Author: Sarah Appleton Pine

Reading, the Collective, and the Formation of the Self

Reading, the Collective, and the Formation of the Self

Yiyun Li transcends the individual through the way she focuses so singularly on the I, moments of aloneness, and solitary memories, rather than on feelings she has from shared memories. Yu Hua, too, transcends the individual, though he does so by offering his experience as a way of representing collective experience.

“The characters in the novel are shameless about their bodies”: An Interview with K-Ming Chang

“The characters in the novel are shameless about their bodies”: An Interview with K-Ming Chang

Part myth, part bildungsroman, part queer love story with a lyric, fabulist delivery, Chang’s debut novel, out today, is a novel of the body—its mundane functions, its power to create life, the ways in which it decays—as well as what can be done to a body—by war, from domestic violence, when aroused.

Reading World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments

Reading World of Wonders: In Praise of Fireflies, Whale Sharks, and Other Astonishments

Through her celebration of nature—and herself—Aimee Nezhukumatathil explores how it connects her to family and has played a role in building her own. Ultimately, she urges, we should wonder while we can, and do better to protect that which we can wonder at before we lose it completely.