REVIEW: Immersion: A Writer’s Guide to Going Deep by Ted Conover March 1, 2017 …Immersion gives a lively and thoughtful introduction to the field of immersion journalism or immersion nonfiction. Read full story →
Interview: David Ewald, creative nonfiction editor at Eclectia Magazine and its anthology, Best Nonfiction Volume One March 1, 2017 With more than two decades behind it, Eclectica Magazine was certainly a pioneer in the online magazine space. Read full story →
REVIEW: Concrete Carnival by Danner Darcleight March 1, 2017 Danner Darcleight is a promising writer, a devoted friend, and a loving husband. He is also a convicted murderer… Read full story →
The Saturday Before and After the Wednesday In Between by Joe Oswald February 1, 2017 The convenience store is five blocks from home. I stop there often after work, and the manager smiles at me when I enter because I’m one of those husbands who after filling up with gas, stops in for soda, snacks, or anything else… Read full story →
A Field Guide to Motel Chairs by Doug Brewer February 1, 2017 I am peering through my camera at an empty chair next to a mostly empty motel swimming pool. Read full story →
Elixir Washes Ashore by Alexis Paige February 1, 2017 A year since we bought the house along the river and weeks since it rained. But now, thunderstorms crackle the edges of sky… Read full story →
This Is How It Will Go by Randy Magnuson February 1, 2017 Next to the girl will be a black trash bag, stretched at the neck and torn in several places, where the contents – all of her worldly possessions… Read full story →
The Trouble with Loving Poets by Elizabeth Zaleski February 1, 2017 The trouble with loving poets is that they leave a long paper trail. They want you to read it, too. Read full story →
Echocardiogram by Gloria DeVidas Kirchheimer February 1, 2017 A device called a transducer picks up echoes of sound waves as they bounce off the different parts of the heart. Read full story →
To See a World by Kerry Cohen February 1, 2017 He’s not in the yard. My chest grows tight, and I run down the block, calling for him. What will he do if he is lost? He’s only five. Read full story →