Writers’ Day Jobs: Joanna Pearson
Our contributor Joanna Pearson, psychiatrist and fiction writer, on how her day job relates to her writing life.
Our contributor Joanna Pearson, psychiatrist and fiction writer, on how her day job relates to her writing life.
Up next in the Writers’ Day Jobs series, Yxta Maya Murray, a novelist, art critic, playwright, and law professor.
The first in a new series of features on writers’ day jobs.
A roundup of pandemic-related creative work, blog posts, and interviews from The Cincinnati Review and friends.
In the spirit of the season, we here at CR thought it might be nice (and cathartic) to pause, take a deep breath, and reflect on some of the best writing advice we are thankful to have received.
An interview with Felicia Zamora. “Photography and poetry help me question human behavior in very distinct and unique ways; they both have lenses that swivel simultaneously outward and inward.”
An interview with Aditi Machado. “I tend to think I became a more interesting writer after, and while, translating Farid Tali’s Prosopopoeia. There’s something about sinking into someone else’s—a different language’s—syntax and sonics that reorients your relationship to your chosen writing language(s).”
We wanted to introduce or reintroduce ourselves to you here at the start of the year. Here are some good news and goings-on from our staff (we’re writers too!).
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