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Birds flew in all directions. People scrambled. Dogs barked, and hens molted their feathers in a desperate attempt to escape. The air filled with a cacophony of prayers and weeping . . .
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Nick Mandernach Fiction
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Tania Pleitez Vela Nonfiction
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Krisma Mancía Poetry
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NER staff reader Dana Lynch talks with writer Lindsay Ahl about tracking place like a ghost, objective versus subjective reality, and rendering the 1970s in her story “Green Wall, Red China” from issue 46.2.
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“Maggie comes to New England Review with an invigorating sense of possibility for what fiction can do—how it can surprise and enchant us, break its own rules, and a ask the difficult questions,” says editor Carolyn Kuebler.
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Browse & shop new books by Edward Hirsch, Khadijah Queen, Helen Schulman, Garrett Hongo, & more.
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Staff reader C. Rees talks with poet Richard Siken about associative landings, the fractured intimacy of address, and his forthcoming collection I Do Know Some Things, which features three poems published in NER 46.2.
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“If, as Jan Łukasiewicz says, ‘only that part [of the past] is real which is still alive today in its effects,’ then remembering a moment prevents it from going out of existence.”
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Browse & shop new books by Henri Cole, Joyce Carol Oates, Marissa Davis, Rebecca Solnit, & more.
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NER Out Loud To Saola, for If and When
Mai Der Vang reads her poem “To Saola, for If and When,” first published in NER 46.1 (2025).