LitFest 2026 in Review

Art and politics took center stage at our 11th annual LitFest! From February 26th to March 1st, the community flocked to Amherst College for talks by Jamaica Kincaid, Pete Buttigieg, and more. Students competed in the Spoken Word Slam, and filled seminar rooms for craft classes with Jamaica Kincaid, Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, Evie Shockley, and Dan Chiasson

Read on for a gallery of selected images and videos from LitFest 2025, and view all the event recordings here before they expire.

LitFest 2026 in Review
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Two Poems by Heather Bourbeau

By HEATHER BOURBEAU

Photo courtesy of the author.

Medicine Lake (Sáttítla Highlands National Monument)

The highway is nearly empty;
the mid-June air still crisp.
There is snow on the roadside,
to the west are fire scars.
If I slowed the car, I might relax into

grief. But I am lost.                             

Two Poems by Heather Bourbeau
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The Common Young Writers Program Opens Applications for Summer 2026!

Applications for The Common Young Writers Program, a fully virtual summer writing class for high school students (rising 9-12), are now open! Over the span of two weeks, students will be introduced to the building blocks of fiction, learn to closely read a text the way a writer would, and leave having written and edited a short story of their own. Taught by the editors and editorial assistants of Amherst College’s literary magazine, the two summer courses (Level I and Level II) run Monday-Friday and are open to all aspiring writers in grades 9-12. The program starts on July 20 and ends with a celebration of student work on the 31st. Applications close May 18 at midnight.

 

Level I is for beginners and anyone excited to try their hand at fiction. Level II is for returning TCYWP participants or students who have already completed a creative writing class or workshop. 
 

Full and partial need-based tuition waivers are available for both levels; we hope that no student will let financial difficulty prevent them from applying. Tuition waivers will be awarded to students with strong applications who cannot attend the program without financial assistance. In the application, students will have the opportunity to briefly describe their financial circumstances and state the amount they could afford to pay, if any, if accepted into the program. No tax returns or other documentation is required.

Click here for more information and details on how to apply.

The Common Young Writers Program Opens Applications for Summer 2026!
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Writing the Rust Belt: Rosanna Young Oh Interviews Allison Pitinii Davis

Allison Pitinii Davis (left) and Rosanna Young Oh (right)

Allison Pitinii Davis (left) and Rosanna Young Oh (right)

ALLISON PITINII DAVIS and ROSANNA YOUNG OH explore how Davis’ personal connection to Youngstown, Ohio and scholarly interest in labor inspired her debut novella, Business. They discuss representing the Rust Belt in literature, their identities as eldest daughters who worked for their family businesses, and the dignity and ethos of the working-class communities that raised them. Allison Pitinii Davis is the author of the poetry collection Line Study of a Motel Clerk , Poppy Seeds, and Business, a novella in Agency 3: Novellas . She serves as a Visiting Assistant Professor of Poetry at Ohio State University.​​

Writing the Rust Belt: Rosanna Young Oh Interviews Allison Pitinii Davis
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Surveilled Terrain

By THOMAS EMPL 
Translated by ISABEL FARGO COLE

The ferryman wrenched the gangplank out of its mount, heaved a breath and hooked it between the boat and the dock. During the brief ride we didn’t say a word; he didn’t recognize us. On the coast, to the east of the town, a military jet took off and dipped straight into a breakneck loop to head the other way, trailing its sonic boom.

I’d shaved the night before. Mouth open, I fingered my smooth skin. Rough lines ran from my nostrils to the corners of my mouth, like incisions. My ears looked huge. When I got up in the morning, my mirror image startled me. It was as if someone had hung up one of those photos I never looked at, showing that out-of-place apprentice, expressionless at the joiner’s bench. I didn’t recognize myself until I heard my voice.

Surveilled Terrain
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Dutch Blitz

By CIGAN VALENTINE


Cajon del Maipo, Santiago, Chile
 

It is Easter weekend in a Catholic majority country. It’s Friday, and it feels like the whole world is counting down and holding its breath, waiting for a miracle they know will always come. Out here, though, Catholicism feels like a relic, a prop in an old mountain town with one main square. Something out of the Wild West, if such existed in Latin America. Old men sit around the square selling handmade tiles, reselling fake name-brand sports gear. A fine layer of dust covers everything. 

Dutch Blitz
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Podcast: Lauren Groff on “Brawler”

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Listen on Spotify.

Transcript: Lauren Groff

Acclaimed TC contributor LAUREN GROFF speaks to managing editor EMILY EVERETT about her new story collection, Brawler, out this month from Riverhead, and her origins as a writer at Amherst College, where The Common is based. She also discusses how a story collection comes together over many years, how working with her longtime agent Bill Clegg has shaped her work, and what she’s working on now and next. Groff’s work appears most often in The New Yorker these days, but The Common published a story of hers in Issue 01, more than 15 years ago.

Lauren Groff next to the book cover of "Brawler"

Podcast: Lauren Groff on “Brawler”
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February 2026 Poetry Feature: Fatimah Asghar and Shane Moran

This month we welcome SHANE MORAN to our pages for the first time, and we welcome back FATIMAH ASGHAR; both poets have poems forthcoming in the print journal. Gratitude to both poets from all of us at TC.

Table of Contents:

—Fatimah Asghar: “[madness]” and “[pagamento]”

—Shane Moran: “Cedar of Lebanon” and “Les Docks / Chatelet”

February 2026 Poetry Feature: Fatimah Asghar and Shane Moran
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Mountain, Stone

By LENA KHALAF TUFFAHA

This poem is republished from Water & Salt by Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, a guest at Amherst College’s eleventh annual literary festival. Register and see the full list of LitFest 2026 events here.

Do not name your daughters Shaymaa,
courage will march them
into the bullet path of dictators.
Do not name them Sundus,
the garden of paradise calls out to its marigolds,
gathers its green leaves up in its embrace.
Do not name your children Malak or Raneem,
angels want the companionship of others like them,
their silvery wings trailing the filth of jail cells,
the trill of their laughter a call to prayer.

Mountain, Stone
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