miCRo: “Inversion can feel like weightlessness” by Anita Goveas
How do you navigate loss, upside down and a hundred feet in the air?
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Nov 2, 2022 | miCRo
How do you navigate loss, upside down and a hundred feet in the air?
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Nov 1, 2022 | Interviews
Leslie Lindsay chats with CR contributor Su Cho about her debut poetry collection, The Symmetry of Fish. Juxtaposing Korean and English, ocean and prairie, parent and child, Cho’s poetry, like water, takes an unpredictable path.
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Oct 27, 2022 | On Craft
How do we choose a poem’s final, resounding lines?
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Oct 26, 2022 | miCRo
In “Apricots,” the speaker’s beloved pollinates apricot trees by hand, showing us what is, and what is not, subject to the passage of time.
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Oct 20, 2022 | Writers' Day Jobs
Writer Aleyna Rentz discusses her job writing factual science-based social media content in a world plagued by misinformation.
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Oct 19, 2022 | miCRo
This piece moves seamlessly between fact and feeling, illustrating how objects are often the most powerful doorways into memories.
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Oct 18, 2022 | Writers' Day Jobs
Journalist Alison Stine shares her experiences: “Writing in another form, whatever it is, will always help you return to your instrument stronger and with new awareness.”
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Oct 13, 2022 | Writing Life
I spent minutes just staring at the cursor blink at me: an infinite tally for the time I was wasting, a constant little wound scarring the page I couldn’t dare to fill.
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Oct 12, 2022 | miCRo
The feigning killdeer in this prose poem becomes a mirror to understand the speaker’s own evolution.
Read MorePosted by Cincinnati Review | Oct 5, 2022 | miCRo
Birgitta Trotzig’s “Language Difficulties” (translated by Brad Harmon) describes just how impossible it is to say what one means
Read More