Miller’s debut Southern epic chronicles the formative years of a man consumed by the best kind of hubris-the pride to withstand any adversity. Janson Sanders, half American Indian, half-white, comes of marrying age in the depression... Read More
Rain forests once covered twelve percent of the earth’s surface; now they cover only two percent. Every day, an area the size of New York City is destroyed. Experts predict that this ancient ecosystem will have disappeared by 2025,... Read More
A young woman sees an exquisite sorrow and longing through the eyes of a man residing in a shelter; she suddenly realizes she has seen the eyes of Jesus, changing her life’s direction. A man saw his grammar school in a soft, celestial... Read More
With everyone from teenagers to senior citizens playing the stock market from their home computers, it is easy to see that business wheeling and dealing is no longer just for high-powered men in suits working out of glass-and-steel... Read More
The year in Indian Country is divided into thirteen moons. Thirteen equal cycles of four weeks, twenty-eight days. The Sugar Moon, Fishing Moon, and the Very Cold Moon are examples denoting the seasons and their seasonal activities in... Read More
Siren McKay flees her sordid life as the mistress of a drug lord in New York City, a man she was accused of killing, and hides in her hometown of Cold Springs to heal her wounds and start anew. Yet her past will not let her rest. After... Read More
A conscientious objector, translator Balaban; an eighteenth century concubine and poet, Ho Xuân Huong; and a linguist from New York University, Dr. Ngô Thanh Nhà n; have created a book rife with firsts. Like many groundbreaking,... Read More
In one of his poems, Kuusisto calls himself a “fool of the night seasons,” referring to the blindness that affected him during his youth. This poet, however, is no fool about poetry or the construction of beautiful and haunting... Read More