An Interview With Michael Denneny
During his 17 years at St. Martin's Press, editor Michael Denneny brought gay and lesbian fiction into the mainstream.
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During his 17 years at St. Martin's Press, editor Michael Denneny brought gay and lesbian fiction into the mainstream.
Three writers choose Ohio's poetry and fiction fellowship winners.
Creative writing instructors across the U.S. pick their favorite books about the craft of writing.
Martin Espada, the author of City of Coughing and Dead Radiators, talks about his life, politics, and poetry.
Accomplished translators talk about the impact of the craft on their own poetry and ficiton.
An honoraria ban means federal employees cannot accept payment for articles or speeches, unless Supreme Court overturns it.
In this conservative, blue-collar town, the literary life is centered around a bar, magazine, and a university.
Marketing helped turn a midlist writer into a best-selling author.
A writer travels to Tanzania's principal city, Dar es Salaam, where late Maria Thomas set novel, Antonia Saw the Onyx First.
Despite lawsuits and criminal investigations, authors pay expensive vanity presses to publish their books.