularly, and many people by no means see them in any respect besides in reminiscence. Some recollections we cling to love security blankets, and others we want we might bury beneath the world’s tallest trash heap. Generally these recollections are little greater…

  • REVIEW: Deep Home: The Gayest Love Story Ever Instructed by Jeremy Atherton Lin

    Reviewed by Brian Watson Deep Home: The Gayest Love Story Ever Instructed (Little Brown and Firm: June 2025) is the second memoir from Jeremy Atherton Lin. His first, Homosexual Bar: Why We Went Out, got here out a scant three years in the past; each memoirs talk about features of his relationship with the person Mr.…

  • INTERVIEW: Jill Bialosky | Hippocampus Journal

    Interviewed by Leslie A. Lindsay It’s March within the Midwest as I learn The Finish is the Starting: A Private Historical past of My Mom (Washington Sq. Press/Atria; Could 2024). If anybody is aware of something about March within the Midwest, or possibly March basically, they’re probably conscious that it’s something however steady. March is…