All posts tagged: Aidan Cooper

Announcing The Common’s Seventh Literary Editorial Fellow

(Amherst, Mass. July 14, 2026)—Award-winning, international literary journal The Common has announced Aidan Cooper ’26 as its seventh Literary Editorial Fellow. The fellowship launched in 2020 with support from the Whiting Foundation and is sustained by the generosity of Amherst College alumni donors.

The Literary Editorial Fellowship (LEF) was introduced with three goals in mind: to strengthen the bridge between The Common’s existing Literary Publishing Internship (LPI) for undergraduates and the professional publishing world; to provide real-world literary experience for an Amherst graduate, transferable to a wide range of fields; and to increase the capacity of The Common’s publishing and programming operations.

The LEF is designed to provide recently graduated students with a stepping stone between academic work and the greater publishing world. The full-time, postgraduate fellow assists the managing editor with print and digital production; edits and proofreads prose and poetry, working closely with contributors; creates multimedia web features; mentors current LPI students; and develops, organizes, and staffs innovative events on campus and across the country.

Aidan Cooper headshotAidan Cooper ’26 is the seventh Literary Editorial Fellow, following Kei Lim ’25, Sam Spratford ’24, Olive Amdur ’23, Sofia Belimova ’22, Elly Hong ’21, and Isabel Yao Meyers ’20. Cooper arrives at the position after one year as an editorial assistant for The Common and one year as the magazine’s David Applefield ’78 Fellow. They graduated from Amherst College as an English major, where they served as editor-in-chief of Amherst’s poetry club and poetry magazine, The Lilac, and worked in the archives of the Folger Library in Washington, D.C., investigating the relationship between mercantilism and horsemanship in Shakespeare’s England. In addition, they completed a creative-critical senior thesis about relational modes of meaning-making in contemporary “experimental” poetry, for which they were awarded summa cum laude. Their poem “Before They Traded Devers” was published online at The Common.

The Common’s insistence on place-based writing has been instrumental to my development as a writer and thinker,” Cooper said. “This endlessly inspiring community of writers, translators, and artists makes The Common a haven in the literary world, and I can’t wait to take on more responsibility in nurturing it.” Cooper is eagerly anticipating learning about the operational aspects of The Common and sharpening their editorial eye. “I’m honored to be supporting this necessary and beautiful magazine as it has supported me,” they said, “and to have the chance to read and refine some great stories, too.”

“Aidan has had a notable role in the greater literary and editorial sphere at Amherst, including already at The Common,” said magazine founder and editor-in-chief Jennifer Acker. “I’m excited for them to work even more closely with authors and the intern team in service of The Common’s mission to publish the best place-based writing from around the world and mentor the next generation of writers and editors.” Since 2010, Acker has directed the Literary Publishing Internship, which employs eight to ten students annually. She also directs Amherst College LitFest, now in its twelfth year.

The LEF position is only one example of Amherst’s commitment to supporting hands-on learning, introducing students to practical and intellectual applications of its liberal arts curriculum. “The Common provides students with an opportunity to apply their humanistic education toward real-world publishing experiences, and the Literary Editorial Fellowship enables this learning to extend beyond graduation, as students take the first steps towards their careers,” said Martha Umphrey, Amherst College’s Provost and Dean of the Faculty.

 

About The Common

The Common is a print and digital literary journal published biannually. Issues of The Common include fiction, essays, poems and images that embody a strong sense of place. Each spring, the magazine features a rich portfolio of Arabic fiction in translation, introducing English-language readers to new and exciting voices from across the Middle East and North Africa. Since its debut in 2011, The Common has published more than 1,500 authors from 56 countries. Pieces from The Common have been awarded the O. Henry Prize, the PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Award for Emerging Writers, and have been selections and notable mentions in multiple genres in the prestigious Best American series. The journal’s editorial vision and design have been praised in The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Slate, The Millions, Orion Magazine, and The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Former Literary Publishing Interns have gone on to publish acclaimed novels, win Watson Fellowships, study English literature at top graduate programs, and work at nonprofit organizations and literary publishers around the world. Beyond mentoring undergraduates, The Common supports educators from high school to graduate levels through The Common in the Classroom and hosts summer writing courses for high school students via The Common Young Writers Program. Read more about the magazine’s programs here.

Announcing The Common’s Seventh Literary Editorial Fellow
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What We’re Reading: August 2025

Curated by KEI LIM

The summer months for The Common’s staff have been filled with wandering, around Western Massachusetts and beyond. Throughout this wandering, we’ve carried books which roam themselves, where relationships parallel the movements of the landscapes they traverse. Editorial Assistants BEN TAMBURRI, LUCHIK BELAU- LORBERG, and CLARA CHIU, and Applefield Fellow AIDAN COOPER recommend three novels and a poetry collection which brought them solace during these long, sweltry days.

Cover of Willa Cather's O Pioneers!

Willa Cather’s O Pioneers!, recommended by David Applefield ’78 Fellow Aidan Cooper 

Anyone who knows me knows I can’t stand audiobooks. There’s something about the pace or the performances that irks me, or maybe it’s something about being slightly insoluble in the story, while I drive, or fold laundry, or task my hands with whatever it is that isn’t turning a page. For me, reading has always been about following and, more importantly, re-following where the words before me lead; I flip here and there, underline and annotate, and generally meander through and indulge in the language’s turns. But because this summer has been one interwoven with travel, tugged along by the two yellow lines in our potholed New England roads, I decided (betraying my brand) to put O Pioneers! by Willa Cather through my car radio.

What We’re Reading: August 2025
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Before They Traded Devers

By AIDAN COOPER

Fenway Park

Photo courtesy of author.

Boston, MA
After Frank O’Hara

Father’s Day, it’s 8 a.m. & I’m late on the road
to Boston because I drooled too much sleeping
I’m driving to a Red Sox game, yes I’ll go
because my dad at one point liked the pitcher 
& the tank’s too full to not go 

when I reach the MFA beehiving with students
I wonder what’s on & it’s Van Gogh’s Roulin Family Portraits 
& I want to park there in case I have time to peruse
but it’s 50 bucks & I’m seeing my family anyway
so I circle Huntington until I find an empty spot 
on Parker & it’s Sunday so I’m off the hook 
& I don’t thank God pay a thing

Before They Traded Devers
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The Common Magazine Announces 2025-26 David Applefield ’78 Fellow

(Amherst, Mass.) — Award-winning, international literary journal The Common announced today that Aidan Cooper ‘26 will be the third recipient of the David Applefield ’78 Fellowship. The fellowship, the magazine’s first endowed student internship, was established in 2022 by a group of friends and family of David Applefield, a literary polymath who attended Amherst College and founded Frank, an eclectic English-language literary magazine based in Paris. 

The David Applefield ’78 Fellowship funds one student intern annually who possesses exceptional editorial and leadership skills to work alongside the magazine’s other student interns and magazine staff on editorial and promotional assignments. Among other responsibilities, the Applefield Fellow coordinates the Weekly Writes Accountability program, leads the Level I section of the Young Writers Program for high school students, and provides research and production support for podcasts. In addition, the Applefield Fellow trains and mentors other interns, and organizes events for the Amherst College community.

Headshot of Aidan Cooper

Aidan Cooper ‘26 enters the role following a year as an editorial assistant. They’re the acting President of Amherst College’s Poetry Club, Editor-in-Chief of The Lilac magazine, and a bearer of various literary positions around the college and beyond. They’re in the midst of many writing projects, from a research paper on early modern horsemanship and mercantilism begun at the Folger Shakespeare Library, to an English thesis on nothingness in avant-garde poetry.

Cooper thanks the more than fifty friends, classmates, and family members of David Applefield who contributed to the fellowship fund for their generosity and trust, as well as the magazine’s staff for their mentorship. “The Common, through its mission and care, champions such a worldly and passionate writing community,” Cooper said, “and I’m so thankful to immerse myself in it.”

 

The Common Magazine Announces 2025-26 David Applefield ’78 Fellow
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What We’re Reading: July 2024

Curated by SAM SPRATFORD

July in Western Massachusetts is a month of heightened sensation. Perceptions are focused by the burning and buzzing heat, until it bursts in its own excess, dripping or pouring from the sky. It is an excess that ferments rather than rots, and it is what makes July so intoxicating. The onset of climate change, bringing merciless humidity and monsoon weather patterns, has deepened and darkened this character. Amid this, our Editorial Assistants AIDAN COOPER, CIGAN VALENTINE, and SIANI AMMONS have been reading books that match the month’s potency: storytelling that dazzles, prose that floods and sweeps away the sane, and historical truths delivered in lightning-bolt cracks. 

What We’re Reading: July 2024
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