by Sonya Chung
When I pause to look back (thank goodness for anniversaries to remind us) at the authors we’ve featured at Bloom this past year, I think of the inertia they all bucked, willfully and courageously. Continue reading
by Sonya Chung
When I pause to look back (thank goodness for anniversaries to remind us) at the authors we’ve featured at Bloom this past year, I think of the inertia they all bucked, willfully and courageously. Continue reading
I thought I would like to write about that world [of apartheid] but not in a handwringing, white liberal guilt way. I told myself quite firmly that this was just a kaleidoscope of small stories. But that I would try to run that concurrently against this darker newsreel background, intensifying apartheid and the madness and cruelty of that system. Continue reading
By Sue Dickman
The mystery, at least in the U.S., is why no one knows who she is. In my experience, to read Trapido is to want to read more Trapido and also to wonder why it is so hard to find the Trapido you so want to read. Continue reading