Volume 62: 2023 – Page 2 – Michigan Quarterly Review

Volume 62: 2023

AT THE HEAD OF THE CLASS

Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 Julie Lee is the award-winning author of Brother’s Keeper and In the Tunnel. She holds an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from the Vermont College of Fine Arts, as well as a BA in history from Cornell University. When she is not spending time with her family, […]

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Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 Julie Lee is the award-winning author of Brother’s Keeper and In the Tunnel. She holds an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from the Vermont College of Fine Arts, as well as a BA in history from Cornell University. When she is not spending time with her family,

EPITHALAMION FOR THE YELLOW WOMAN (FOR MYSELF)

Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 Be it enacted by the Senate and the House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That . . . in determining the immigration of any subject of China, Japan, or any Oriental country, to the United States . . . it shall be unlawful

EPITHALAMION FOR THE YELLOW WOMAN (FOR MYSELF) Read More »

Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 Be it enacted by the Senate and the House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That . . . in determining the immigration of any subject of China, Japan, or any Oriental country, to the United States . . . it shall be unlawful

Snakeshead & Honeysuckle

Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 Why We Chose It: Michigan Quarterly Review reader Diepreye Amanah on why she recommended “Snakeshead & Honeysuckle” by Amy Sailer for the Fall 2023 issue. You can purchase the issue here. With “Snakeshead & Honeysuckle”, Sailer weaves a tapestry of wonder. Fluent with her threads of music, and with distinct voices for needles,

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Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 Why We Chose It: Michigan Quarterly Review reader Diepreye Amanah on why she recommended “Snakeshead & Honeysuckle” by Amy Sailer for the Fall 2023 issue. You can purchase the issue here. With “Snakeshead & Honeysuckle”, Sailer weaves a tapestry of wonder. Fluent with her threads of music, and with distinct voices for needles,

OBJECT

Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 January 2017, and I’m sitting at my desk in my home office in Denver. It’s a cheap thing from Target that I put together myself, but I love how my forearms—thanks to my lousy typing form—have rubbed away the finish in oblong, peach-colored patches on the edges of the

OBJECT Read More »

Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 January 2017, and I’m sitting at my desk in my home office in Denver. It’s a cheap thing from Target that I put together myself, but I love how my forearms—thanks to my lousy typing form—have rubbed away the finish in oblong, peach-colored patches on the edges of the

JUNO, FAR FROM DORCHESTER, SOUTH CAROLINA, 1733

Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 Why We Chose It: Michigan Quarterly Review reader Michael O’Ryan on why he recommended “JUNO, FAR FROM DORCHESTER, SOUTH CAROLINA, 1733” by Melissa Range for the Fall 2023 issue. You can purchase the issue here. Melissa Range’s “JUNO, FAR FROM DORCHESTER, SOUTH CAROLINA, 1733”, immediately captivated me for its effective utilization of a

JUNO, FAR FROM DORCHESTER, SOUTH CAROLINA, 1733 Read More »

Published in Issue 62.4: Fall 2023 Why We Chose It: Michigan Quarterly Review reader Michael O’Ryan on why he recommended “JUNO, FAR FROM DORCHESTER, SOUTH CAROLINA, 1733” by Melissa Range for the Fall 2023 issue. You can purchase the issue here. Melissa Range’s “JUNO, FAR FROM DORCHESTER, SOUTH CAROLINA, 1733”, immediately captivated me for its effective utilization of a

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