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Feeling like a nap today? Illustration by Lauren Nassaf, story by @ElizabethWeld, in our Spring 2018 issue:
https://t.co/MFWySaycov
This far into a century of upheavals, what does it mean to practice citizenship? In our Fall issue, we ask questions that are vital to understanding the ways in which citizenship reaches through daily lived experience.
https://t.co/L4ZtIBFuSq
On this day in 1876, Sherwood Anderson was born. He wrote the essay “J. J. Lankes and His Woodcuts” for our Winter 1931 issue, describing the title artist in a minimalist manner similar to his style in WINESBURG, OHIO. #VQRVault
https://t.co/RUAfP5hnVU
“No one knows how long the Hafgufa has lived. But it is thought that it has been in the oceans since before men ever took to them.”
—Patrick Barrett, “The Hafgufa.” A story from our Summer Fiction issue.
https://t.co/CiUGxSQbmc
Strout’s is one of eight stories in the issue, along with a fictional comic by @dirtbagg.
https://t.co/FFxA0OXXSQ
Williams’s SELF-PORTRAIT IN BLACK AND WHITE, a nonfiction work taking on similar themes as the above essay, is nearing its one-year publication anniversary from @wwnorton. Read more here:
https://t.co/KKkB5ZDUqv
“Everything Splashes and Sinks,” A. Igoni Barrett’s story in our Summer issue, follows the coming of age of Nimi and Abiye through the lenses of family and identity.
https://t.co/1848bALbMp
Last week, the @VQR staff was reading the words of @knownemily, TriciaLockwood, and @DavidGrann. Check it out, in the latest Best 200 Words:
https://t.co/6nfAiOo3bo
“When your four-year-old begins talking incessantly about death, there are a few tactics for dealing with it. One is curiosity.”
—@TeaMichelle, “Reaper Madness.” An essay from Fall 2019. #pride
https://t.co/QAi52JLHqs
Our second Summer Fiction issue celebrates the power of fiction to fortify our human connections from afar. It also features a vital selection of poetry, essays, criticism, and comics, as well as reporting on India’s threatened free press.
https://t.co/FFxA0OXXSQ