Immigrating into the Absurd: A Review of Tropicália by Ananda Lima
byTropicália is a book that doesn’t pull its punches or steer away from the absurd, pulling in readers from the first line, “She devoured…
Tropicália is a book that doesn’t pull its punches or steer away from the absurd, pulling in readers from the first line, “She devoured…
EcoTheo is thrilled to welcome our new Social Media Editor Emily Ling! Emily recently returned to Austin after a few seasons in Massachusetts, where…
We are delighted to welcome Kristina Norgard to EcoTheo. Kristina is an undergraduate student pursuing an English degree at St. Mary’s College of Maryland….
William Woolfitt’s third book of poems, Spring Up Everlasting, revels in the overlapping mysteries of spirit and language, nature and nature’s degradation. Recipient of…
Kyrstin Jacqueline Gentilcore is a poet, artist, and educator. Gentilcore holds a BFA from Alfred University concentrating in Poetry & Expanded Media, and a…
ETR is delighted to welcome two new editors to our incredible editorial team: Julie Wan and Manik Perera! Julie, our Nonfiction Editor, earned her…
Our social media editor Hilary Scheppers reflects on the importance of renewal and recommitment as an ongoing eco–spiritual practice. Amidst the dense layers of…
If you consider yourself a reader, especially a reader of poetry, it is likely that you’ve read John Keats’s “Ode on a Grecian Urn.”…
A Dialogue with Hannah VanderHart’s Review of Rosarium (Acre Books, 2018) “The body, like a church, / is a crime scene,” Hannah Dow suggests…
A Review of Acadiana (Black Lawrence Press) by Nancy Reddy Writing informed by geography tends to stake two kinds of claims: the claims we…