October 2018 – Page 4 – Michigan Quarterly Review

October 2018

alien child painting by carroll cloar with families dressed in white standing across a stream in the rocks

On Return & Redemption: Ed Madden in Conversation with Kwame Dawes

“Caregiving isn’t just doing things for someone, it is an attitude toward the doing and toward the person and the person’s body. It’s a turning toward the other.”

On Return & Redemption: Ed Madden in Conversation with Kwame Dawes Read More »

“Caregiving isn’t just doing things for someone, it is an attitude toward the doing and toward the person and the person’s body. It’s a turning toward the other.”

“Where the Hell Did My Memory Go?” An Interview with Lori Racicot

“When working with or caring for someone with health or memory issues, the situation is often variable and fluid, and can change without warning. Caregivers need to be flexible. That’s how I approached this series of paintings: fluid and flexible, while using a variety of techniques to make marks on the paper.”

“Where the Hell Did My Memory Go?” An Interview with Lori Racicot Read More »

“When working with or caring for someone with health or memory issues, the situation is often variable and fluid, and can change without warning. Caregivers need to be flexible. That’s how I approached this series of paintings: fluid and flexible, while using a variety of techniques to make marks on the paper.”

the care giver by caroline johnson front cover collage with two old hands grasping each other

Triptych in Color: On Caroline Johnson’s “The Caregiver”

Johnson comments on the circumstances that informed many of the poems in the narrative, autobiographical book: watching films with her parents; learning about her father’s work as a bomber pilot in the Air Force during Cold War; and working with her parents’ principal and patient caregiver, Donna.

Triptych in Color: On Caroline Johnson’s “The Caregiver” Read More »

Johnson comments on the circumstances that informed many of the poems in the narrative, autobiographical book: watching films with her parents; learning about her father’s work as a bomber pilot in the Air Force during Cold War; and working with her parents’ principal and patient caregiver, Donna.

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