A Medical Gaze at the Grand Multiparas
A doctor writes on the grand multipara, “the great giver of multiple births” — women who have given birth five or more times.
A doctor writes on the grand multipara, “the great giver of multiple births” — women who have given birth five or more times.
In Paranda, everyday activities like reading symbolize protest and resistance in homes, alleyways, and gatherings.
Nasser Rabah and other poets of Gaza are still writing — still sending their poems to us, because Palestine is literature.
U.S. asylees and refugees must consider the risks of visiting Syria against the lives they've established in the U.S.
Wasta and nepotism are at the heart of this short story by Yemen’s most prolific writer, theatre critic, and journalist.
What happens when a human-robot relationship forms? In near-future Dubai, an accident in a skyscraper holds the key to this question.
Following the banishment of Bashar Al-Assad, Syrian artists are starting to return and exhibit new work at home and internationally.
Victor Hugo’s way still guides those building bridges across languages, faiths, and histories in a time of fear.
Trekking through the diverse terrains of Britain, Norway, and Saudi Arabia, a geologist embarks on a journey of self-discovery and reconnecting with her roots.
A meditation on how war distorts the perception of time, transforming events and emotions into distant memories.
Gaza's senior poet Nasser Rabah presents two poems from his first collected works in English, new from City Lights.
Two women on the mend in the hospital, one a wife and mother, the other pining for a lover, both dream of a better life.
The “francophone” term limits books to the “Francophonie” section in French bookstores, and forces authors to focus on identity.
We're not quite at "Fahrenheit 451" where books in pyres are burned in public, but our freedom to read faces significant threats.
In Iraq, buildings don’t simply reflect ideology — they absorb it, transmit it, and sometimes resist it. Especially when left unfinished.