nonfiction

Talking with Anukriti Mishra

Talking with Anukriti Mishra

“As a second language writer I think of bending genre conventions as leading the reader into unchartered territory, being a bridge to the unknown.”

Talking with Kim Knight

Talking with Kim Knight

“His arrival in Australia is a pivotal moment: The lack of documentation, losing the written Chinese version of his name, this is where it all starts, with this seemingly simple process of entering the country and declaring himself. Everything goes awry from here.”

Talking with Shanta Lee

Talking with Shanta Lee

“Within the context of how I grew up, I’ve often had to revisit and ask the question: If I were a parent trying to raise a child in a certain environment, how would I want to control the ways that their body is seen and being seen?”

Talking with Abigail Ham

Talking with Abigail Ham

“There is something magical about airports, train stations, bus stops, etc. … They make us think honestly about our between-ness and our aloneness and our inescapable connectedness.”

Talking with Ashley Memory

Talking with Ashley Memory

“Above all, we must honor our own perception of the events, and this is part and parcel of our debt to the reader.”

Talking with Christie Tate

Talking with Christie Tate

“My very proper Southern grandmother would definitely frown on the personal essay and the memoir because it divulges too much, and privacy and keeping your business to yourself—especially your mess—are both hallmarks of being a lady.”

Talking with Clinton Crockett Peters

Talking with Clinton Crockett Peters

“Me-then experiences the fraught moment; me-now tries to make sense of it.”

Talking with Kabi Hartman

Talking with Kabi Hartman

“Writing ‘Eighteen Takes on Being Jewish’ has made me a bit more comfortable with being the kind of Jewish person that I am—but I still struggle with the question of belonging to a Jewish institution such a synagogue.”

Talking with Greg Oldfield

Talking with Greg Oldfield

“I'm also as a sports nut, and a majority of my stories incorporate some kind of game or player.”

Talking with Joel Coltharp

Talking with Joel Coltharp

“Strangely enough, I found not having the answers to those questions actually benefited the central narrative in the final version of the essay.”

Talking with Brittany Coppla

Talking with Brittany Coppla

“I wanted the architecture of this story to feel recursive, and I hope that ultimately the meditations in the museum are in conversation with the experiences that happened outside of the museum.”

Talking with Raksha Vasudevan

Talking with Raksha Vasudevan

“I felt in Uganda as I do in most spaces: both alien and at home, at once rooted and floating in space.”

Talking with Audrey Olivero

Talking with Audrey Olivero

“I think I actually owe teen girls and queer people coming into themselves on the early internet way more than I owe a single literary figure for getting me through this inspirationally.”

Talking with Hege A. Jakobsen Lepri

Talking with Hege A. Jakobsen Lepri

“But writing helps untangle the different threads in the web of relationships: with my family of origin, with the language and literature, with a certain way of seeing the world.”

Talking with Shoshana Surek

Talking with Shoshana Surek

“It is a sad realization that while they are uniquely theirs, the stories are not singular.”

Talking with Chloe Amos

Talking with Chloe Amos

“I wanted to take a stab at starting some dialogue over a very nuanced issue even before I have any real solutions figured out.”

Talking with Jacob Aiello

Talking with Jacob Aiello

“It was only after I was able to look at this story as if it was about a fictional character that I think I made the connections and patterns that brought it to life.”

Talking with Shauna Laurel Jones

Talking with Shauna Laurel Jones

“I’m interested in cultural and aesthetic dimensions of human relationships with other animals, so naturally this “puffin problem” was a topic that spoke to me.”

Q&A with Nonfiction Contributor E.E. Hussey

Q&A with Nonfiction Contributor E.E. Hussey

“Science writing taught me the value of concise and succinct writing. It comes in handy when I’m drafting fiction.”

Q&A with Nonfiction Contributor Brandi Bradley

Q&A with Nonfiction Contributor Brandi Bradley

“Country music has incredible narratives about high-drama situations: adventure, crumbling marriages, tragic accidents, murder, and—my favorite high-drama narrative—the cost of ambition.”