Canoe docked at the edge of a pond, surrounded by trees

Islands

CASEY WALKER
For the farewell trip, Elle and I arrived at the house to find Matthew and John already unpacking in their bedrooms. I stood for a moment in my mother’s study. It was still filled with her legal books and paperback mysteries. Someone would have to sort those books, discard them, and probably the job would be mine.

Dirt road

Future Remains: The Mysterious Allure of a Town in Ruins

CUSH RODRIGUEZ MOZ
There’s doubt about the provincial and national governments: if they had built additional infrastructure during the five years leading up to the flood, a time during which the region’s hydraulic installations went untouched. And there’s doubt about the inhabitants: if they hadn’t been so reluctant to lose a tourist season.

Portrait of person smiling and holding up their hand. Turned to the right.

Two Poems by Ahmed Bouanani, translated by Lisa Mullenneaux

AHMED BOUANANI
My country is this horizon with blank pages / where I see skeletons of broken children / wandering, begging for the light of thin wisps / of stories that might finally appease them // In hands the color of amaranth magic / they hold hippogriffs like dogs / a talisman to protect themselves from the lover

Teju Cole signing books

The Epiphany in the Ordinary: An Interview with Teju Cole

TEJU COLE
I really believe in the novel as an innovative form. Yet I didn’t want novelty for its own sake. There had to be something necessary in how I approached the narrating. For me, this was a puzzle to be solved, this work of arriving at the many different ways a character might give an account of what it means to be in the world. 

Tethered Hearts

LARA ATALLAH
The city is angry with love. Its sidewalks echo Beirut, and a life there, long-forgotten, languishing in the rearview mirror. Everywhere I look, an almost-déjà-vu skims the walls of my mind. Buenos Aires is Beirut, is Paris, is an aubade to the lost and never found. Down by Recoleta, Haussmann buildings dot the avenues.

Book cover of Orbital by Samantha Harvey

What We’re Reading: September 2025

MONIKA CASSEL
The speaker’s father, deployed to Vietnam in 1970 (the year of the dog in the lunar calendar) becomes a central figure between these grieving, unsilenceable women, but he is reticent, seen most vividly when the speaker, a child, watches as he sleeps to make sure he doesn’t choke on his tongue from seizures resulting from his service.

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