Three Poems from Annie Finch’s Earth Days
Annie Finch’s poetry is a pure tone that calls us home to the first impulse of poetry. We link to […]
Annie Finch’s poetry is a pure tone that calls us home to the first impulse of poetry. We link to […]
Sasha Moujaes tours an expansive exhibition at the Institut du Monde Arabe, talking to the curator and several Palestinian artists.
Matthew Broomfield reviews a book on the Kurdish women’s movement, which challenges hierarchical, patriarchal society.
Katie Logan reviews a graphic novel that blends the real world with the fantastical in a coming of age journey.
Antony Loewenstein reviews the latest book from veteran war reporter Anjan Sundaram, whose work may have cost him his marriage.
Hadani Ditmars reports on a legendary Palestinian theatre in Jenin that has nine lives and gives hope to the refugee camp’s youth.
The writer’s visit to a Cairo internet store to renew her internet service proves to be an out of body experience.
In Edward Lovelace’s new documentary, a refugee’s handicap becomes a source of inspiration in the struggle for survival.
In and out of Turkish prisons for his unflinching political essays, Ahmet Altan returns with a new novella in English.
Youssef Rakha is more interested in what it means to be a contemporary Arab-Muslim independently of the West than an American Arab.
Katie Logan has read “The Undesirables” — a graphic novel set in WW II-era Europe and North Africa.
Sarah Naili interviews musical artists who meld eastern and western instruments, and forms, to create their unique sounds of beauty.