Fall 2022 – Michigan Quarterly Review

Fall 2022

Allotment

The Dawes Act of 1887 fragmented communal indigenous territory in Oklahoma into individual allotment plots. The water ran clay red as the crust of the earth dissolved into splintered versions of itself. The squatters who came before & after renamed land solid muscle. Big Ag lurked in the shadows, sowing genetically modified seeds of seizure. […]

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The Dawes Act of 1887 fragmented communal indigenous territory in Oklahoma into individual allotment plots. The water ran clay red as the crust of the earth dissolved into splintered versions of itself. The squatters who came before & after renamed land solid muscle. Big Ag lurked in the shadows, sowing genetically modified seeds of seizure.

Beyond the Storm, the Night is Peaceful

Why I Chose It: Michigan Quarterly Review reader Joshua Olivier on why he recommended “Beyond the Storm, the Night is Peaceful” by Daniel Mazzacane for our Fall 2022 issue. You can purchase the issue here. I loved “BEYOND THE STORM, THE NIGHT IS PEACEFUL” as soon as I read an early draft as an undergraduate, four years before

Beyond the Storm, the Night is Peaceful Read More »

Why I Chose It: Michigan Quarterly Review reader Joshua Olivier on why he recommended “Beyond the Storm, the Night is Peaceful” by Daniel Mazzacane for our Fall 2022 issue. You can purchase the issue here. I loved “BEYOND THE STORM, THE NIGHT IS PEACEFUL” as soon as I read an early draft as an undergraduate, four years before

“Of Work”: On Hughes’s “Let America Be America Again”

For the Fall 2022 special issue of MQR, “Fractured Union: American Democracy on the Brink,” we reached out to a range of esteemed authors to write short essays that respond to Langston Hughes’s poem “Let America Be America Again I believe it was in a high school English class that I first encountered Langston Hughes, reading the

“Of Work”: On Hughes’s “Let America Be America Again” Read More »

For the Fall 2022 special issue of MQR, “Fractured Union: American Democracy on the Brink,” we reached out to a range of esteemed authors to write short essays that respond to Langston Hughes’s poem “Let America Be America Again I believe it was in a high school English class that I first encountered Langston Hughes, reading the

FOUNDING DOCUMENTS RESTAGED

Why I Chose It: Michigan Quarterly Review reader Chloe Alberta on why she recommended “Founding Documents Restaged” by Craig McDaniel for our Fall 2022 issue. You can purchase the issue here. I admit, I have the attention span of a goldfish, or an excitable child—in a pile of nonfiction, “Founding Documents Restaged” caught my eye. But beyond the

FOUNDING DOCUMENTS RESTAGED Read More »

Why I Chose It: Michigan Quarterly Review reader Chloe Alberta on why she recommended “Founding Documents Restaged” by Craig McDaniel for our Fall 2022 issue. You can purchase the issue here. I admit, I have the attention span of a goldfish, or an excitable child—in a pile of nonfiction, “Founding Documents Restaged” caught my eye. But beyond the

The What!?

If a man loads his musket and takes to the street he is hilariously out of date and dangerously outgunned even if the street is unarmed. Someone’s mouth is a musket waiting for gunpowder whiskey and the right word of a bullet. The finger pressed to chest says bitch before the mouth has a chance

The What!? Read More »

If a man loads his musket and takes to the street he is hilariously out of date and dangerously outgunned even if the street is unarmed. Someone’s mouth is a musket waiting for gunpowder whiskey and the right word of a bullet. The finger pressed to chest says bitch before the mouth has a chance

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