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Birds flew in all directions. People scrambled. Dogs barked, and hens molted their feathers in a desperate attempt to escape. The air filled with a cacophony of prayers and weeping . . .
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Nick Mandernach Fiction
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Tania Pleitez Vela Nonfiction
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Krisma Mancía Poetry
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“Maggie comes to New England Review with an invigorating sense of possibility for what fiction can do—how it can surprise and enchant us, break its own rules, and a ask the difficult questions,” says editor Carolyn Kuebler.
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Browse & shop new books by Edward Hirsch, Khadijah Queen, Helen Schulman, Garrett Hongo, & more.
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Staff reader C. Rees talks with poet Richard Siken about associative landings, the fractured intimacy of address, and his forthcoming collection I Do Know Some Things, which features three poems published in NER 46.2.
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“If, as Jan Łukasiewicz says, ‘only that part [of the past] is real which is still alive today in its effects,’ then remembering a moment prevents it from going out of existence.”
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Browse & shop new books by Henri Cole, Joyce Carol Oates, Marissa Davis, Rebecca Solnit, & more.
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Editorial intern Ali Shuaib ’25 talks with writer, editor, and former NER intern Chris Feeney ‘19.5 about asking for what you want, the future of AI language models, and his Middlebury memories.
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NER Out Loud To Saola, for If and When
Mai Der Vang reads her poem “To Saola, for If and When,” first published in NER 46.1 (2025).