Sejal Shah is this week's Kenyon Review Online feature for her essay "Street Scene"!

Congrats, dear Sejal!

 

Street Scene

by Sejal Shah

Parisians call this neighborhood mixed. Mixed is code; it means immigrants. Think Brooklyn, Caitlin says. We are in the 20th Arrondissement, near Père Lachaise. I am here to see the Louvre and the Turkish Baths; I am here to visit my friend, Caitlin. I have a map and some time for wandering. To travel by yourself and enjoy it is a skill; I don't practice enough.

The 20th Arrondissement. Storefronts with fuchsia and blue signs; Senegalese behind tables of patterned scarves, watch caps, and leather bags; music, a low flare around which we warm ourselves at the park, at pool tables, at long wooden bars. LeeAnne isn't here to tell me where she stayed in Paris. When I think of her, I see us talking in my backyard, splashing in the pool, upstate New York summers. It surprises me. She was never there, but I can see it: the blue pool, our hideaway; beach towels; instant iced tea. I imagine we lay ourselves out on the uneven flagstones, waiting to be hot enough to peel ourselves off and fling ourselves into the water. If I close my eyes hard enough, if I squint, I can almost see it, this scene-that we grew up together. She was that kind of friend. As I walk through Paris, I keep expecting to catch a glimpse of her, vanishing into some narrow street.

. . . 

Click here to continue reading this essay.

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 Sejal Shah is a writer and teacher of writing. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in journals and books including the Asian American Literary ReviewDenver QuarterlyIndiana Review, the Massachusetts ReviewPleiades, and Under Her Skin: How Girls Experience Race in America (Seal Press). 

 

Jennifer S. Cheng's from "Letters to Mao" published at Web Conjunctions

Congrats, dear Jennifer! 

"Letters to Mao"  are the this week's Web Conjunctions Exclusive! To read the poems, click here: http://www.conjunctions.com/webconj.htm 

Jennifer S. Cheng is the author of a chapbook, Invocation: An Essay (New Michigan Press). Her writing appears in the Seneca ReviewThe CollagistQuarterly West, and Fifty-Fifty, an anthology of Hong Kong writing. She lives in San Francisco.  

Tamiko Beyer's "We Come Elemental" reviewed at Lamba Literary

Congrats, dear Tamiko! 

We Come Elemental
By Tamiko Beyer

"Tamiko Beyer packs a good deal of complication into We Come Elemental, her slim new book of poetry from Alice James Books. With a lean, lyrical style, Beyer asks the reader to contemplate the connection between the natural world and ourselves; how water and mud and land intersect with identity and body and politics; and whether the lines we draw are as firm as we would have ourselves believe."

To read the more, click here: http://www.lambdaliterary.org/?s=tamiko+beyer&submit

Bushra Rehman interview now up at The Village Voice

Congrats to our dear Bushra! 

Read the article here: bit.ly/15hr8PS 

Bushra Rehman's first novel, Corona, is a fragmented, poetic, on-the-road adventure told from the perspective of the charismatic Razia Mirza. After coming of age in a tight Muslim community surrounding the first Sunni Masjid built in New York City, a rebellious streak leads to Razia's excommunication, prompting the young heroine to flee. Stories that alternate between childhood memories and the misadventures of her young adulthood slowly reveal glimpses of the past that Razia is escaping and the Queens neighborhood that has shaped her life.

Rehman's poems, stories, and essays have been featured on  BBC  radio and in the New York Times, among other publications, and she co-edited the anthology Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today's Feminism. Here, via e-mail, she talks about the Muslim community in her native borough, being a new mother, and why her protagonist aspires to be shameless.

Congrats to Jane Wong, distinguished Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship Finalist

Congrats, dear Jane! 

Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowships

Five Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowships in the amount of $15,000 will be awarded to young poets through a national competition sponsored by the Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry. Established in 1989 by the Indianapolis philanthropist Ruth Lilly, the fellowships are intended to encourage the further study and writing of poetry.

The Poetry Foundation and Poetry magazine announce the 35 finalists for the 2013 Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowships. 

2013 Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship Finalists

Ruth Awad
Kai Carlson-Wee
Mario Chard
Chris Childers
Jen Coleman
Caleb Curtiss
Michael Dauro
Caitlin Doyle
Kyle Flak
Patrick Ryan Frank
Harmony Holiday
Hieu Huynh
Marcus Jackson
Jennifer Luebbers
Jamaal May
Rachel Morgenstern-Clarren
Matt Morton
Matthew Nienow
Anne Noftle-Kelli
Hannah Sanghee Park
Meghan Privitello
Megan Pugh
Erika L. Sanchez
Danniel Schoonebeek
Natalie Shapero
Solmaz Sharif
Mairead Small Staid
Rich Smith
Ida Stewart
Sarah Trudgeon
Lindsay Turner
Sharon Wang
Eric Weinstein
Phillip B. Williams
Jane Wong

* * *

About the Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship Program
Established in 1989 by Ruth Lilly to encourage the further writing and study of poetry, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship program has dramatically expanded since its inception. Until 1995, university writing programs nationwide each nominated one student poet for a single fellowship; from 1996 until 2007, two fellowships were awarded. In 2008 the competition was opened to all U.S. poets between 21 and 31 years of age, and the number of fellowships increased to five, totaling $75,000.

 

July 23: Poets & Writers presents Word for Word at Bryant Park: Joseph O. Legaspi, Tyehimba Jess, Patricia Spears Jones, and Samantha Thornhill

Join Poets & Writers in Bryant Park's historic outdoor Reading Room for a free poetry reading featuring

Joseph O. Legaspi, Tyehimba Jess, Patricia Spears Jones, and Samantha Thornhill.

Bryant Park Reading Room
42nd Street and Sixth Avenue
New York, NY

For details, visit:  http://www.bryantpark.org/plan-your-visit/wordforword.html or http://www.pw.org/content/poets_writers_at_bryant_park

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