Press Pass: Dorothy
In 2010, Danielle Dutton founded Dorothy, a publishing project, with the aim of producing books that appeal both to fiction readers and to poetry fans. Her own writing—she is the author of two novels,...
View Article“Something Has Brought Me Here”
For years now, whenever I read a novel, narrative has been impressing itself more and more visually in my mind. Or maybe it’s that my mind has gone more and more toward these fictional visions. Even...
View ArticleDip into Our Summer Issue
We’re not big on themes here at the Review, but our new Summer issue was designed with the poolside in mind—we did everything short of printing it on sunscreen-proof paper. At its center you’ll find a...
View ArticleWhat Our Contributors Are Reading This Summer
In place of our usual staff picks this week, we’ve asked five contributors from our new Summer issue to write about what they’re reading. It’s coming. The Mister Softee Jingle will clang down on you...
View ArticleStaff Picks: Disaster, Calamity, Ecstasy
From the cover of The Violins of Saint-Jacques. I bet you didn’t know that Patrick Leigh Fermor, recognized as Britain’s greatest travel writer during his lifetime, penned a novel, or that it was...
View ArticleLiner Notes: A Way into the Invisible
Eric Dolphy in Copenhagen, 1961. Photo courtesy JP Jazz Archive/Redferns. In the midnineties, I was a jazz head. I was a poet and I was a jazz head. I loved to read and I loved listening to music. I...
View ArticleThe Paris Review Staff’s Favorite Books of 2017
Danez Smith. It turns out that the books that top my reading list this year are, in one way or another, about intimacy. First, biography: Chris Kraus’s After Kathy Acker and Sam Stephenson’s Gene...
View ArticleAnnouncing Our Summer Issue
Our Summer issue opens with a selection from Jan Morris’s diary, begun in 2016, and each time I read it, I am struck anew by the capaciousness of her thoughts. In seventeen entries, she revisits...
View ArticleDwelling Places: On Renee Gladman’s Turn to Drawing
From Renee Gladman’s Prose Architectures After we acknowledge it is writing that cannot be read, how is it that we then go about reading it? I wrote this question down in my notebook after first...
View ArticleTrump Is a Performance Artist: An Interview with Eileen Myles
Eileen Myles may be the closest thing we have to a celebrity poet. In part, Myles’s stardom can be attributed to the award-winning television show Transparent, in which a queer poet played by Cherry...
View ArticleStaff Picks: Passion, Portals, and Premature Presents
T. S. Eliot’s “The Cultivation of Christmas Trees” I’ve spent a lot of time guddling around the Daily archive of late. There are many joys attendant to this, not least the expansion of that tragic...
View Article“Something Has Brought Me Here”
For years now, whenever I read a novel, narrative has been impressing itself more and more visually in my mind. Or maybe it’s that my mind has gone more and more toward these fictional visions. Even...
View ArticleDip into Our Summer Issue
We’re not big on themes here at the Review, but our new Summer issue was designed with the poolside in mind—we did everything short of printing it on sunscreen-proof paper. At its center you’ll find a...
View ArticleWhat Our Contributors Are Reading This Summer
In place of our usual staff picks this week, we’ve asked five contributors from our new Summer issue to write about what they’re reading. It’s coming. The Mister Softee Jingle will clang down on you...
View ArticleStaff Picks: Disaster, Calamity, Ecstasy
From the cover of The Violins of Saint-Jacques. I bet you didn’t know that Patrick Leigh Fermor, recognized as Britain’s greatest travel writer during his lifetime, penned a novel, or that it was...
View ArticleLiner Notes: A Way into the Invisible
Eric Dolphy in Copenhagen, 1961. Photo courtesy JP Jazz Archive/Redferns. In the midnineties, I was a jazz head. I was a poet and I was a jazz head. I loved to read and I loved listening to music. I...
View ArticleThe Paris Review Staff’s Favorite Books of 2017
Danez Smith. It turns out that the books that top my reading list this year are, in one way or another, about intimacy. First, biography: Chris Kraus’s After Kathy Acker and Sam Stephenson’s Gene...
View ArticleAnnouncing Our Summer Issue
Our Summer issue opens with a selection from Jan Morris’s diary, begun in 2016, and each time I read it, I am struck anew by the capaciousness of her thoughts. In seventeen entries, she revisits...
View ArticleDwelling Places: On Renee Gladman’s Turn to Drawing
From Renee Gladman’s Prose Architectures After we acknowledge it is writing that cannot be read, how is it that we then go about reading it? I wrote this question down in my notebook after first...
View ArticleTrump Is a Performance Artist: An Interview with Eileen Myles
Eileen Myles may be the closest thing we have to a celebrity poet. In part, Myles’s stardom can be attributed to the award-winning television show Transparent, in which a queer poet played by Cherry...
View Article
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