yalereview
Sep 8
Our new issue is here! Follow the link in our bio to read it online now—or order a print copy from our online shop.
This issue features new work by this year’s @windhamcampbell Prize winners, as well as work by previous recipients.
What happens when AI speaks for the dead? Patricia J. Williams writes about the legal implications of our new reality. Rana Dasgupta argues that Trump is only a symptom of a deeper crisis in America. Anne Enright recounts three trips to Venice, before and after marriage.
Plus: a short story by Sigrid Nunez; poems by Tongo Eisen-Martin and Anthony Vahni Capildeo; excerpts of new dramatic works by playwrights Matilda Feyiṣayọ Ibini and Roy Williams; and much more.
Elsewhere, Kate Briggs shares a newly translated manifesto from Hélène Bessette, and Edmund de Waal revisits Virginia Woolf’s MRS. DALLOWAY.
And in our criticism section, Richie Hofmann traces the lasting influence of Richard Siken’s CRUSH on American poetry—and the strange afterlives of the book online; and Audrey Wollen considers the epistolary style of Claire-Louise Bennett and why it feels so right for our times.
Cover art: Edmund de Waal, landfall, 2024. Photo: Alzbeta Jaresova. Courtesy the artist.
yalereview
Sep 8
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