miCRo: three pieces by Joe Kapitan
Three interwoven flash essays about the south that move from a sense of menace to hope.
Read Moreby Cincinnati Review | Oct 4, 2023 | miCRo | 0
Three interwoven flash essays about the south that move from a sense of menace to hope.
Read Moreby Cincinnati Review | Jul 13, 2022 | miCRo | 1
In her microessay on chronic pain, Chrissy Martin breaks down and redefines the language of suffering and resilience.
Read Moreby Cincinnati Review | Apr 27, 2022 | miCRo | 0
In two pieces that feature mothers with dementia, Beth Ann Fennelly shows us again why her work is central to contemporary enthusiasm for the form of the microessay.
Read Moreby Cincinnati Review | Feb 2, 2022 | miCRo | 0
In Elizabeth Lindsey Rogers’s “Dyke Litany,” queer adolescent isolation transforms into a collective experience.
Read Moreby Cincinnati Review | Sep 8, 2021 | miCRo | 0
Eastman’s “On Leave” opens with a study of contrasts on new motherhood, set lakeside where the speaker and her newborn son are spending the morning after sleepless nights.
Read Moreby Cincinnati Review | Aug 26, 2020 | miCRo | 0
In Jin Su Joo’s “Have You Eaten Rice” we learn about several key relationships in the speaker’s life through the lens of rice.
Read Moreby Cincinnati Review | Jan 9, 2019 | miCRo | 0
Assistant Editor Jess Jelsma Masterton: When working in the micro form, writers often struggle to...
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