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Literature Criticism
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From:New England Review (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-Reviewed
Ziguras, Jakob The room in which I lived had been empty for a long time. It contained only a few furnishings: a desk for work, a bed, a clothes rack. But the most important thing was space--the possibility of... -
From:New England Review (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedAt a bookstore in Santa Fe called The Ark, you can buy a crystal for anything. Heartache? Try some rose quartz. Need clarity? Citrine will manifest it. Self-worth? Rhodonite. Guidance? Hollandite. The shop is filled with...
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From:New England Review (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedA cock and a hen once wanted to go a journey together. So the cock built a beautiful carriage with four red wheels, and he harnessed four little mice to it. And the cock and the hen got into it, and were driven off. Very...
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From:New England Review (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedI read a book recently that began by stating that we are now in a dire climate emergency, with very little time to act. This is a common enough idea, whether coming from internationally verified scientific data or by way...
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From:New England Review (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedW hen I was a teenager, nineteen years old, my father showed me around the cemetery in Taiwan where his uncle was buried and where he was listed on the tombstone as his uncle's oldest and only son. The area around the...
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From:New England Review (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedOn the half-mile walk to meet the bus my senior year of high school, I encountered two swans. Swans here, in the northwestern Montana wilderness populated with hawks, grouse, eagles, and seasonal mallard ducks and Canada...
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From:New England Review (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedMy first thought: Murder City , solid title. It was 2011 and I was scraping by in San Francisco, spending hours at the public library, tinkering with writing projects, browsing the stacks during breaks. The name on the...