Lost Map

5.26.26

Write a poem that begins with directions you cannot give, whether it’s returning to a childhood home that no longer exists, finding someone you’ve lost, or reaching a place that has only ever appeared to you in dreams. Let the poem move between the literal and the imagined, charting not only streets and landscapes, but also memories, misdirections, and silences. What landmarks have shifted? What details remain sharp? Allow the act of mapping to reveal both presence and absence, and bring the reader in on what it feels like to be in the place you want to bring them.

Orhan Pamuk: The Museum of Innocence

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In this Louisiana Channel interview, Nobel Prize–winning author Orhan Pamuk talks about being known as a political writer and how his novel The Museum of Innocence (Knopf, 2009) led to the establishment of a real-life museum of the same name in Istanbul, Turkey, which offers a meditation on memory, objects, and storytelling.

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Community

5.21.26

How has community served you? Whether literary community or a community found through hobbies and activities, or racial, ethnic, cultural, gender, and sexual identities, there are many ways in which these communities provide the support and resources missing from one’s life. In Parul Sehgal’s recent interview with Sarah Schulman published in the Paris Review’s Art of Nonfiction series, she says: “My whole life has taken place in community, in the gay community. Community saved my life. It’s the official structures, family and all that, that have been my problem.” Write a personal essay that explores various communities you participate in. Compare and contrast what you have found valuable in them versus the social and institutional structures imposed upon you via family, government, economy, education, and religion. With whom has your life taken place?

Dua Lipa on the Power of Translated Fiction

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“There really isn’t anything quite like a book to understand the perspective of others, and translated fiction takes that even further.” In this video, singer, songwriter, and host of the Service95 Book Club podcast Dua Lipa delivers the opening speech for the tenth anniversary of the International Booker Prize about the impact and importance of translated literature.

Pandemic Evolutions

5.20.26

A study published last year in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences presented surprising findings about a population of dark-eyed juncos living in Los Angeles. The normally forest-dwelling sparrows whose physical traits had diverged from their wilder counterparts to suit their urban lifestyle, had beaks that reverted to their wildland shapes during pandemic lockdown restrictions when their immediate environments had fewer humans in them. Think about the environmental shifts that transpired in the early 2020s due to the pandemic and write a short story that revolves around a physical adaptation or transformation that occurred naturally over the course of those years due to changed habits. Experiment with incorporating elements of science fiction, humor, and surrealism into your story. Who takes notice of these changes?

Loitering

5.19.26

Poet and novelist Stacy Skolnik pieced together a series of Facebook posts from her old high school friend Robert Frost into a collaborative hybrid poetry collection, which is forthcoming from Book Works in June. In one of the collection's poems, the speaker expounds a moment of frustration after reading the signage outside a shopping area: “Can you believe this notice / in the middle of a seating and dining porch / it’s literally made for loitering // We have this seating area but NO ONE CAN USE IT!!!” Taking inspiration from themes that this poem touches upon—class, productivity, propriety—compose a poem of your own that meditates on what it means to loiter, which Merriam-Webster defines as “to remain in an area for no obvious reason.” What judgments do you make when you notice someone who appears to be loitering?

Lin King on Translating Taiwan Travelogue

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In this Cover to Cover podcast interview hosted by Emily Y. Wu, writer and translator Lin King talks about the nuances of Taiwanese and Japanese culture, and the process of translating Yáng Shuāng-zi’s novel Taiwan Travelogue (Graywolf Press, 2024), which won the 2024 National Book Award for Translated Literature and the 2026 International Booker Prize. “I feel like the food was, in some ways, the toughest part for me to translate,” says King.

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