Michael Ferro – Michigan Quarterly Review

Michael Ferro

We Are Stories: A Review of Lindsey Drager’s The Archive of Alternate Endings

The realm of storytelling is a sacred one, and not just for authors and readers, but for our culture as a whole. As the novel makes readily apparent, if we neglect or ignore our collective pasts, our stories, then we risk losing the most important part of us forever.

We Are Stories: A Review of Lindsey Drager’s The Archive of Alternate Endings Read More »

The realm of storytelling is a sacred one, and not just for authors and readers, but for our culture as a whole. As the novel makes readily apparent, if we neglect or ignore our collective pasts, our stories, then we risk losing the most important part of us forever.

Sickness Bears Honesty; Honesty Bears Change: Thirty-Seven by Peter Stenson

Change is something that many of us strive for—changing ourselves, changing others, and, most particularly, changing the world. But too often we expect radical change without having to put in the work to achieve it; we ignore the arduous tasks that precede major transformation and just continue yearning, searching. Enter Mason Hues, the protagonist of

Sickness Bears Honesty; Honesty Bears Change: Thirty-Seven by Peter Stenson Read More »

Change is something that many of us strive for—changing ourselves, changing others, and, most particularly, changing the world. But too often we expect radical change without having to put in the work to achieve it; we ignore the arduous tasks that precede major transformation and just continue yearning, searching. Enter Mason Hues, the protagonist of

lsa logoum logoU-M Privacy StatementAccessibility at U-M