

Tim Jones-Yelvington on Queer Shame, Camp Emotion, Belonging, and Hope in Colton Behavioral Therapy
Sarah Marcus-Donnelly: Camille Rankine beautifully writes that you “interrogate the very notion of beauty, its construction within a white supremacist world, and the how the cages our culture has built of it can hold us captive within our own minds.” In Colton Behavioral Therapy, you’ve created a world of both always and never where these impossible, conflicting, and toxic societal standards of gender and identity are imposed, and at the very least, self-enforced. Do you thin


Stephanie Cawley on Voice, Politics of Resilience, and Her Influences in A Wilderness
Sarah Marcus-Donnelly: A Wilderness begins with an essential self-awareness. You write, “I put a horse in the poem.” And, in the penultimate stanza of the opening poem, you continue with an introspective narrator: “Who was the “I” who wore a white dress and did/ as she was told?” I feel like your speaker grounds each poem in the tangible. How do you see the narrator’s progression throughout the book? Stephanie Cawley: For a long time, I have been very interested in the idea o


Hannah Leffingwel on Queer Love, Loss, and Myth in A Thirst for Salt
Sarah Marcus-Donnelly: A Thirst for Salt is a love letter to someone lost and the pleasure of beginnings. What I found so interesting was the insight into the lover, the “you.” There’s a context and history given to her that we are so rarely privy to when the “I” is suffering. The book questions our ability to have something or someone “forever”—maybe even the value of it. Can you talk to us about permanence (or lack thereof) and how it functions in this work? Hannah Leffingw


Feminist Interview Series: Fox Frazier-Foley author of "Like Ash in the Air After Something Has
Sarah Marcus-Donnelly: This book is a beautiful meditation on gender expression as deception, threat, protection, absolution, violence, and condemnation. Please tell us about the process of researching and choosing these specific stories to tell. Why was it important for you to tell these stories? Fox Frazier-Foley: Thank you so much for your kind words about my work, Sarah. I’m honored to be having a conversation with you—about my work, and about feminism, theology, and myth


Quite Mad: A Conversation with Sarah Fawn Montgomery
*CW: This post contains discussion of sexual violence. Sarah Marcus-Donnelly: Your captivating new book, Quite Mad: An American Pharma Memoir, out this September from The Ohio State University Press, does an outstanding job of blending memoir and relevant mental illness history. Can you talk to us a bit about the importance of striking that balance? What was it like to examine your own personal narrative within the greater context of America’s problematic treatment background


A Conversation with Nicole Tong
Sarah Marcus-Donnelly: Your gorgeous new book, How to Prove a Theory, was the 2017 Jean Feldman Poetry Prize Winner. It is a meditation on grief and memory and human resilience. I have had the pleasure of listening to you read some of these poems, which made them even more tender and devastating for me. Can you tell us about the process of writing about grief? How long did it take you to write the collection? Can you share some background for this book? Nicole Tong: Sarah, th


Editor Stacy Nigliazzo on Red Sky: Poetry on the Global Epidemic of Violence Against Women
Sarah Marcus-Donnelly: Firstly, thank you for your incredible work in creating such a vital resource. This anthology, which you edited with Melissa Hassard and Gabrielle Langley, is filled with poets that I adore (Naomi Shihab Nye, Shaindel Beers, Melissa Studdard, Heidi Czerwiec, Metta Sáma, Karen Skolfield, Sivan Butler-Rotholz, E. Kristin Anderson, Trish Hopkinson, Lisa Lewis, Rebecca Foust, and too many others to name). The introduction of this collection addresses the mu


A Conversation with Rion Amilcar Scott
Jamie Klingensmith: Many of your stories, such as “Checkmates” and “Good Times,” which appear in your collection Insurrections, explore the question of masculinity. Since Gazing Grain Press is an inclusive feminist press, how do you think this question of masculinity, or what it means to be a man, a son, or a father, relates to inclusive feminism? Rion Amilcar Scott: So many of the men in Insurrections suffer from their own mistaken assumptions about what masculinity is. For

Searching for Identity in the Faceless World: Katie Fuller and Paradigms of Power in Valve
Searching for Identity in the Faceless World: Katie Fuller and Paradigms of Power in Valve Doublecross Press, 2016, $10 Katie Fuller’s debut chapbook Valve is a vivid, unsettling examination of feminist identity, power dynamics, and autonomy in an internet-tinted world. Within this beautifully crafted, hand-stitched collection are 13 powerful pieces designed to make the reader re-evaluate self-identity, using the lens of American pop culture. Reminiscent of Alice Notley’s pi


Review: Jen Fitzgerald's The Art of Work
The Art of Work
Noemi Press, 2016 $15 Paperback
ISBN-13 978-1-934819-57-9 http://www.noemipress.org/catalog/poetry/fitzgerald/ Jen Fitzgerald’s The Art of Work is a collection that encompasses collaboration, shared experience, and common struggle. Opening with a literal “Glossary of Terms,” this is a book of definitions, or rather, the act of redefining terms. Fitzgerald’s book not only calls the concept of ownership into question, she also addresses the entities that get