【Mika Muroi Archives】
Announcing Our Spring Issue
A Letter from the Editor
Five days before the Spring issue went to press, I found myself perched on a sofa in the Review’s Chelsea office, listening as Jamaica Kincaid and Darryl Pinckney put the finishing touches on a conversation they’d begun eight years earlier. By then, my colleagues and I had pored over hundreds of pages of transcripts for Kincaid’s Art of Fiction interview, and yet, that Monday afternoon, as the two writers went back over the stories she’d told him about her childhood on Antigua, her adventures as a young journalist in seventies New York, and her life as a writer, new details kept emerging. She was a backup singer in Holly Woodlawn’s band before being replaced by Debbie Harry? She drafted Annie Johnout loud in the bath while pregnant with her first child?

JAMAICA KINCAID AND DARRYL PINCKNEY IN THE PARIS REVIEWOFFICES. PHOTOGRAPH BY STEPHANIE BLACK.
Among the greatest pleasures of the Review’s Writers at Work series is the opportunity to eavesdrop on a revered author speaking intimately—on a conversation that feels at once spontaneous and timeless. We experienced a similar pleasure while first reading many of the pieces that appear in the Spring issue. The manic highs and lows of an all-consuming sexual affair, recorded by Annie Ernaux in a diary she would later use to compose Simple Passion. Jane Gardam’s hard-won sense, confided to Sadie Stein, of the importance of comfort and happiness to literature. Ordinary household objects made luminous in Ishion Hutchinson’s elegy for his grandmother and her home by the sea in Portland, Jamaica. The accidental uncovering, in a scene from Will Arbery’s play Corsicana, of a painful, long-repressed teenage memory. A glimpse into the private world of a middle-aged woman scraping by in northeastern Texas. A love scene told in the language of an IKEA instruction manual.
The cover image, by Andrew Cranston, a favorite of our art director, Na Kim, was painted on a hardback book especially for the Review. For me, it captures something about this strange season we are in, when hope feels almost painful. “Spring like a gun to the head,” Dorothea Lasky writes in one of three poems she contributed to the issue. “Green how I want you.”
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Parental Controls: How to Lock Down Your Kids' iOS Devices
2025-06-26 12:42Germany vs. Slovenia 2025 livestream: Watch U21 Euro 2025 for free
2025-06-26 10:06Wordle today: The answer and hints for June 11, 2025
2025-06-26 10:01Q&A with tendercare founder and CEO Shauna Sweeney
2025-06-26 09:58Popular Posts
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for April 29, 2025
2025-06-26 11:15Building a Budget PC: Should You Buy a Used Graphics Card?
2025-06-26 11:09Hisense 75
2025-06-26 11:01Best speaker deal: Save $50 on the Beats Pill
2025-06-26 10:58Fyre Festival and Trump’s Language
2025-06-26 10:55Featured Posts
Skype is finally shutting down
2025-06-26 11:41AMD Raven Ridge 8GB vs. 16GB Reserved Memory Benchmark & Explanation
2025-06-26 11:26Using FreeSync with Nvidia GPUs Examined
2025-06-26 11:09Best Echo deal: Save $25 on Amazon Echo Show 5
2025-06-26 10:35Meta continues its submission to Trump with new advisor on its board
2025-06-26 10:06Popular Articles
The strangeness of Japan's decision to start openly hunting whales
2025-06-26 12:41OpenAI launches new, smarter model. Meet o3
2025-06-26 12:02Hisense 75
2025-06-26 11:19Bomb Envy
2025-06-26 10:32Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (582)
Mark Information Network
Every MCU movie villain ranked, from "Iron Man" to "Thunderbolts*"
2025-06-26 12:33Ignition Information Network
Best Sonos deal: Save $20 on Sonos Era 100
2025-06-26 12:32Fresh Information Network
Best fitness deal: Save $30 on the TheraGun Relief at Amazon
2025-06-26 12:29Leadership Information Network
Blockchain Explained: How It Works, Who Cares and What Its Future May Hold
2025-06-26 11:19Steady Information Network
Best Kindle Unlimited deal: Get 3 months of Kindle Unlimited for 99 cents
2025-06-26 10:37