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A Geography of Reading

"It is by reading novels, stories, and myths that we come to understand the world in which we live." -Orhan Pamuk

Senses, Memory, and the Sandwich Generation in Steph Catudal’s Radicle

December 6, 2025 by Isla McKetta, MFA Leave a Comment

Cover of Radicle featuring dendritic branchingI’ve been sitting on a review copy of Steph Catudal’s Radicle, or When the World Lived Inside Us for ages. I think I was afraid of reading the book, which explores motherhood and losing a parent, because of what it would open for me. I was right about the feelings. I was wrong to wait to read it, because the sensory detail and her gentle attention to the experience of being human make this book worth returning to again and again.

The Exquisite Beauty, Pain, and Hope of Watching a Child Grow

Parenting, especially in our modern isolation, is an on-all-the-time kind of thing. Which means it’s hard to slow down and see what’s happening as you go. Various apps send me snapshots of what we did on this day so many years ago, but I don’t slow down often enough to exist in and remember the moments as and when they are. Catudal perfectly captures this and the heartbreak of bringing a being that is perfect into an imperfect world in “The Starting Line.”

I thought I’d always remember
how precious it is
to breathe, to walk,
to wake with eyes wide open
but here I am now, unable to recall
the sweet desperation
reckoning with impermanence
can bring.
– from “The Starting Line” by Steph Catudal from Radicle

Later in the poem, Catudal brings us tight into one of these moments with a simple image that captures everything:

And then she reaches for the monarch
perched on milkweed,
her small hand yearning to hold
the brittleness of life.
– from “The Starting Line” by Steph Catudal from Radicle

Throughout the book, Catudal’s language is clean and clear with just the right amount of detail. She lets us see what is happening and feel alongside her as she parents her child and herself.

The Lessons We Don’t Want to Impart

In “New Moon,” Catudal writes of what we pass on to our children:

I give you my love and
I give you this anger,
embers of an untamed inheritance.

How will it forge you?
– from “New Moon” by Steph Catudal from Radicle

It’s a gorgeous testament to that thing so many of us experience when we become parents despite not being fully forged ourselves (because we are human), the feeling of trying to heal for ourselves and more so for our children, for whom we want better, only and always. I thought of these words while stroking my 10-year-old’s forehead this morning. He still wants to be near me (when I let him), and that’s everything. And I see the ways I wish already that I could have been different for him.

What of my stuntedness will you carry?
What of my brokenness will break you, too?
– from “New Moon” by Steph Catudal from Radicle

Letting Our Elders Go

One of the quandaries of the sandwich generation is parenting yourself and your children while also offering care for your elders. While I am no longer the primary caretaker for my mother, and haven’t been for a long time, I still wrestle with how I am needed where and how much I can give to those who need me (including myself) at any time.

In Radicle, Catudal is very expressly present with her father at the end of his life. In “It’s Beautiful, It Hurts,” she writes of being “too young to know / how to comfort a giant / stripped bare.” This reveals so poignantly the ways that we are always the children of our parents. How difficult it is to shift the roles, even when it becomes necessary.

The poem that broke me, though, was “Some Things Are Not Meant to Be Fixed” as Catudal writes of falling through a board on a tree house, her father scooping her up, and all the feelings they both carried forever after. The poem captures in a few spare lines one moment that encapsulates a whole relationship, and it left me asking what it is I remember. I have not lost a parent, if I’m lucky that may be decades away, but I’ve been having to prepare to lose one for the last 35 years.

Catudal opened a door for me this morning, asking me to check in with my own memory. Which got me writing again, for the first time in weeks. And I am grateful.

If you want to check in with your own exquisite joy or pain, order Radicle, or When the World Lived Inside Us from Bookshop.org. If you use that link to purchase anything, you’re keeping indie bookstores in business and I receive a commission.

Filed Under: Books, USA & Canada

2025 National Book Awards

November 19, 2025 by Isla McKetta, MFA Leave a Comment

Tonight I watched the National Book Awards at my local independent bookstore, Ravenna Third Place Books, and it filled my soul in so many ways that I wanted to share some highlights with you while still on this high.

We can and must lift each other up

Roxane Gay received a lifetime achievement award. She spoke of the work she did in 2012 to assess how many writers of color and women were reviewed by the New York Times in one year, nearly 90% of the writers were white.

She spoke also of doing all the work she can to uplift other writers, and avoiding a scarcity mindset. She called out the publishers in the room, reminding them of their power to change the way the industry operates and who it represents.

Her speech was filled with her characteristically incisive wit and she ended by saying, “You have the power to create the change that the publishing industry so desperately needs. And you will be remembered for how you use that power. Or how you don’t.”

Writing is a sacrament that makes us smarter

George Saunders spoke about early days when he was stealing writing time from work and about writing on the bus. I’ve done both. And he talked about how this close work made him smarter. And realizing that, he found writing to be a sacrament, because “The person we happen to be in this moment through habit is not the limit of who we might become.”

“[Revising] is the process of not being sure, it’s staying open to the truths that the prose is anxious to show us…bullies, autocrats, zealots…they know, they always know. They are completely sure. But we artists…have an advantage over autocrats because when we’re in that not knowing state we’re open to finding out how things actually are.”

There is power in being who we are


When Gabriela Cabezón Cámara got up to give her speech to accept the award for literature in translation, she did it in Spanish, “Because I know the fascists don’t like it.” And my heart swelled. Something I’ve been trying to recapture lately is the multilingual self that used to feel like all of me. I was the only one in the room who laughed at her joke before it was translated, but I felt so full knowing that I could follow what she was saying and that that made me part of a larger world.

We must use the voice we have


Omar El Akkad said over and over “it’s difficult to think in celebratory terms” about spending two years watching children be torn apart from shrapnel, knowing our tax dollars are doing it, and watching people be snatched off the streets by masked agents of the state for insisting that Palestinians are human beings.

But he stressed, “We have an obligation to stand in opposition to any force, including those enacted by our own governments that, if left unchecked, would happily decimate every principle of free expression and connection that we come here to celebrate.”

Being in community

Rabih Alameddine spoke, in what was easily the funniest speech of the night, of the myth of the writer as a solitary being. “Writers as arts libertarians. Well, as you probably know, libertarians are like house cats. They consider themselves fiercely independent while relying on a system they don’t understand or appreciate…” and then he went on to describe all the connections that make writers not libertarians at all. I felt seen.


Last time I watched the National Book Awards was a few years ago. I was by myself on a writing residency at Centrum and it felt so professional to tune in. Tonight, though, I was surrounded by people cheering for their favorite authors. Even better, our laughter echoed together. And when a person I knew, Stesha Brandon, got up on the awards stage to present the award for literature in translation, the people at the bookstore ran to the screen and took selfies. I hadn’t remembered that Stesha was going to be there, but it was a wonderful moment that made the world feel small in the best of ways.

Sometimes things seem dark right now. They are. But we are not alone, even with our books. And we have work to do (together).

Filed Under: Books

Arriving at Asimov’s Foundation Through the Back Door

November 1, 2025 by Isla McKetta, MFA Leave a Comment

When I was in high school, there was a certain type of person who read Isaac Asimov. I can picture one in particular: male, white, bowl cut, spent a lot of time smoking bowls on the industrial-sized trampoline in his back yard. Nice enough dude, but I didn’t fit the profile, so I didn’t read the books (to be fair, I was pretty deeply immersed in my Stephen Kings and Holocaust memoirs). I’m happy to say I’m less inhibited about reading books that aren’t “mine” these days, but this does mean I missed out on some really foundational books, like Asimov’s Foundation. In fact, I’m not even sure I really thought about the book until I started watching the series on Apple TV.

Illustration featuring stars of the Apple TV series Foundation: Hari Seldon, Gaal Dornick, Salvor Hardin, Demerzel, and Brother DayWhat drew me to the series (beyond my husband’s recommendation) was how beautiful it is (and not just because they cast Lee Pace). The on-screen world is painterly (in one season expressly so as “Dusk” Cleon is actually painting the murals in his palace). What kept me there is the fascinating characters (especially Gaal Dornick and Salvor Hardin) and political machinations that made the world feel real and urgent. I kept thinking, “There must be so much more of this in the books! I must read the books!” I found the second two in a local Little Free Library, but it took me ages to actually order the first. What a surprise it was to finally read about this world I thought I knew.

There will be spoilers ahead, if you can spoil a 75-year-old book and a series that debuted four years ago. There may also be misinformation as I’m going off my poor memory here. But I won’t say too much, because, as always, I most want you to get excited enough about this story to experience it for yourself.

Characters make a story

As I said, I was all in on Gaal Dornick as a character. Watching her float face up in the seas of her water-logged world. Seeing her absolute need for knowledge, a quest so intense it pulls her apart from her family, culture, and planet forever. Witnessing her stumble and triumph and stumble again as she comes into her own power.

Gaal was only one of the many characters we got to invest in in the series: Hari Seldon (the psychohistorian), Emperor Cleon (presented in the three forms of his cloned self-Dawn, Day, and Dusk), Demerzel (the woman who seems to make the Empire run), and Salvor Hardin (warden of Terminus and Gaal’s daughter). Each of these characters has an interesting backstory and a way of being in the narrative that drives the story forward. For example, Gaal is present as the Foundation is exiled from Trantor (the seat of Empire), her daughter is an integral part of the Foundation’s existence on Terminus, and Gaal becomes an important catalyst for the second Foundation.

Creating continuity across galaxies and lifetimes

cover of Foundation showing Hari Seldon in a wheelchair inside a capsuleThe book is different. Not only is Gaal not a woman (almost no characters of consequence are), the character is incidental to the plot. In fact, most of the characters are incidental. As I was reading Foundation, I realized that part of what I’d loved about the series was the way the characters provided a touchstone for me as we hopped across planets and leapt forward in time over and over again. We lost a few of my favorites along the way, but there were always others I could lean on, knowing how their sympathies did and did not square with mine.

Without this continuity, I felt thrust into story line after story line without really knowing how to get my bearings. Whereas the series creates an entire history, this lack of continuity in the book provided me with outlines of what each stage of history was and could be, but I found it a lot harder to get inside (or to care).

Political evolutions

There’s also a stark difference between the series and the book in that we continue to experience the Empire in the series. That adds to the continuity of the story, but it also adds weight and context to what the Foundation is playing against. We didn’t have to see the whole history of Empire to imagine why it might decline (though we get touches in flashback). And when we flash forward, there’s context in what’s happened politically (and what’s about to happen) because we are grounded in both worlds. In the book, Empire (seemingly) ceases to exist over generations.

Also, the book feels much more jumpy. It wasn’t until near the end that I could pinpoint why (besides missing the characters), but I finally realized that each new crisis really sets a stage for Asimov to discuss a political system. When one of the characters calls the other a demagogue, it clicked—I felt like I was inside an Ayn Rand novel. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve been deeply immersed in Rand’s work at various times in my life, and I’ve never been sorry I read it, but her work feels instructional, not narrative. The characters are often cardboard cutouts meant to push us forward to a conclusion Rand wants us to make.

I stopped reading Rand when I realized how little room there was for me in the books. One of the things I love about a book is bouncing myself off the ideas in conversation and coming away with my own thoughts. With Rand I could only agree or disagree. There wasn’t enough there for more.

I don’t think it’s an accident that Asimov and Rand share Russian lineage and a general time period. Their work both reads like they so forcefully need for us to believe something so we can change the world together. For me, though, I think the best way to change the world is to engage with the people around us, find out what they want changed about the world, and build a collective vision of what could be better.

I don’t know if I’ll read more Foundation books. I probably will just to see. I’m also off the series a bit after the most recent season. But believe me when I tell you that the first two seasons are gorgeous. Better yet, watch them for yourself!

If you want to read Asimov for yourself, order Foundation from Bookshop.org. If you use that link to purchase anything, you’re keeping indie bookstores in business and I receive a commission.

Filed Under: Books, Film, USA & Canada

Considering Voice in I Am Cleopatra and Cyborg Fever

October 9, 2025 by Isla McKetta, MFA Leave a Comment

Who gets to talk, when, and for whom is a conversation I can’t get enough of. For me this is one of the crucial elements of feminism (besides, you know, equal rights and control over one’s own body). It’s a conversation we don’t have enough in literature, though I’m glad we’re having it more often than we used to. And it’s something I started thinking deeply about this past week as I was finishing up reading I Am Cleopatra by Natasha Solomons and Cyborg Fever by Laurie Sheck.

Feminist Retellings of History in I Am Cleopatra

I Am Cleopatra starts strong, with the title character addressing us directly, “I want you to see me as I am. You can dislike me, love me or abhor me, but know me first. I was born a girl and a goddess. A future queen, if I should live that long.” It’s a compelling beginning for a character we’ve most often known through the men she loved or bedded (or both), and we certainly get to know Cleopatra more intimately than ever before.

The character Solomons portrays is intelligent and strategic. She’s also young and afraid. I enjoyed getting inside her motivations as her father courts the favor of the Romans, she marries her brother to become queen, she’s betrayed by that brother, and Caesar enters her life. She’s also human: menstruating and virginal when she first meets Caesar, having popped out of the laundry bag she was smuggled into her own palace inside. We see her acknowledge her own fears and work to overcome them in the name of her people. It’s a beguiling portrayal, even if (and maybe because) she is less the seductress than we’ve previously seen her be.

Through Cleopatra we get to know Charmian, the girl who has been her slave since they were both born. There is a class distinction here as Charmian is never a narrator in the story, though this Cleopatra does see the plight of the common people around her more than we might expect. That in and of itself is a nice change, though I wouldn’t say this queen is fully “woke.”

The other character who gets to narrate her own plight is Servilia, lover of Caesar (in Rome) and mother of Brutus. Servilia counsels the young princess on her first visit to Rome and then disappears from the book for awhile as Caesar mires himself in Egypt and Egyptian politics. We meet her again and in earnest when Caesar brings Cleopatra to Rome.

The absence of Servilia from much of the middle of the book is a flaw as I see it, because Servilia has a rich perspective of her own, and I was enjoying learning about Rome through her eyes. It’s also the crux of what makes me think about feminism and voice in this book. I love that (for once) this story is told in the voices of the women. I did not love that the action then revolves entirely around the men (especially Caesar). I understand why the book is structured this way, it follows the action and HIStory as we know it, but I wanted to stretch into something new, something that might have passed the Bechdel Test (and I wondered how far from history an author would have to venture to make that happen).

Myriad Voices in Cyborg Fever

In sharp contrast, Cyborg Fever by Laurie Sheck is a hybrid text that took me all kinds of places I never thought I would go. The voices in this book include Erwin (the narrator), a nun and a cyborg that talk to him, and Deadpool (who talks to the cyborg). Don’t let the ridiculous sound of that last sentence fool you, this book is intelligent and funny and I’m still pondering its meanings and ramifications.

“Maybe meaning lies in the not-understanding, in the ways things shut us out. All the ways that we remain unknowing.” – Laurie Sheck, Cyborg Fever

I’m not going to lie, sometimes I got lost as Erwin’s musings covered entropy, Borges, orphan planets, Tesla, Einstein, the discovery of black holes, a nun who cannot attach to an infant, Professor Xavier (of the X-Men), musings on loneliness, the chemical roots of empathy, engineering humans for war, Laika, and so, so much more. There were hundreds of historical tidbits and tangents I wanted to track down, fact check, or follow. Sheck weaves them together artfully into a tantalizing exploration of what it means to be human and what comes next. But, as far as I can tell, she’s providing as many questions as answers (which makes the book far more interesting to read).

“To be knowledgeable is to know you cannot know.” – Laurie Sheck, Cyborg Fever

I was particularly excited to read this book in this moment as I’ve been working with AI in my day job. It’s been instructive to see how information is collated, where errors get introduced into a system, and how much it seems like the engines prefer to be wrong than to admit not knowing. To me that is the fatal flaw, where growth stops, because the machines cannot then be curious. This limitation makes me wonder about the people who designed the systems, what their limits are.

“A map is a set of agreed-upon errors.” – Laurie Sheck, Cyborg Fever

It was also interesting to ponder algorithms and how Erwin is getting introduced to his information. I spend a lot of time editing guides related to search engine optimization, so I get to see behind at least one of the curtains of how decisions are made for us online. It’s something I think a lot about as my son learns to navigate around the walled garden we’ve tried to create for him online.

“I didn’t realize algorithms can lead you from one topic to another without your suspecting you’re being lead—you just think you’re making choices.” – Laurie Sheck, Cyborg Fever

As much as this book introduced me to all kinds of wonderful and fascinating ideas, it really hit home for me with the Deadpool appearance. Not because I’m a Marvel superfan, but because I live with one; and nothing beats telling your 10-year-old at the breakfast table that the deep book you’ve been reading actually featured the star of the movie he had everyone watch last week (Once Upon a Deadpool—highly recommend if you are not a super hero fan but need something to watch with someone who is, because it works on many levels, like this book). The book also connected to Alien Earth (highly recommend this because no one does layered storytelling on TV like Noah Hawley) with the idea that “new kinds of bodies lead to new thoughts” and I was left wondering how close we are to a future of company towns in space and people who give their whole lives (and in some cases bodies) over to corporations. Shudder.

Although reading while exhausted was either the best way to encounter this story or the worst (definitely not in between), I appreciated how many voices came through and what a broad expanse of inquiry Sheck presented. It’s a book I will read again.

If you want to hear the voices of either of these books for yourself, I Am Cleopatra comes out on October 21 (but you can pre-order it now) and Cyborg Fever is available now from Bookshop.org. If you use those links to purchase, you’re keeping indie bookstores in business and I receive a commission.

Filed Under: Africa, Books

On Creativity and Asking Questions

September 13, 2025 by Isla McKetta, MFA Leave a Comment

If you’ve read my recent posts, you know I’m asking a lot of questions right now, trying to find the next steps in my path as I wonder about the world we’ve built. As I’ve been reading and touching base with other people these past few weeks, though, I’m realizing how essential questioning is to my worldview, how much respect I have for people who ask big questions, and how little patience I have for people who ask few. This week I’m reflecting on what that means in Fahrenheit 451, A Sorceress Comes to Call, A Burning, and The Bat-Poet.

Good and Evil in A Sorceress Comes to Call

Cover of a sorceress comes to call featuring a magical looking forestI have no interest in dogging on books that make lots of people happy but just aren’t my bag. But am interested in learning from these books, as something can be learned from anything. A Sorceress Comes to Call by T. Kingfisher was one of those books for me. Loaned to me by a beloved relative, I read the book even after I figured out I was the wrong reader, because I was interested in why the book didn’t work for me.

I realized that my main rub was with the way the titular character and her daughter were portrayed, in that one was a perpetrator and the other a victim. Simply that. They were both effectively written as such and the pacing was solid, but I wanted more layers in each of them. More nuance to the story. I wanted to be able to ask why they were acting the way they were and to find interesting back stories therein.

Sometimes I worry I can dig too deep, look for too many reasons why people are the way they are, to the point that excuses can be made for anything. This is something I explore in my most recent book, Naked Driving to the Witches’ Graveyard (working title as I’m looking for a publisher) as consider what it’s like to grow up in an environment where all ideas are weighed and accepted, and the hurts that can have. Like the fact that my husband asked me what it was like to grow up near the Aryan Nation in Hayden Lake, Idaho (he was watching The Order last night) and all I could say was, “We didn’t agree with them, but we respected their right to their own worldview.”

While I wanted to know more about the characters in A Sorceress Comes to Call and to see some nuance in their humanity, there was nothing that was going to make me excuse the actions of the sorceress. Or was there?

Archetypes in A Burning

Cover of A burning featuring flamesSpeaking of political violence, which is on a lot of our minds lately, I found a copy of A Burning by Megha Majumdar at the Little Free Library and dove right in. I’m not quite done with this one but it was interesting to feel how differently I related to the characters in this story of a young woman (Jivan) in India who is imprisoned for a terrorist act she did not commit.

I was particularly interested in how I accepted Majumdar’s portrayal of PT Sir, Jivan’s once PE teacher, as he finds meaning and power in a fringe political party. Where I questioned myself while reading this book was that these characters are as much archetypes as those in A Sorceress Comes to Call. But I think the difference is that Mamjudar uses this as a tool to shift the weight of the story from the individuals (who do have interesting reasons for what they do) to the society (which is richly detailed in the ways it fails its citizens, especially the non-Hindu ones).

I’m not sure yet that A Burning is asking a question. But it is definitely exploring the layers of why and how, and it’s a compelling read during this time of the rise of Modi.

Fahrenheit 451 and the Mirrors of Today

cover of fahrenheit 451 featuring a book of matchesSome dystopias are fictional and I got the chance to revisit this classic by Ray Bradbury recently as my 10-year-old son picked it out as one of his birthday books. I can tell he’s exploring someone’s canon of great books because he checked Frankenstein out from the school library more than ten times last year (and it’s in our home again already this year—though I have offered to buy him a copy). He struggled in the beginning as he couldn’t tell what was metaphor and what was a mapping of an unfamiliar world (someday he’ll be the book reviewer, I tell ya), but I think we were both enriched by reading this book (and by watching the Simpson’s Treehouse of Terror takeoff, though picturing Montag as Homer did shift things a bit for me).

At first I was drawn in by the uncanniness of the “parlors” with their “families” of talking heads that fill the citizens’ brains with pablum only gently personalized with their names. I related to this both from an addiction to SimCity standpoint and also because I’m starting to work more with AI in my freelance life. Both of which make me think about how simultaneously engaging and shallow these digital worlds are.

“So now do you see why books are hated and feared? They show the pores in the face of life. The comfortable people want only wax moon faces, poreless, hairless, expressionless. We are living in a time when flowers are trying to live on flowers, instead of growing on good rain and black loam. Even fireworks, for all their prettiness, come from the chemistry of the earth. Yet somehow we think we can grow, feeding on flowers and fireworks, without completing the cycle back to reality.” – Faber in Fahrenheit 451

In all, there are so, so many things in this book that reflect on now. The one that sticks with me, because we can all feel it coming, can’t we? is the war. Like Granger says about the Phoenix:

“Every time he burnt himself up he sprang out of the ashes, he got himself born all over again. And it looks like we’re doing the same thing, over and over, but we’ve got one damn thing the Phoenix never had. We know the damn silly thing we just did. We know all the damn silly things we’ve done for a thousand years and as long as we know that and always have it around where we can see it, someday we’ll stop making the goddamn funeral pyres and jumping in the middle of them.”

Asking Questions Now

I was at a reading this week where poet and translator Jake Syersak was reflecting on the work of Moroccan poet Tahar Ben Jelloun who was imprisoned during the 1960s. Syersak said something about how the magazine that Ben Jelloun had made with friends, the one that the government hated so much that it outlawed the magazine and chased down all the contributors. Syersak spoke of the power of that and of the power of the uncertainty literature creates. He talked about people who want us to be certain and how they want to shape what we are certain about. I could only think of the “family” Bradbury described and how the noise of the questions in my head is one million times better than the noise they are creating trying to make the questions stop (Harrison Bergeron-style).

“When [my grandfather] died, I suddenly realized wasn’t crying for him at all, but for the things he did. I cried because he would never do them again…He shaped the world. He did things to the world. The world was bankrupted of ten million fine actions the night he passed on.” – Granger in Fahrenheit 451

Essential Creativity in The Bat Poet

cover of the bat poet featuring a bat flying through a forestThe book that rounds out the puzzle in my brain today is The Bat-Poet by Randall Jerrell, illustrated by Maurice Sendak. This simple story of a bat who is finding ways to himself through writing came to me by recommendation of Maya Jewell Zeller and I read the whole thing aloud to my family the day it arrived.

The lesson I carry from this book is the nascence of the bat’s voice and how he persists, even as the mockingbird tries to center himself in any attention and to fill the air with his own thoughts (much like the “family”). The bat goes on and on and gets better the more he creates.

“The trouble isn’t making poems, the trouble’s finding somebody that will listen to them.” – The Bat-Poet in The Bat-Poet

For now, like Montag in Fahrenheit 451, I’ll be looking for a glass of milk, an apple, a pear. “Some sign that the immense world would accept him and give him the long time he needed to think all the things that must be thought.” These questions and thoughts are the beginning of my work, the art I am creating. What will you build?

If you want to explore any of these books, pick up a copy of A Sorceress Comes to Call, A Burning, Fahrenheit 451, or The Bat-Poet from Bookshop.org. Your purchase keeps indie bookstores in business and I receive a commission.

Filed Under: Books, USA & Canada

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Recent Posts

  • Senses, Memory, and the Sandwich Generation in Steph Catudal’s Radicle
  • 2025 National Book Awards
  • Arriving at Asimov’s Foundation Through the Back Door
  • Considering Voice in I Am Cleopatra and Cyborg Fever
  • On Creativity and Asking Questions

What I’m Reading

Isla's bookshelf: currently-reading

Birds of America
Birds of America
by Lorrie Moore
The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions, Etc.
The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions, Etc.
by Jonathan Lethem
The Souls of Black Folk
The Souls of Black Folk
by W.E.B. Du Bois
Bomb: The Author Interviews
Bomb: The Author Interviews
by BOMB Magazine
On Writing
On Writing
by Jorge Luis Borges

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