• Jessie Li

    NER 46.3-4 contributor Jessie Li talks with staff reader Dana Lynch about infinite universes, writing in first-person plural, and the function of misunderstanding in her short story “How We Met Our Father.”

  • Michael Carson

    Staff reader Simone Kraus talks with NER 46.3-4 contributor Michael Carson about the significance of writing letters, Kafka and Lawrence, and the relationship between war and writing.

  • Alisha Dietzman

    NER 46.3-4 author Alisha Dietzman talks with managing editor Leslie Sainz about the meditative power of repetition, fixed moments of sensory memory, and the generative influence of film and TV on her recent poems.

  • A Word: Notes on Literary Argument

    “A novel’s success does not rest on its function as polemics or a jeremiad, but to a large extent it does rest on its logic. And since novels exist in the world, it’s not a stretch to say that novels have a large stake in articulating societal illogics . . .”

  • Erag Ramizi

    “. . . I experienced Lê’s style of writing as the smooth gliding of a sharpened pocketknife along the surface of the skin, with moments when the tip of the blade would puncture the flesh.”

  • January ’26 Reading Roundup

    Browse & shop new books by Margo Glantz, Sam Munson, Oksana Vasyakina, David Guterson, & more.

  • NER Out Loud Of Coywolves and Women

    Caley Henderson reads an excerpt from her essay “Of Coywolves and Women,” first published in NER 46.3-4 (2025).

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