Monday, February 17, 2025

Vibe

https://www.vibe.com/


Founded in 1992 by iconic music and film producer Quincy Jones as a print publication, VIBE is a leading entertainment and lifestyle brand delivering content across multiple media platforms to a diverse audience around the world. With over 25 years of celebrating Black culture, VIBE continues to embrace the soulful roots that chronicle the artists, celebrities, sounds, fashion​, and events—from hip-hop and R&B to the modern-day converging music landscape. VIBE has significantly refocused its efforts to the digital space as a top-tier trusted brand for music and entertainment fans, while also highlighting themes like the social justice movement, sparking dialogue that informs and issues change. In 2020, VIBE officially joined the esteemed Penske Media Corp. portfolio of content brands with plans on continuing its legacy of excellence.

- https://www.vibe.com/about-us/. Accessed 17 Feb. 2025.

Village Voice

https://www.villagevoice.com/


Founded by Dan Wolf, Ed Fancher, and Norman Mailer in 1955, the Village Voice introduced free-form, high-spirited, and passionate journalism into the public discourse. As the nation’s first alternative newsweekly, the Voice today carries on the same tradition of no-holds-barred reporting and criticism it embraced when it began publishing more than 68 years ago.

- https://www.villagevoice.com/about/. Accessed 17 Feb. 2025.

Thursday, February 6, 2025

The Lost List

"The Lost List" by Ryan Bradley. First published in The Sewanee Review, Spring, 2021.

If You Ever Find Yourself

"If You Ever Find Yourself" by Erika J. Simpson. First published in The Audacity, December 22, 2021.

The Audacity

https://theaudacitymagazine.com/


The Best American Essays 2022

At the Bend of the Road

"At the Bend of the Road" by Aube Rey Lescure. First published in Guernica, July 20, 2021

Mother Country

"Mother Country" by Elias Rodriques. First published in Virginia Quarterly Review, Summer 2021.

Anatomy of a Botched Assimilation

"Anatomy of a Botched Assimilation" by Jesus Quintero. First published in Your Impossible Voice, #24.

Your Impossible Voice

Your Impossible Voice publishes brash and velvety new work from around the globe, including fiction, poetry, nonfiction, translations, literary reviews, essays, and interviews.

https://www.latimes.com/about. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.


The Best American Essays 2022

 

My Gentile Region

"My Gentile Region" by Gary Shteyngart. First published in The New Yorker, October 11, 2021.

What She Would Always and Should Always Be Doing

"What She Would Always and Should Always Be Doing" by Kaitlyn Greenidge. First published in BuzzFeed, April 6, 2021.

BuzzFeed

https://www.buzzfeed.com/

BuzzFeed, Inc. is home to the best of the Internet. Across pop culture, entertainment, shopping, food and news, our brands drive conversation and inspire what audiences watch, read, and buy now – and into the future. Born on the Internet in 2006, BuzzFeed is committed to making it better: providing trusted, quality, brand-safe news and entertainment to hundreds of millions of people; making content on the Internet more inclusive, empathetic, and creative; and inspiring our audience to live better lives.

https://www.buzzfeed.com/about. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.


The Best American Essays 2022

 

China Brain

"China Brain" by Andrea Long Chu. First published in n+1, #41.

Among Men

"Among Men" by Calvin Gimpelevich. First published in Ploughshares, Issue 148, Summer 2021.

Between These Lives, Azeroth

"Between These Lives, Azeroth" by Tanner Akoni Laguatan. First published in Wired, February 19, 2021.

The Wrong Jason Brown

"The Wrong Jason Brown" by Jason Brown. First published in The New Yorker, May 2, 2021.

The Gamble

"The Gamble" by Lina Mounzer. First published in Freeman's, 2021.

Ghost Bread

"Ghost Bread" by Angelique Stevens. First published in Prism, 59/2.

Her Kind

"Her Kind" by Naomi Jackson. First published in Harper's Magazine, December 2021.

Futurity

"Futurity" by Alex Marzano-Lesnevich. First published in Harvard Review, #57, September 2, 2021.

It Had to Be Gold

"It Had to Be Gold" by Justin Torres. First published in Los Angeles Times Image, March 19, 2021.

The Gye, the No-Name Hair Salon, the Coup d'Ètat, and the Small Dreamers

"The Gye, the No-Name Hair Salon, the Coup d'Ètat, and the Small Dreamers" by Jung Hae Chae. First published in New England Review, 42/4.

Baby Yeah

"Baby Yeah" by Anthony Veasna So. First published in n+1, #39.

The Wild, Sublime Body

"The Wild, Sublime Body" by Melissa Febos. First published in The Yale Review (online), March 10, 2021.

Ghosts

"Ghosts" by Vauhini Vara. First published in The Believer, August 9, 2021.

Fire and Ice

"Fire and Ice" by Debra Gwartney. First published in Granta, #156.

Drinking Story

"Drinking Story" by Elissa Washuta. First published in Harper's Bazaar, July 14, 2021, as "How Do I Tell My Story of Getting Sober."

Abasement

"Abasement" by Brian Blanchfield. First published in Territory, #13.

Territory

https://themapisnot.com/

Territory, a literary project about maps and other flawed objects. Territory launched in May 2015 with our first issue, Utopia, and we published our thirteenth and final issue, Cursed, in November 2021.


The Best American Essays 2022

Justin Torres

JUSTIN TORRES is the author of the novel We the Animals, a national bestseller, which was adapted into a feature film. His stories and essays have appeared in The New Yorker, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times Images magazine, and several other publications. He lives in Los Angeles, where he is an assistant professor of English at UCLA.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

Los Angeles Times

https://www.latimes.com/

The Los Angeles Times is the largest metropolitan daily newspaper in the country, with more than 40 million unique latimes.com visitors monthly, Sunday print readership of 1.6 million and a combined print and online local weekly audience of 4.4 million. The Pulitzer Prize-winning Times has been covering Southern California for more than 143 years.

Los Angeles Times’ businesses and affiliates also include LA Times Studios, The Envelope, Times Community News, De Los, Los Angeles Times en Español and Hot Property.

https://www.latimes.com/about. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.


The Best American Essays 2022

 

Bread Loaf

The Bread Loaf Teacher Network Journal (previously Bread Loaf Teacher Magazine) was created in 1993 by the Bread Loaf School of English, funded by the Wallace-Reader’s Digest Funds. The magazine was edited for several years by Chris Benson at Clemson University, and then produced by guest editors Sheri Skelton, an Alaskan teacher, and most recently by Tom McKenna MA ’96, Alaska teacher and director of BLTN communications. The articles are written by members of the Bread Loaf Teacher Network and other associates of the Bread Loaf School of English.

https://www.middlebury.edu/school-english/teacher-network/journal. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.


The Chattahoochee Review

https://www.the-hooch.com/

ZYZZYVA

https://www.zyzzyva.org/

About ZYZZYVA

Mission

Reflecting the values that make San Francisco a cultural beacon, ZYZZYVA publishes a literary journal defined by its risk-taking and egalitarianism, and by its focus on inclusivity and excellence.

With each issue, ZYZZYVA offers a meaningful consideration of the most urgent ethical concerns of our time, in part via themed issues on topics ranging from resistance, the border, and art to the environment, labor, and technology. We create substantial space for poetry, nonfiction, interviews, fiction, and art from an array of voices, resulting in a lively, thoughtful conversation in print, online, and in-person, across genres and generations, answering the need for a unique kind of engagement.

https://www.zyzzyva.org/about/history/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Erika J. Simpson

ERIKA J. SIMPSON is a Southern girl living in Denver, Colorado, with her partner and cat. She holds an MFA in creative writing from the University of Kentucky and is the recipient of the 2021 MFA Award in Nonfiction. Her greatest joy comes from birthday visits with her sister and loving on her niece. She is currently working on a memoir, as well as a black speculative fiction collection.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

Gary Shteyngart

GARY SHTEYNGART is the author of numerous books, including the memoir Little Failure and the novels Lake Success, Super Sad True Love Story, and Our Country Friends.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

Elias Rodriques

ELIAS RODRIQUES is a Jamaican writer currently based in New York. His first novel is All the Water I've Seen Is Running.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

Jesus Quintero

JESUS QUINTERO read his first work of fiction at the age of twenty-one (Michael Chabon's Wonder Boys, because of the cover's jumping, candy-apple-green '64 Impala and the possibility that it might be about gangs). He received his MFA in creative writing from the University of San Francisco. He is working on a memoir and teaches English and creative writing at De Anza College in the San Francisco Bay Area.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

Lina Mounzer

LINA MOUNZER is a Lebanese writer and translator. She contributes regularly to the New York Times and her work has appeared in The Paris Review, The Economist, and The Baffler, as well as in the anthologies Hikayat: Short Stories by Lebanese Women and Tales of Two Planets. During 2021, she wrote a monthly column for the Lebanese daily L'Orient Today, chronicling social changes in the wake of the country's economic collapse.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.


L'Orient Today

https://today.lorientlejour.com/

L’Orient Today is an independent platform that aims to examine the failure of the Lebanese system and to hold political and economic powerbrokers accountable through comprehensive, in-depth reporting. L’Orient Today is the English-language news service from Groupe L’Orient-Le Jour.

https://today.lorientlejour.com/who-we-are. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Aube Rey Lescure

AUBE REY LESCURE is a French-Chinese-American writer and deputy editor at Off Assignment. She is the coauthor of Crating a Stable Asia and the translator of the essay anthology Le Système Économique Chinois Face à ses Défis (制度改变中国). Her fiction and creative nonfiction have appeared in Guernica, The Florida Review online, WBUR, Jellyfish Review, Entropy, and elsewhere. Her debut novel, about coming of age in Shanghai, will be published by HarperCollins in 2023.

https://coloradoreview.colostate.edu/colorado-review/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

Entropy

https://entropymag.org/

Entropy was an online magazine that covered literary and related non-literary content. The magazine featured personal essays, reviews, experimental literature, poetry, interviews, as well as writings on small press culture, video games, performance, graphic novels, interactive literature, science fiction, fantasy, music, film, art, translation, and other topics. Entropy's website also functioned as a place where those within the literary community could interact.

In 2021, the editorial staff announced the rolling closure of the site. Following this, they no longer published new content but kept the site live through 2022. As of 2023, the group has deleted its website and socials.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy_(magazine). Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Jellyfish Review

https://jellyfishreview.wordpress.com/

It’s sometimes said that if you want your story to have a happy ending, finish now. So we’re finishing now. It’s been seven years, seven wonderful years, and we’ve published thousands of gorgeous stories. Thousands of beautiful things with stings! They will stay here, but we will be calling it a day. For now, at least… who knows what the future will hold. Maybe we’ll miss it too much and you’ll see us again, somewhere down the line

Thank you to all the writers, all the readers, and all the support we’ve received from everyone and all the friends we’ve made along the way. All of you were part of the jellyfish family. Running a magazine is a lot of work, and you made it such a joy.

https://jellyfishreview.wordpress.com/2023/01/13/letter-from-the-editor/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

WBUR

https://www.wbur.org/

WBUR is Boston’s NPR. A public media leader committed to exceptional journalism on-air, online, on-demand and on stage. Our mission is to produce high-quality journalism and enriching experiences that foster understanding, connection and community for an expanding circle of people. Our vision is to become a daily habit for every person in Boston and beyond who seeks to engage with the most consequential issues of our times.

https://www.wbur.org/about. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

The Florida Review

https://cah.ucf.edu/floridareview/

The Florida Review publishes work from around the world from emerging and established writers. We are not Florida-exclusive, though we embrace our state and its many communities. Our magazine is a home for the realistic and the weird alike. We love when the ordinary proves extraordinary or the wild is tamed. We love anything with sentences that sing. We love it all, and we’ve been loving good writing for over 50 years. The Florida Review has been in print since 1972, and in 2017, we added a new literary supplement, Aquifer: The Florida Review Online, which features new work on a biweekly basis, along with author interviews, book reviews, and graphic narratives.

https://cah.ucf.edu/floridareview/about/mission/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Tanner Akoni Laguatan

TANNER AKONI LAGUATAN is a surfer living with his little black dos in Laguna Beach, California. His piece in The Best American Essays 2022 is his first published essay. He is at work on a memoir about Hollywood, weed, and two hundred years of Filipino American family history.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

The Caribbean Writer

https://www.thecaribbeanwriter.org/

The Caribbean Writer (TCW)-–Where the Caribbean Imagination Embraces the World-–is an international, refereed, literary journal with a Caribbean focus, founded in 1986 and published annually by the University of the Virgin Islands.

Our mission is to publish quality writing by established writers that reflects the culture of the Caribbean; promotes and foster a strong literary tradition; and serves as an institute for the development of emerging writers.

https://www.thecaribbeanwriter.org/about-us/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Poets & Writers

https://www.pw.org/

About Poets & Writers

Founded in 1970, Poets & Writers is the nation’s largest nonprofit organization serving creative writers.

Our mission is to foster the professional development of poets and writers, to promote communication throughout the literary community, and to help create an environment in which literature can be appreciated by the widest possible public.

https://www.pw.org/about-us/about_poets_amp_writers. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Kaitlyn Greenidge

KAITLYN GREENIDGE's debut novel, We Love You, Charlie Freeman, was one of the New York Times critics' Top Ten Books of 2016 and a finalist for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize. She is the features director at Harper's Bazaar and a contributing writer for the New York Times, and her writing has also appeared in Vogue, Glamour, the Wall Street Journal, and elsewhere. She is the recipient of fellowships from the Whiting Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Libertie is her second novel.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

The Wall Street Journal

https://www.wsj.com/

The Wall Street Journal was founded in July 1889. Ever since, the Journal has led the way in chronicling the rise of industries in America and around the world. In no other period of human history has the planet witnessed changes so dramatic or swift. The Journal has covered the births and deaths of tens of thousands of companies; the creation of new industries such as autos, aerospace, oil and entertainment; two world wars and numerous other conflicts; profound advances in science and technology; revolutionary social movements; the rise of consumer economies in the U.S. and abroad; and the fitful march of globalization.

https://www.wsj.com/about-us. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Glamour

https://www.glamour.com/

For nearly 85 years Glamour has been leading the conversation about the topics women are invested in, which are more diverse, complex, and exciting than ever. We pride ourselves on offering inclusive and accessible access into the intersecting orbits of fashion, beauty, wellness, pop culture, parenting, and politics. In a world where every media brand is competing for clicks, time, comments, and likes, it’s a nonnegotiable to be able to cut through the noise and deliver content that’s not only unique but authentic.

https://www.glamour.com/info/about-glamour. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Vogue

https://www.vogue.com/

Since the first issue of Vogue was published in 1892—its cover an illustration of an unnamed, beaming debutante by A.B. Wenzell—the title has defined itself as the world’s foremost fashion authority. Over the years, Vogue has evolved with the times, coming to encompass a wider world of culture, entertainment, beauty, politics and the arts, dedicating itself to a celebration of groundbreaking image-making, great journalism, and the discovery of new talent.

https://www.vogue.com/about-us. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Harper's Bazaar

https://www.harpersbazaar.com/


The Best American Essays 2022

Calvin Gimpelevich

CALVIN GIMPELEVICH is the author of the short story collection Invasions. His essays and short stories have appeared in Ploughshares, Kenyon Review, Electric Literature, and Them. He is the winner of a 2022 NEA Fellowship in prose and recipient of Lambda Literary's Judith A. Markowitz award, in addition to grants and fellowships from Artist Trust, Jack Straw Cultural Center, 4Culture, and Seattle's Office of Arts & Culture. He was born in San Francisco.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.


Them

https://www.them.us/

Them is the award-winning authority on what it means to be LGBTQ+ today — and tomorrow. From in-depth storytelling on the fight for LGBTQ+ rights to intimate profiles of queer cultural vanguards, we're a platform for all of the bold and rebellious ways that LGBTQ+ people are reshaping our world every day.

https://www.them.us/info/about-them. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Electric Literature

https://electricliterature.com/

Electric Literature is a nonprofit digital publisher with the mission to make literature more exciting, relevant, and inclusive. We are committed to publishing work that is intelligent and unpretentious, elevating new voices, and examining how literature and storytelling can help illuminate social justice issues and current events. We are particularly interested in writing that operates at the intersection of different cultures, genres, and media.

https://electricliterature.com/about/mission/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Andrea Long Chu

ANDREA LONG CHU is the book critic at New York magazine Her nonfiction book Females was a finalist for the 2019 Lambda Literary Award in Transgender Nonfiction. Her writing has appeared in n+1, New York, The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, Artforum, Bookforum, Boston Review, Chronicle of Higher Education, 4Columns, The Drift, and Jewish Currents. She lives in Brooklyn.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

Jewish Currents

https://jewishcurrents.org/

Founded in 1946, Jewish Currents is a magazine committed to the rich tradition of thought, activism, and culture on the Jewish left and the left more broadly.

https://jewishcurrents.org/about. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

The Drift

https://www.thedriftmag.com/

About

The Drift is a magazine of culture and politics

https://www.thedriftmag.com/about/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.


4Columns

https://4columns.org/

4Columns is a website of arts criticism aimed at a general audience. Its title refers, quite literally, to what you’ll find there each week: four new columns, each with a distinctive voice and perspective. Together, they offer a complex and compelling view of contemporary culture, from film to literature to theater to the visual arts.

“To justify its existence,” Charles Baudelaire said of criticism, it “should be partial, impassioned, and political, that is to say, written from an exclusive point of view that opens up the widest horizons.” Following Baudelaire’s lead, 4Columns treats criticism as a literary genre in its own right—one in which singular passions ignite public discourse. The criticism it publishes functions as a conversational gambit, a piece of fan mail from the most exacting of admirers, maybe even a breakup note.

4Columns’s mainstay is the thousand-word review—a length that both enables critical reflection and demands writerly rigor. Centered, but not moored, in the New York scene, 4Columns reflects the cosmopolitanism of today’s culture through the sensibilities of a similarly diverse group of contributors. The site’s flexible, modular framework supports a multiplicity of styles, approaches, and ideas. It, further, maintains meaningful distinctions between artistic disciplines while accommodating the hybrid nature of much contemporary practice. 

Launched at a moment when the Internet is increasingly the dominant outlet for critics and criticism, 4Columns exploits the resources of online technology but avoids one of the blogosphere’s most prevalent shortcomings: the poor payment of writers. 4Columns nurtures excellence by compensating its contributors fairly. It also counters the web’s information overload and tendency to foster hyperspecialization by focusing on four well-chosen works a week, bringing together writing on varied cultural forms within a single venue. Combining sophisticated analysis with broad accessibility, 4Columns insists on art’s capacity to serve as something shared, even—perhaps especially—when it is the object of criticism.

https://4columns.org/about. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Chronicle of Higher Education

https://www.chronicle.com/

The Chronicle of Higher Education is academe’s most trusted resource for independent journalism, career development, and forward-looking intelligence. Since its founding in 1966, The Chronicle has grown to serve millions of educators, administrators, researchers, and policymakers who rely on its insights to lead, teach, learn, and innovate. The Chronicle’s independent newsroom – the nation’s largest dedicated to covering colleges and universities – is home to award-winning journalists and data analysts with a passion for serving audiences with indispensable news and actionable insights on issues that matter.

Our history.

The Chronicle, a privately owned, independent news and information organization, was founded in 1966 and originally owned by a nonprofit, Editorial Projects in Education. EPE sold The Chronicle in 1978 to Jack Crowl and Corbin Gwaltney, and The Chronicle of Higher Education Inc. was formed. Gwaltney bought the entire company in 1990, and until his death in July, 2019, was co-chair of its board of directors, along with his wife and current chair, Pamela Gwaltney.

https://www.chronicle.com/page/about-us/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Artforum

https://www.artforum.com/

Artforum is the magazine of record for the contemporary art world and holds the unique roles of institution and foremost tastemaker of the industry. Established in 1962, it is often the first to identify artists whose work comes to define eras, delivering the highest level of critical discourse to an international audience. Artforum’s artists’ projects, reviews, and critical essays on contemporary visual culture including coverage of film, music, architecture, performance, and media provide rigorous, diverse, and provocative perspectives on cultural trends of our time.

https://www.artforum.com/about-us/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Crazyhorse · swamp pink

https://swamp-pink.charleston.edu/

history

Nearly twenty years ago, Crazyhorse found a home at the College of Charleston. Between then and now, we’ve taken great pride in publishing exceptional writing. For a time, admittedly, our objective seemed clear and singular. We have arrived at a place where the holistic nature of what we do—the symbolic properties of what we are and the foothold of power we possess in literary visibility and representation—has come into necessary and long overdue focus. Not only does the history of our magazine and its name, by its very presence, carry the weight and consequence of an oppressive history, so too does the silence and inaction of our collective in all the years leading up to the present.

Our magazine was founded in Los Angeles in 1960 and titled after the Lakota Chief, Crazy Horse. In the years that followed, it traveled to Murray State in Kentucky, then the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, before finally arriving in Charleston. None of these institutions are geographically significant to Crazy Horse or the Lakota people, nor, to our knowledge, are any of the individuals who shepherded the magazine through its many phases, culturally or racially entitled to the use of Indigenous language. Our name is and always has been an act of exploitation.

In the fall of this year, we will publish our final issue, then begin anew under our new title, swamp pink. Swamp pink is a perennial member of the lily family, indigenous to the Carolinas. In 1988, swamp pink was federally listed as a threatened species due to environmental encroachment, development, and the introduction of invasive species.

Though we hope that the disavowal of our longstanding appropriation of Lakota culture will be a step in the direction of a more equitable and inclusive literary landscape, we know that it is, at most, the repudiation of an inexcusable wrongdoing and, at least, a gesture. This is not our moment to have, just as it was never our name to assume.

As a masthead and as a magazine, we are eager for the opportunity to promise ourselves to a fundamental regeneration. We are proud of the voices we’ve showcased over the years, writers and minds we admire, and we are indebted to the art they’ve given life to in each and every issue. Moving forward it is paramount to us that our magazine not only platform and celebrate diverse voices but do so with the interests of folks for whom the stakes of equity are highest, to whom the distance between where we are and where we want to be is most intimately known, as our bellwether. Beyond interrogating the power of our name, we vow also to disrupt the power structures inherent to our institution—from our masthead to the words within our pages. We are not beginning a conversation; we are merely endeavoring to shoulder our own weight in one that is ongoing.

As our community, we hope you’ll feel encouraged to share your thoughts, ideas, and criticisms with us. Thank you for your readership, your creation, your imagination—both of art, and of its decolonization. We are open and listening, and know that there is no stasis in revision, nor restitution.

https://swamp-pink.charleston.edu/about/history/. Accessed 6 Feb. 2025.

Jason Brown

JASON BROWN is the author of three collections of short stories, including A Faithful but Melancholy Account of Several Barbarities Lately Committed. He is writing a memoir called Character Witness.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

Ryan Bradley

RYAN BRADLEY is a journalist, editor, and essayist who frequently contributes to the Virginia Quarterly Review and The New York Times Magazine. He has won a Los Angeles Press Club award for feature writing and been nominated for a National Magazine Award. He lives in Los Angeles.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2022.

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

A Rewilding

"A Rewilding" by Christienne L. Hinz. First published in Terrain, November 7 2023.

Anita Baker Introduced Us and Patrice Rushen Did the Rest

"Anita Baker Introduced Us and Patrice Rushen Did the Rest" by Ed Pavlić. First published in Oxford American, No. 297, Autumn 2023.

Storm Damage

"Storm Damage" by Anne Marie Todkill. First published in The Fiddlehead, No. 297, Autumn 2023.

Love Is a Washing Line

"Love Is a Washing Line" by Rémy Ngamije. First published in Prairie Schooner, 96.4, Winter 2022.

As Big as You Make It Out to Be

"As Big as You Make It Out to Be" by Austin Woerner. First published in Ploughshares #157, Fall 2023.

Because: An Etiology

"Because: An Etiology" by Richard Prins. First published in Potomac Review, Issue 73, Fall 2023.

Memory's Cellar

"Memory's Cellar" by James McAuley. First published in Liberties, 4.1, Fall 2023.

An Upset Place

"An Upset Place" by James Whorton Jr.. First published in The Gettysburg Review 34.2, April 2023.

Trapdoor

"Trapdoor" by Kathleen Alcott. First published in Harper's Magazine, December 2023.

As They Like It: Learning to Follow My Child's Lead

"As They Like It: Learning to Follow My Child's Lead" by Nicole Graev Lipson. First published in Virginia Quarterly Review, 99.3, Fall 2023.

1978

"1978" by Amy Margolis. First published in The Iowa Review, 53.1, Spring, 2023.

If Not Now, Later

"If Not Now, Later" by Yiyun Li. First published as "What Gardening Offered After a Son’s Death" in The New Yorker, issue of October 30, 2023.

The Ones We Sent Away

"The Ones We Sent Away" by Jennifer Senior. First published in The Atlantic, August 7, 2023.

If/Then

"If/Then" by Courtney Miller Santo. First published in New Letters, 89.3 & 4, Summer/Fall 2023.

The Anatomy of Panic

"The Anatomy of Panic" by Michael W. Clune. First published in Harper's Magazine, May, 2023.

Woodstove

"Woodstove" by Brock Clarke. First published in Five Points, 22.1, Spring, 2023.

Proxemics

"Proxemics" by Jonathan Gleason. First published in Colorado Review, 50.1, Spring, 2023.

It's Hard Out Here for a Memoirist

"It's Hard Out Here for a Memoirist" by Jerald Walker. First published in Prairie Schooner 97.1, Spring, 2023.

The Lives of Bryan

"The Lives of Bryan" by Jennifer Sinor. First published in The American Scholar, Summer, 2023.

Mere Belief

"Mere Belief" by Sallie Tisdale. First published in Harper's Magazine, November, 2023.

Reframing Vermeer

"Reframing Vermeer" by Teju Cole. First published in New York Times Magazine, May 28, 2023.

Jenisha from Kentucky

"Jenisha from Kentucky" by Jenisha Watts. First published in The Atlantic, September 13, 2023.

Terrain

https://www.terrain.org/

 

The Best American Essays 2024


Potomac Review

https://mcblogs.montgomerycollege.edu/potomacreview/

Our Mission

Rooted in the nation’s capital’s suburbs, Potomac Review is the antidote to the scripted republic that surrounds it. By taking on D.C.’s values of international inclusion, Potomac Review looks out into the world from its lush Potomac River basin, collecting and absorbing the world’s literary diversity. Potomac Review seeks literature from emerging as well as established writers around the globe to facilitate in the literary conversation.

Our History

Founding editor Eli Flam launched Potomac Review in the D.C. area in 1993, declaring it “the quarterly with a conscience at the heart of the Mid-Atlantic.” The review relocated in the early 2000s to Montgomery College and the Paul Peck Humanities Institute, where it became the biannual print literary magazine it is today.

Over the years, the Potomac Review has received numerous recognitions. We’re excited that this fall, Richard Prins’s “Because: an Etiology” (issue 73) will appear in Best American Essays 2024 and Mark Christhilf’s “Overtures on Some Unanswered Questions” (Issue 73) will appear in Best Spiritual Literature 2024.

Additionally, Potomac Review recently has received citations in Best American Essays and Best American Short Stories.  In 2023, Alan Rossi earned distinction for “My Teacher” (Issue 70) in Best American Short Stories. Notable distinctions in Best American Essays include Caleb Coy for “In Maggie’s Shadow” (2023, Issue # 71); Amanda Gaines for “Purplest” (2022, Issue # 69);  John Talbird for  “What Happens Next” and Orman Day for “When We Were Swashbucklers” (2021, Issue # 66);  Tracey Hack for “Dormancy” and Kevin J. Kelley for “Po-tay-to/Po-tah-to” (2020, Issue # 65); Paul Haney for “It’s Our Album Now” (2020, Issue # 64); Sarah Bryan for “Thelytoky” and Krista Christensen for “Theory of Negativity”  (2019, Issue # 63);  and Sue Eisenfeld for “Taking It” (2018, Issue # 61).

https://mcblogs.montgomerycollege.edu/potomacreview/about/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

 

The Best American Essays 2024


Liberties

https://libertiesjournal.com/

About

Liberties Journal of Culture and Politics is a publication of the Liberties Journal Foundation a 501(c)3 nonpartisan organization based in Washington, D.C., founded by Alfred H. Moses and Bill Reichblum in 2019.

The Foundation seeks to inform today’s cultural and political leaders, influence citizen engagement, inspire participation in the democratic process, and promote the humanities.

The Foundation launched Liberties Journal of Culture and Politics in the Fall of 2020 with Leon Wieseltier as editor and Celeste Marcus as managing editor. Bill Reichblum is the publisher. Christopher McCaffery is the associate publisher.

Liberties is an independent quarterly journal of ideas that publishes serious, stylish, and controversial essays about significant issues in culture and politics. Liberties features essays from leading op-ed writers and scholars, award-winning and well-known non-fiction and fiction writers, next generation rising talents, and poets from around the world.

Liberties publishes quarterly in the Fall, Winter, Spring, and Summer.

https://libertiesjournal.com/about/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

 

The Best American Essays 2024

Five Points

https://fivepoints.gsu.edu/

Five Points: A Journal of Literature and Art is published by Georgia State University two times per year.

https://fivepoints.gsu.edu/about/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

 



The Best American Essays 2024

Colorado Review

https://coloradoreview.colostate.edu/colorado-review/

About Colorado Review

Launched in 1956 (with the first issue featuring work by Langston Hughes, William Carlos Williams, E. E. Cummings, Henry Miller, Bertolt Brecht, and Mark van Doren), Colorado Review is a national literary journal featuring contemporary fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and book reviews. Each issue is approximately 200 pages. Published three times a year, CR has a circulation of approximately 1,100, is carried by university and public libraries across the country, and is also available via Project MUSE. The journal receives over 7,000 manuscript submissions each academic year. It lives on the campus at Colorado State University.

Colorado Review is committed to the publication of contemporary creative writing. We are equally interested in work by both new and established writers. While open to a variety of styles and concerns, CR welcomes work that centers story and voice and/or that plays with form in meaningful ways. We accept short fiction, literary nonfiction, poetry, and book reviews (reviews are published online only).

https://coloradoreview.colostate.edu/colorado-review/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

 



The Best American Essays 2024

Austin Woerner

AUSTIN WOERNER is a Chinese-English literary translator whose work has appeared in Ploughshares, Poetry, the New York Times Magazine, and elsewhere. He is the translator of a novel, The Invisible Valley, by Su Wei, and two volumes of Ouyang Jianghe's poetry, and the editor of Chutzpah!: New Voices from China. He has taught creative writing and translation in China for many years, first at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou and then at Duke Kunshan University in Suzhou, and he is currently a teaching fellow in translation studies at the University of Leeds.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2024.

Poetry

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/

About Poetry Magazine

For more than 110 years, Poetry magazine has been a monthly gathering space for poets and readers. The magazine publishes contemporary poetry and prose, primarily in English, and translations from contributors all over the world. In addition to its print publication, Poetry’s entire digital archive of over 1,200 issues is available for free, and content from 2013 to present is available in our digital app. Poetry has been published in Chicago since its founding in 1912.

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/about. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

James Whorton Jr.

JAMES WHORTON JR. is a former Mississippian now living in Rochester, New York. He is author of the novels Approximately Heaven, Frankland, and Angela Sloan. His short stories and essays have appeared in Oxford American, The Gettysburg Review, The Iowa Review, The Southern Review, Mississippi Review, Chicago Quarterly Review, and The Sewanee Review. He teaches at SUNY Brockport.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2024.

Nashville Scene

https://www.nashvillescene.com/

From investigative cultural and political reporting to looks inside the city's massive arts and entertainment industry, the Scene has developed into a must-read for Nashvillians of all stripes over the past three decades. The newsweekly's provocative lifestyle coverage and criticism of emerging local musical talent have cemented its relationship with readers. 

The Scene is the only place for special issues like "You Are So Nashville If," "Boner Awards" and of course each year's massive "Best of Nashville" which covers everything from the best bars and bands to politics, shops, parks, activists and more. The Scene is a medium-circulation print publication release throughout Nashville and surrounding counties every Thursday - our website also features online-only daily coverage of state and local politics, the arts, music, film, and food. 

The Nashville Scene reserves the right to remove any comments from our site or various social media platforms at any time. Comments featuring hate speech or otherwise threatening or violent content will be deleted. To report a comment you think violates our terms, email editor[at]nashvillescene[dot]com. 

https://www.nashvillescene.com/site/about.html. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

Chicago Quarterly Review

https://www.chicagoquarterlyreview.com/

The Chicago Quarterly Review is a nonprofit, independent literary journal publishing short stories, poems, translations and essays by both emerging and established writers since 1994. We’re proud to have had work from our pages chosen for Best American Short Stories, Best American Essays, the O. Henry Prize Stories and the Pushcart Prize Anthology as we continue our mission to stimulate, entertain, and inspire.

“To mark the 25th anniversary of Chicago Quarterly Review, the fall 2019 issue is appropriately huge, as befits Carl Sandburg’s “stormy, husky, brawling,/ City of the Big Shoulders.” Here, in more than 400 pages, are 32 short stories, 20 poems, a suite of photographs and a dozen works of nonfiction. The result isn’t just a literary quarterly; it’s a tour of the bright and darkling plain we call contemporary American literature.”      –Michael Dirda, The Washington Post

https://www.chicagoquarterlyreview.com/cqr-blurb//. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

Mississippi Review

https://www.mississippi-review.com/

Mississippi Review was founded by Gordon Weaver in 1972 at the University of Southern Mississippi. Frederick Barthelme took over the editorial reins in 1977 and along with managing editor Rie Fortenberry quickly turned Mississippi Review into a literary journal of national acclaim. Since 1972, we have been publishing award-winning Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry.

Mississippi Review is housed in the University of Southern Mississippi's Center for Writers. We currently publish two issues a year and host an annual contest awarding prizes in Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry.

https://www.mississippi-review.com/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

Jenisha Watts

JENISHA WATTS is a senior editor at The Atlantic. Before joining The Atlantic in 2020, she was a culture editor for ESPN's The Undefeated and a features and commentary editor for espnW, and she edited articles for ESPN The Magazine. She's also held editorial roles at Time Books, Essence, and People. She lives in Maryland with her husband and son.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2024.

People

https://people.com/

About PEOPLE

Who We Are

PEOPLE’s accomplished team of editors, writers, designers and photographers are all dedicated to the brand’s core mission: to inform, entertain and inspire by sharing the stories that everyone will be talking about. For 50 years, the PEOPLE team has been comprised of trusted experts in nearly every field. We’re the go-to source for news about celebrities, entertainment and the royals, and we elevate powerful human interest stories and everyday people making a difference in their communities. With decades of experience and a true passion for the subjects we cover, our journalists believe in the power of storytelling to make a difference.

All About PEOPLE

PEOPLE delivers the most trustworthy celebrity news and captivating human interest stories, connecting you to the pulse of American culture. Since our first issue hit stands in 1974, we have been striving to tell compelling stories about the people behind the issues, as opposed to just the issues themselves. We are your everyday escape, taking you inside the lives of intriguing stars, newsmakers, up-and-comers and ordinary people doing extraordinary things. We serve and delight you by providing ideas about beauty, food and style through the lens of the people influencing the trends. And we are a force for good by telling stories of hope, optimism and kindness that drive conversation and inspire action.

https://people.com/about-us-5499056. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

Essence

https://www.essence.com/

ESSENCE MAGAZINE

ESSENCE is the premiere lifestyle, fashion and beauty magazine for African-American women. With its motivating message, intimate girlfriend-to-girlfriend tone, compelling and engaging editorial lineup and vibrant and modern design, ESSENCE is the definitive voice of today’s dynamic African-American woman. ESSENCE speaks directly to a Black woman’s spirit, her heart and her unique concerns. Every month African-American women rely on ESSENCE for editorial content designed to help them move their lives forward personally, professionally, intellectually and spiritually. Sections such as Work & Wealth, Healthy Living, and Looks We Love cover topics that focus on career and finance, health and lifestyle, and fashion and beauty and share an intimate connection with readers. In 2008, ESSENCE won 12 New York Association of Black Journalists awards in the Investigative, General Feature, International, Business/Technology, Science/Health, Arts & Entertainment, Personal Commentary, Public Affairs and Online categories. The publication has a monthly circulation of 1,050,000 and a readership of 8.5 million. The first issue of ESSENCE hit the newsstands in May 1970, with a circulation of 50,000.

https://www.essence.com/about/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

TIME

https://time.com/

TIME is a global media brand built on 100 years of unparalleled trust and authority, with an audience of more than 100 million people worldwide across our platforms. Created in 1923, TIME began as the first weekly news magazine: a digest of world events, for busy people to read. Today, TIME includes a website; a magazine; a social media footprint of over 51 million; TIME Studios, an award-winning film and television division; live events; Red Border, an award-winning in-house branded content studio; TIME CO2, a climate action platform; TIME Stamped, a recommendations and e-commerce platform created in partnership with Taboola; and TIME Sites, a customer-experience platform.

TIME’s mission is to provide trusted guidance about the ideas and people who shape and improve the world. This promise lives at the center of our award-winning editorial work, fast-growing new divisions, innovative new products, and partner solutions.

https://time.com/longform/about-time/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

ESPN The Magazine

https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/43676830/how-stunning-luka-doncic-anthony-davis-trade-came-together-los-angeles-lakers-dallas-mavericks

PEN/New England Award

https://pen.org/pen-new-england-awards/

A Literary Heritage

“For as long as there’s been an America, New England has been home to writers. We are the land of John Updike and John Cheever, Sylvia Plath and Ann Sexton, Frederick Douglass and Henry David Thoreau. To say a book is the best by a New England writer is saying a great deal indeed.” —Jennifer Haigh

Celebrating New England’s long and illustrious literary tradition, the PEN/ New England Awards recognize outstanding fiction, poetry, and nonfiction by New England authors. Previous winners include E. B. White, Andre Dubus, Tracy Kidder, Mary Oliver, Susan Quinn, Anita Shreve, Swanee Hunt, Stanley Kunitz, Leo Damrosch, Louise Glück, Margot Livesey, Sebastian Junger, Jennifer Haigh, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Jim Shepard. Formerly called the PEN/Winship Awards, they were established by the Boston Globe in 1975 to honor long-time editor Laurence L. Winship.

https://pen.org/pen-new-england-awards/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.

Monday, February 3, 2025

Pushcart Prize

http://www.pushcartprize.com/

The Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses series, published every year since 1976, is the most honored literary project in America - including Highest Honors from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Since 1976, hundreds of presses and thousands of writers of short stories, poetry and essays have been represented in our annual collections. Each year most of the writers and many of the presses are new to the series. Every volume contains an index of past selections, plus lists of outstanding presses with addresses.

The Pushcart Prize has been a labor of love and independent spirits since its founding. It is one of the last surviving literary co-ops from the 60's and 70's. Our legacy is assured by donations to our Fellowships endowment.

http://www.pushcartprize.com/index.html. Accessed 3 Feb. 2025.

Mother Jones

https://www.motherjones.com/

What Is Mother Jones?

Mother Jones is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom founded in 1976 that reaches millions of people each month across our website, social media, videos, newsletter, and print magazine. Mother Jones is produced by the Center for Investigative Reporting, which also produces Reveal, the weekly investigative radio show and podcast.

Our newsroom investigates the big stories that may be ignored or overlooked by other news outlets, including about democracy and voting rights, racial justice, reproductive rights, and food and agriculture.

We are America’s oldest investigative news outlet, and are based in San Francisco with bureaus in Washington, DC, and New York. We are an independent newsroom (meaning we don’t have any corporate owners), and are accountable only to you, our readers. Our mission is to deliver hard-hitting reporting that raises awareness and inspires change.

- https://www.motherjones.com/about/. Accessed 3 Feb. 2025.

Creative Nonfiction

https://creativenonfiction.org/



Harvard Review

https://www.harvardreview.org/

MISSION

Harvard Review publishes new poetry, essays, fiction, drama, criticism, book reviews, and interviews. From its beginnings, the journal has been committed to showcasing the work of emerging writers alongside established voices, or, as we like to think of it, publishing writers who will be famous next to writers who already are.

Over the years we have published a number of important writers at an early stage of their careers, including Nam Le, Mary Ruefle, Jhumpa Lahiri, Carl Phillips, David Foster Wallace, and Mary Karr. Some of the authors we have debuted include Paul Harding, who won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2010; Ben Shattuck, whose first published story was selected for PEN America’s Best Debut Short Stories in 2017; Moira McCavana, whose debut story was published in the O. Henry Prize Stories Anthology in 2018, and Charles Yu, winner of the 2020 National Book Award for Fiction.

Editorially, we are interested in literary technique and agnostic when it comes to subject matter; we take each piece on its merits and seek a diversity of voices. We look for evidence of control, polish, deliberateness, authority and for work that strikes us as realizing its own ambitions, whatever those may be. In terms of design, the magazine draws on the aesthetic of the 1960s Black Sparrow Press, foregrounding typography and color and employing only abstract elements. We print on uncoated cover stock for a tactile feel and design our covers in thematically related pairs. Our cover designs by Alex Camlin have been repeatedly honored in PRINT magazine’s Regional Design Annual.

In print, we publish poetry, short stories, essays, and visual art; online, in addition to these genres, we also publish translations, interviews, criticism, and book reviews. Contributors to Harvard Review are regularly selected for Best American anthologies, The O. Henry Prize Stories and the Pushcart Prize Anthology.

HISTORY

In 1986 poet and novelist Stratis Haviaras, then Curator of the Woodberry Poetry Room in Harvard’s Lamont Library, founded a quarterly periodical called Erato. Its purpose was to publicize the activities of the Poetry Room and create a new forum for discussion of current literary matters and events. The first issue of Erato, which was just four pages long, featured a poem by Seamus Heaney, a short piece on Louis Simpson, and a news item from Harvard University Press. Tipped into the issue were three loose-leaf pages of book reviews, including reviews of works by Joseph Brodsky, Marguerite Duras, and Richard Ford.

Within three years the book review section had grown to over thirty pages and the publication was renamed Harvard Book Review. In 1992 Haviaras launched Harvard Review, a perfect-bound journal of some 200 pages, published semi-annually and incorporating the old Harvard Book Review. The journal provided a forum for criticism along with new poetry and short fiction. In 2000 Haviaras retired from Harvard and Christina Thompson was appointed editor. Oversight of the review shifted from Lamont Library to Houghton Library at this time.

https://www.harvardreview.org/history/. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.


The Best American Essays 2022

Massachusetts Book Award

https://www.massbook.org/mass-book-awards

The Massachusetts Book Awards recognize significant works of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, translated literature, graphic novel/memoir, and children’s/young adult literature written, illustrated, or translated by current Commonwealth residents. An annual “notable contribution to publishing” award recognizes the work of Massachusetts-based presses. 

National Book Award

https://www.nationalbook.org/national-book-awards/

Established in 1950, the National Book Awards are American literary prizes administered by the National Book Foundation, a nonprofit organization. A pantheon of writers such as William Faulkner, Marianne Moore, Ralph Ellison, John Cheever, Bernard Malamud, Philip Roth, Robert Lowell, Walker Percy, John Updike, Katherine Anne Porter, Norman Mailer, Lillian Hellman, Elizabeth Bishop, Saul Bellow, Toni Morrison, Flannery O’Connor, Adrienne Rich, Thomas Pynchon, Alice Walker, E. Annie Proulx, Jesmyn Ward, and Ta-Nehisi Coates have all won National Book Awards. Although other categories have been recognized in the past, the Awards currently honor the best Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry, Translated Literature, and Young People’s Literature, published each year.


Anne Marie Todkill

ANNE MARIE TODKILL lives off-grid in North Hasting, Ontario, within the treaty lands of the Michi Saagiig Anishinaabeg. Her essays, short fiction, and poems have appeared in various Canadian literary magazines and anthologies, including The Fiddlehead, The Malahat Review, The New Quarterly, The Best Canadian Poetry in English series, and the Best Canadian Stories series. Her first collection of poetry, Orion Sweeping, was published in 2022. "Storm Damage" is part of a collection-in-progress.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2024.

The New Quarterly

https://tnq.ca/

The Malahat Review

https://www.malahatreview.ca/

The Fiddlehead

https://thefiddlehead.ca/

 

The Best American Essays 2024


Sallie Tisdale

SALLIE TISDALE is the author of many essays. Her most recent books is The Lie About the Truck: Survivor, Reality TV, and the Endless Gaze.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2024.

Jennifer Sinor

JENNIFER SINOR is the author of several books of literary nonfiction. Her most recent book The Yogic Writer: Uniting Breath, Body, and Page, joins the practice of writing and the practice of yoga. Her essay collections include Sky Songs: Meditations on Loving a Broken World and Letters Like the Day: On Reading Georgia O'Keeffe. She teaches creative writing at Utah State University, where she is a professor of English.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2024.

Jennifer Senior

JENNIFER SENIOR is a staff writer at The Atlantic and winner of the 2022 Pulitzer for Feature Writing. Prior to joining The Atlantic, she spent five years at the New York Times—first as one of its daily book critics, then as columnist for the Opinion page. Before that, she spent eighteen years as a staff writer for New York Magazine. Her first book, All Joy and No Fun: The Paradox of Modern Parenthood, spent eight weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, was named one of Slate's Top 10 Books of 2014, and has been translated into twelve languages. In addition to the Pulitzer, Senior has won a variety of journalism prizes, including a National Magazine Award, a GLAAD award, two Front Page Awards from the Newswomen's Club of New York, and the Erikson Prize in Mental Health Media. Her work has been anthologized four times in The Best American Political Writing, and her profile of the psychologist Philip Brickman was selected for The Best American Science Writing of 2021. She lives in New York with her husband and son.

- Contributors' Notes, The Best American Essays 2024.