One Summer Up North by John Owens
One Summer Up North is a picture book guaranteed to delight the young and old alike. With sixteen beautifully rendered drawings, Owens takes the reader through a majestic visual vacation… Read more »
A Fan Letter on Minnesota Writers
One Summer Up North is a picture book guaranteed to delight the young and old alike. With sixteen beautifully rendered drawings, Owens takes the reader through a majestic visual vacation… Read more »
In this collection of Emilio DeGrazia, trees become more than what we know them for, more than just ‘green things standing in the way’ and become the characters of focus… Read more »
Michael Torres’s debut poetry collection, An Incomplete List of Names, captures the evanescent nature of love in its many forms. It is tender and forceful; bold and vulnerable. In each… Read more »
The Range Eternal is a children’s book that centers around a blue enamel woodstove—the heart of a childhood home in the Turtle Mountains. The book follows a young Native American… Read more »
Though most of American Gospel is set beside the aptly named Last Lake in rural northwestern Minnesota, the backdrop of the political drama that was the end of The Nixon… Read more »
Cary Waterman’s Threshold: New and Selected Poems is comprised of poems of habitation, where the poet survives by asking herself the questions relevant to authority, respect, dread, and fatality. The… Read more »
Sarah Stonich’s Laurentian Divide uses the rhythms of life in Hatchet Inlet—a fictional northern Minnesota town situated near a large and contested nature reserve area on the border with Canada—to… Read more »
In his fourth collection, The Cataracts, Raymond McDaniel’s poems examine the larger relationship we have with objective truth and purpose, while also showcasing personal narratives that provide the reader a… Read more »
Linda LeGarde Grover is an Anishinaabe writer, and an enrolled member of the Bois Forte Band of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe. While she does not call herself a fluent speaker… Read more »
The subtitle for Anika Farajado’s memoir is quite apt: A Memoir of Finding Family, because her journey of familial connections takes the reader on magical trip. Born in Colombia, but… Read more »