by
Bobjohnson
A jazzy Detroit restaurant plays Thursday night host to poets from across the country--including Flint's very own DAP.
by
Matthew Falk
If you want to know what it means to make art that's stronger and more vast than pain, art that can stand up to terror, you should read this.
by
Jeremy Benson
Nathan Hauke navigates the no-man's land at the intersection of religion and family.
by
Jeremy Evans
Readings and spoken word will entertain and more.
by
Kara Gheldof
A wide and estranged group of characters reflects on the suicide of a mutual friend in Garnett Kilberg Cohen's collection, published last week by Bay City's own Mayapple Press.
by
Kimberly King Parsons
A timeless depiction of unforgettable voices awaits the reader.
by
Amanda Goldblatt
Monson's non-memoir achieves near-limitlessness.
by
Jeremy Benson
David Small's graphic memoir is a bizarre paradox of design and intent.
by
Collin Schuster
Collin Schuster discusses the creative, destructive possibilities of Mathias Svalina's Destruction Myth.
by
Gina Myers
In her second collection, Buffam offers an introspective, smart, funny and dark poetry.