The New Yorker

Bryan Doerries’ Theater of War company brings catharsis to the traumatized. In the coronavirus era, that’s all of us.

NYT Opinion

Read Valzhyna Mort’s “Belarus Is Under Attack,” a response and reflection on the Belarusian government’s violent response to protest.

Poets & Writers

Q&A with poet and essayist Aimee Nezhukumatathil on writing, nature, and her forthcoming collection of essays World of Wonders.

BE Latina

Read this interview with Mahogany L. Browne, “if we never admit it, if we never acknowledge it — then we can feign ignorance.”

The New Yorker

Read Terrance Hayes‘ “Pseudacris Crucifer,”A single tree frog can sound like a sleigh bell,/The father says. Several can sound like a choir/Of crickets.”

StatoRec

Read Roxana Robinson’s latest essay, “the more you rely on weapons, the less you use empathy.

Financial Times

Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Natasha Trethewey recounts a family history of struggle, resistance, and hope – read the full piece here.

Heron Barks

Read Rowan Ricardo Phillips‘ new poem: “Remember the heat, how it burns the back/of the throat as night screams his name.”

New York Times

Jericho Brown reflects on the history of Pride Month and weighs in on this complicated moment for the L.G.B.T.Q. community.

New York Times

Read “Weather” by Claudia Rankine: “Turns out/in a pandemic everyone, not just the philosopher, is without.”