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Roanoke Review

Volume XLV

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Roanoke Review

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Featured
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Oct 29, 2024
Dr. Cheryl Hopson: A Lifetime on the Pages
Oct 29, 2024

Yes. So I, for example, I'm not an accountant, and I'm not a chemist. I am very good at what I am good at and I love it and I value it so much. And so I recognize it as my gift, and my mother has always said to me, when you've been given a gift, it is your responsibility to share it. Now, she has her religious background. But I have that belief also. Probably because I'm her daughter, but also because my grandmother said the same. And whatever that gift is, if you are really good at making people laugh--I love comedians. I do. Probably because of all the trauma, but for me, laughter is healing. So if you can also read one of my poems and smile or laugh, that's awesome. I like that.

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Oct 29, 2024
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Nov 30, 2023
Q & A Bennie Herron
Nov 30, 2023

“Be you in your work. I see myself as a student for life when it comes to my writing and painting. Understand that your experiences can be colored and crafted just as beautifully as those we look up to. Be you in your work and the authenticity will manifest into people wanting to read and hear your work because they will likely see themselves your truth. “

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Nov 30, 2023
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Oct 2, 2023
Taunja Thomson: Memories Full of Promise
Oct 2, 2023

“I would recommend that someone who wants to get published read as many issues of an many journals as possible & submit, submit, submit their work. I set a goal of submitting my poetry to one hundred journals every year, breaking it down into sending out so many every month & every week to keep on track.”

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Oct 2, 2023
Q&A with Kristina Stocks
Jan 31, 2023
Q&A with Kristina Stocks
Jan 31, 2023

“My advice for young writers and I guess young people, in general, would be to persist. I just left a job that made me unhappy and moved across the country to pursue this writing thing—again. I think it’s okay to fail, and it’s also okay to pursue what will make you happy.”

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Jan 31, 2023
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Dec 31, 2022
Q&A with Jeffrey Greene
Dec 31, 2022

“They’re memoir, but they’re subject driven, and the whole thing is just that when I start these books, I’m as ignorant as most of the audience, or maybe a lot of them more knowledgeable than I am. But the whole thing is a journey into a subject and the transformation that takes place is the knowledge that’s acquired as you go, and all literature is based on transformation.”

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Dec 31, 2022
Emily Iris Degn Interview: Nature Writing
Dec 18, 2022
Emily Iris Degn Interview: Nature Writing
Dec 18, 2022

“Storytelling has always been a huge part of my life, and I have been lucky enough to live in nature-dominated locations and explore the wilderness from a young age. The two things, nature and stories, have been the most defining and important things to me, so they naturally went hand in hand. As I've grown up, I have paired that with my concern for the growing climate crisis and my environmental education.”

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Dec 18, 2022
Maurice Ferguson: Being a Nature Poet
Nov 30, 2022
Maurice Ferguson: Being a Nature Poet
Nov 30, 2022

“Tell them to read, read, read—not to imitate but to assimilate. They should write about everything from aardvarks to zebras and all that’s left in between. Their terrain should be from Angola to Zimbabwe. They should keep notebooks because memory cannot be trusted. Like Bill Stafford, they should know the difference between a nibble and a bite. Like Whitman, they must contain multitudes and shout their barbaric yawp across the rooftops.”

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Nov 30, 2022
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Oct 31, 2022
NaBeela Washington: The Will to Move Forward
Oct 31, 2022

“In this collection I wanted to accept that those things just are and that those things do not have to define me and that those things, while unfortunate, helped me become who I am today. And that's why this concept of “accepting things you cannot change” it so important. It gives you peace at night, it gives you grace, and most importantly the will to move forward.”

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Oct 31, 2022
Q&A with Henry Taylor
Jul 1, 2022
Q&A with Henry Taylor
Jul 1, 2022

“The earliest influences on me were probably in many ways the strongest for a long time. There was a brief period as when I was an undergraduate when I thought that James Dickey’s way of writing poems was the only way that was worthwhile. And he was very kind about that and tried to explain to me that I probably had my own voice somewhere, and that I ought to be bearing down on finding it.”

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Jul 1, 2022
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Apr 1, 2022
Rose DeMaris: A New Vocabulary
Apr 1, 2022

“I’m drawn to forms, constraints, patterning, and rules—including the secret, strange rules I make up, like a pattern of assonance nobody may see but me. I love the way these constraints elicit the most unexpected language and content.”

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Apr 1, 2022
Q&A with Rod Belcher
Feb 24, 2022
Q&A with Rod Belcher
Feb 24, 2022

“We [science fiction writers] are the court jesters of literature. We can say very truthful, very scathing commentaries on our society and no one really takes us seriously.”

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Feb 24, 2022
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Oct 3, 2021
Amelie Meltzer: Gone in a Different Way
Oct 3, 2021

“The way I am finding balance is by accepting that I am not able to write as much as I would like to at the moment, and forgiving myself for that. I have to remind myself that being a poet is a permanent part of who I am, not a membership that will disappear if I don’t meet some imaginary quota of poems per month.”

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Oct 3, 2021
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Aug 25, 2021
Emma Rose Ryan: Writing Around Memories
Aug 25, 2021

“The images I most associate with my uncle are, of course, his tattoos, so I used them as a jumping off point to begin writing about his life, his illness, and his death.”

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Aug 25, 2021
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Jul 30, 2021
Sarah Huang: An Exploration of the Human Experience
Jul 30, 2021

“Writing ‘Limbo’ required copious amounts of research and numerous drafts. Early drafts were written in third-person narration until I realized that only through first-person would the story convey the urgency and intimacy this confessional narrative deserved.”

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Jul 30, 2021
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Jun 30, 2021
Q&A with Sofia Samatar
Jun 30, 2021

“[W]hen it comes to writing, I think amusing yourself is incredibly important. I'm very much for self-indulgence. Often when you do the thing that you really want to do the most, it’s the thing that you think no one will like, right? Because it's so weird that only you like it. But in my experience, that will often have the most reach and touch the most people.”

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Jun 30, 2021
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Dec 5, 2020
Daniel A. Olivas: Our Stories Are Important
Dec 5, 2020

“When I am a guest author at colleges, most of the students I meet with are Latinx and often represent the first generation in their families to go to college. I often say to them that our stories are important. I then ask them: What would happen if we did not write our stories? And they always get it right: If we don’t write our stories, someone else will, and they will get them wrong.”

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Dec 5, 2020
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Nov 18, 2020
Ali Asadollahi: Fitting the Sea in a Cup
Nov 18, 2020

“For me, form matters a lot and the value of "how to say" is not less than "what to say." We Iranians share an expression saying "fit a sea in a cup" and to me, writing short poems corresponds to this expression.”

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Nov 18, 2020
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Apr 14, 2019
Brennen Fahy: The Writer Life
Apr 14, 2019

“Having my mom or my fiancé read a piece I've written and hearing them laugh from another room is what I imagine heroin feels like. Totally worth imploding your life over.”

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Apr 14, 2019
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Mar 17, 2019
Chila Woychik: Writing, Environment and Choices
Mar 17, 2019

“Take your time to learn deeply and well. Most of all, enjoy the process!”

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Mar 17, 2019
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Mar 3, 2019
Julia Caroline Knowlton: The Edge of Our Comfort Zones
Mar 3, 2019

“Complacency never leads to anything cool or new.”

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Mar 3, 2019
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Dec 27, 2018
Lyn Lifshin: Reflections on a Life of Poetry
Dec 27, 2018

“In the past, when asked for a poem, I’d write fifty. That is how I wrote books on Hitchcock, Marilyn Monroe, Blue Tattoo, and refugees.”

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Dec 27, 2018
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Sep 1, 2018
Rebecca Pyle: Muses & Musings
Sep 1, 2018

“These are certain people even from early childhood who clearly, or murkily—eventually somehow expressed to you they had vision fairly independent of others. Often they have all the thoughts and fine-tune of the artist or the writer, but not the inclination, or time. You became sure of their imaginative and understanding powers; your awareness grew over time. It was even in their gaze.”

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Sep 1, 2018
Jul 15, 2018
Travis Byram: Starting Out and Setting Forth
Jul 15, 2018

“Keep, keep, keep editing and toying with your work, knowing you are comfortable and believe in what’s on the page. You’re not a poet because it pays six figures starting out—you’re a poet because you feel like you need to be.”

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Jul 15, 2018
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Apr 15, 2018
Cameron MacKenzie: Historical Fiction and Mythic Revolution
Apr 15, 2018

"The book tries to understand revolution, but what drives the novel is a filtering of revolutionary actions through the context of myth and the role played by storytelling in the creation of those myths. I became fascinated by the myriad depictions of Villa in the historical record, how he was and remains a remarkably contested figure, and how the outlines of that figure have been determined by stories that seem to channel the desires of a culture and a society through a singular man. Pancho Villa is a mythic character, and I try in the book to convey the manner by which that boy became that myth. "

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Apr 15, 2018
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Jan 15, 2018
Sarah Bigham: Creation as Catharsis
Jan 15, 2018

“While much of my work has a serious tone, I employ humor in my daily life as a way to cope with many things, including stress and illness. If you cannot laugh about your situation, even in some small way, then things are very dark indeed.”

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Jan 15, 2018
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Dec 15, 2017
Poetry and Politics with Yun Wei
Dec 15, 2017

"Poetry has the ability to enact the change that politics promise, sometimes even more powerfully because it disrupts your biases, charges up your emotions, and integrates into the chemistry of your thoughts."

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Dec 15, 2017
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Dec 1, 2017
John Buckley and Martin Ott: Poetic Volleyball
Dec 1, 2017

" I cannot always tell which lines are mine in the poems that appear in our books (after some time has passed). I think this shows we have built a collective voice that is different than either one of ours separately."

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Dec 1, 2017
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Nov 1, 2017
Ava C. Cipri: The Container and the Contents
Nov 1, 2017

"The content dictates the form; I do not have a preference. I am simply providing it with the best container; both are mutually mysterious and satisfying."

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Nov 1, 2017
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Oct 15, 2017
E. Kristin Anderson: Finding the Words
Oct 15, 2017

“You have to work with the words in front of you to create a new narrative in your voice. That’s thrilling. An erasure is like a choose your own adventure with words, a cento or a remix is like putting together a puzzle. But you have to tell your own story, just like any traditionally written poem.”

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Oct 15, 2017
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Sep 15, 2017
Nick Roth: The Wending Way to Seeking Stories
Sep 15, 2017

"Some days are shit. Some days are good. I make notes for stories but only once they’re fairly well formed in my head, and half the time I end up ignoring the notes. None of this matters. People find different ways to work. Inspiration happens but if you have to rely on it you’re probably screwed."

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Sep 15, 2017
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