sarah hoenicke floresTell me when the ocean will begin1 / Rip Tide: a PreludeAug 21, 202110Aug 21, 202110
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYWe Are All ComplicitWittner is a promising writer, obviously interested in the foremost issues of our era, and equipped to inspire thoughtAug 20, 2019Aug 20, 2019
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYInterrogating Whiteness: reading Austin Channing Brown’s “I’m Still Here”Michael Brown was killed just weeks before I began my junior year at a private college in Oakland, California. “Police brutality” wasn’t a…Jul 3, 2018Jul 3, 2018
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYA Time to MournThis month, my plan was to write about two new books, both by white men with the first name John. I wouldn’t usually choose titles with…Nov 17, 2017Nov 17, 2017
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYAnd to Questioning, Stay Faithful“If I pulled off the hangnail, I could once again pray undistracted,” writes Tova Mirvis in her recent memoir, The Book of Separation. “But…Sep 22, 20171Sep 22, 20171
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYCosmic DisruptionA Twenty-first Century DecenteringAug 21, 2017Aug 21, 2017
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYA Gentle Visit“The visit was a liniment,” writes poet Alberto Ríos in “Coffee in the Afternoon.”Jul 21, 2017Jul 21, 2017
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYAn American WeaknessIn a recent op-ed for the New York Times, Julia Fierro writes: “Weakness or, to be more specific, showing or admitting to weakness, seemed…Jul 3, 2017Jul 3, 2017
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYReview — Freeman’s: FamilyFREEMAN’S: FAMILY (ISSUE TWO)Jul 21, 2016Jul 21, 2016
sarah hoenicke floresinANMLYNayomi Munaweera’s Writing LifeWhen Nayomi Munaweera’s first novel, Island of a Thousand Mirrors, was released in 2011, she threw a dance party at Club Baobab in San…May 26, 2016May 26, 2016