Recent Blog Posts

Poem of the Week: flower aracelis girmay
aracelis girmay is a poet, editor, and teacher. Her new book of poems, GREEN OF ALL HEADS, is out this fall.

The Massachusetts Review-The Last Song of the World
Fasano is a poet of fatherhood, intimacy, friendship, love, and so much more, which is to say, he is a poet for the living, for life. Reading this, during a time of quotidian personal issues and large-scale problems, I thought of beginnings, not ends. And I will continue to rethink of the collection’s last lines: “the silence of any end or wreckage / is the same as the great and ancient silence / that comes before beginning starts to sing.”

"I reckon you are what you eat": Jennie Malboeuf on "jump the gun" with the Bicoastal Review
The Bicoastal Review's Marina Kraiskaya interviews Jennie Malboeuf on American intentions, animals as "windows to the divine", and raising a child to be neither a victim nor perpetrator of violence in this fraught country.

What Love Can Be: A Conversation with Keetje Kuipers on "Lonely Women Make Good Lovers"
The Poetry Foundation's Helena de Groot interviews Keetje Kuipers "on becoming a single mother by choice, gardening topless, and leaping without looking."
- Categories: BOA News, Book Reviews

Indy Week Reviews Radical Red by Nathan Dixon (July 2025)
Durham writer Nathan Dixon’s short story collection debut, “Radical Red,” imagines Tea Party conservatives who find their ideological contradictions collapsing in on them. It couldn’t be more timely.