(In)imitable Art
byIf 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.”…
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…
ETR is happy to welcome No’a L. bat Miri, Carla Sofia Ferreira, Aida Haddad, and J.D. Ho as standing reviewers. In addition, Chelsea Dingman…
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] The EcoTheo Review is delighted to welcome Esteban Rodriguez as its new interviews editor. Esteban is the author of Dusk & Dust (Hub…
A Review of Acadiana (Black Lawrence Press) by Nancy Reddy Writing informed by geography tends to stake two kinds of claims: the claims we…
A Review of Revisions (Sibling Rivalry Press) by Eric Tran ‘empty me out,’ Eric Tran writes at the end of his gorgeous poem, “How…
A Review of Tunsiya Amrikiya (Bull City Press, 2018) by Leila Chatti National identity, when not summoned for fatuous patriotism, can spur great poetry….
In the ignominious and dispiriting year of American public life that was 2016, which culminated in the election of a president so egregiously unqualified…
I’ve never seen one in person, though I’ve heard and felt plenty. I say it up front for honesty’s sake that none may say…
Everything enters the bloodstream, so if you say I love you, I can bleed it out. I can bleed it out. So, too, I…