A monthly round-up of news about Caribbean books and writers, presented by the Bocas Lit FestWELCOME to the latest ...
In “Bibliophobia,” Sarah Chihaya combines criticism and memoir to write about reading’s role in a life’s highs and lows ...
Gianni Rodari used puns, topsy-turvyism and zany names to invent stories for children and help children invent their own.
His savage fiction, set in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, demonstrated his belief that “violence is the most elemental truth of ...
Join Cassandra King and other top authors at 9 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 15, at the Timrod Library, 217 Central Ave., for “Active ...
How the actress-turned-author mined her wildly bohemian upbringing in Greenwich Village to pen a page-turning collection of personal essays.
Virginia Woolf’s classic Mrs Dalloway was revolutionary for its challenge to the novel form and its representation of time.
The evening was about storytelling and self-expression, uniting rhythm, poetry, dance, art and social commentary. It’s a platform for marginalized voices, a place for reflection and an arena for ...
There are romance novels in our picks (Brynne Weaver’s Scythe And Sparrow is of particular note), but we’ve also got some ...
Didion & Babitz” dodges bringing its subjects to its forefront in favor of second-hand gossip and questionable journalistic ...
Lola Kirke grew up with a rockstar dad and glamorous older sisters. In 'Wild West Village,' she writes about overcoming her chaotic childhood to find her own creative path.
There’s no getting around it — it takes work to teach students how to write. And it takes work for them to do it. It involves ...