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NewsREVIEW: Andrew Solomon’s “Far & Away: Reporting from the Brink of Change: Seven Continents, Twenty-Five Years”
When Andrew Solomon went to Finland to promote The Noonday Demon, his ground-breaking 2001 book on depression, he landed on…
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NewsREAD: Marilyn Chin’s New Poem, “Peony”
Hours before accepting her 2015 Anisfield-Wolf award, Marilyn Chin claimed “activist poet” as her mantle: “I’ve been writing poetry to…
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NewsAt The Cleveland Humanities Festival, Author Kamila Shamsie Asks “Why Weep for Stones?”
Novelist Kamila Shamsie has a knack for titles. She called her talk in Cleveland “Why Weep for Stones?” and built…
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NewsMeet Our 2016 Winners
Rowan Ricardo Phillips’ second book of poetry, Heaven, brims with 38 poems that ask “Who the hell’s Heaven is this?”…
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News Item
2016 Press Release: Winners Announced
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BookThe Jazz Palace
Morris is deeply interested in the tensions of home and away, which can be seen in the immigrant and Great Migration characters populating “The Jazz Palace,” both fictional and actual.
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BookWhat the Eye Hears
He begins with that moment in Swing 46, which threw him into exploring a tradition that “works very hard to create an illusion of ease” and spontaneity, but also illuminates centuries of complex American culture.
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BookHeaven
Phillips’ words insists on the strangeness of difference—the classics haunt his poems, but so do roosters in Ohio, Led Zeppelin riffs in the basement and the Wu-Tang Clan.
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BookThe Gay Revolution
Faderman crystalizes this trajectory in the words of activist Frank Kameny: ‘We started with nothing, and look what we have wrought!’
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AuthorOrlando Patterson
So I found myself going to this place with the smell of brand-new books, and I could take any book I wanted. It was amazing! I used to go there, and read and read and read. That was a transformative experience.
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NewsREVIEW: Mat Johnson’s “Loving Day” Proves A Strong Offering In Racial Satire
by Gary Stonum In electoral politics you must choose one candidate. In identity politics, it is often the same. As…
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NewsThe Artist As Activist: Author Edwidge Danticat In Cleveland
Edwidge Danticat began her remarks in Cleveland by drawing attention to another artist, the painter Jacob Lawrence, whose migration series…
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NewsCurl Up With These National Book Critics Circle Winners In Celebration Of Spring
Readers wondering what to pick up this spring can crack any of the six books just awarded the National Book…
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NewsInterview With Director Matthew Hashiguchi On His New Film, “Good Luck Soup”
The Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards is sponsoring “Good Luck Soup” at this year’s Cleveland International Film Festival. The two screenings are…
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NewsREVIEW: “The Turner House” Captures Detroit With All Its Grit And Glory
Spread over the opening pages of Angela Flournoy’s “The Turner House” is a family tree, its branches enumerating the 61…
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News“Good Luck Soup” Premieres At The Cleveland International Film Festival
Join us for the world premiere of “Good Luck Soup,” a 72-minute documentary on the experiences of Cleveland’s Hashiguchi family…
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NewsSouthern Storyteller Pat Conroy Laid To Rest In His Beloved South Carolina Town
Pat Conroy, the Southern novelist and storyteller, was buried from St. Peter Catholic Church in Beaufort, S.C., surrounded by almost…
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NewsActivism In Your Own Backyard: How To Spark Change Where You Live
Of the five prompts for the 2016 Martin Luther King essay contest, Case Western Reserve University senior Shadi Admadmehrabi selected…
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News“Black-ish” Deftly Mixes Hope and Reality in Police Brutality Episode
In its second season, ABC’s “Black-ish” has hit its stride. Now comes the best evidence of its ability to create…
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NewsMedia Critic Eric Deggans Talks #OscarsSoWhite, Beyonce And Political Correctness
What to do when Fox News host Bill O’Reilly calls you out on his show, labeling you a “race-baiter”? If…