Essays

Essay Lauren Emily Whalen Essay Lauren Emily Whalen

The Least Interesting Burlesque Dancer: On Writing About Me

I’m not that interesting.

For the twelve years I’ve called myself a writer, this has been my refrain, along with is this the final draft or the final FINAL draft? and I got rejected yet again, time to call Dominos for cheesy bread.

I’m a cis white gal who grew up in a farm town, moved to the big city for college and basically never left. I hold down a corporate 9-to-5 job, which keeps my lights on when writing doesn’t. I have never been addicted to heroin. I am the opposite of “not like other girls”—I am other girls.

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Essay Sam Heaps Essay Sam Heaps

An Absolute Truth

Up at 2, up at 3, up at 5. The dog, now a senior, has been most playful in the darkest hours of the night. Nipping at your hand like she is a puppy again. At 5:30, 5:45, 6, at 6:30 a long walk. The sunrise today looks like plastic. Shades of pink and purple like a 90s ToysRUs.

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Essay Arielle McManus Essay Arielle McManus

On Writing About Real People

As an essayist, it’s my job to take experiences from real life and write about them. And oftentimes, these experiences do not take place in a vacuum; they occur with other people. And these people have their own version of events, which may differ slightly from mine. Alas, memory is fungible, reality beget by perception and emotion. 

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Essay Jenna Klorfein Essay Jenna Klorfein

In Defense of Badness

I am, in literature and in life, inexplicably drawn to the bad narrator. I want Maria in Play it As It Lays, strung out on pills, Ottessa Moshfegh’s anti-heroine spending her family’s money into oblivion, Scott in The Sarah Book, driving drunk with his kids in the backseat. I want Fiona Apple on repeat, going bat shit on the symbols, playing the only sound that has ever accurately captured the angst of being the other woman. 

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Essay Gayle Brandeis Essay Gayle Brandeis

Writing Myself Home

I grew up across the street from Lake Michigan, and the lake helped raise me, helped form me. I couldn't see the end of it, could only see where it kissed the horizon, and that made me feel spacious inside, made creative possibility feel endless.

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Essay Emily Marie Passos Duffy Essay Emily Marie Passos Duffy

City as Oracle: On Craft and Transit

“I’m an archivist,”  I proclaim to my partner, as I stop (for the fourth time) to take a picture of a piece of paper in a closed tattoo shop that reads “Sorry, no piercing,” and, later, a piece of graffiti that says “FUCK FUCK FUCK.” As Michel de Certeau affirms, “There is a rhetoric of walking.” The patterns of our movements make a shape we can’t see. 

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Essay Emma Burger Essay Emma Burger

Reading Body Horror to Accept My Own

There’s a pink scar stretching from my lower lip to the bottom of my chin, where a wakeboard carved my face in two in a freak boating accident the summer I was fifteen. It’s faded now, to the point where people who meet me say they never even noticed it until I pointed it out. In the weeks following the accident, bright blue sutures crawled down my face, drawing the gaze of every person who passed me on the street. 

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Essay Fran Hawthorne Essay Fran Hawthorne

How I Research my Novels...By Running

Running eight miles every morning wakes me up, eases my stress level, gives me space to ponder Big Thoughts, keeps my body in shape -- and sometimes also helps me conduct research for my novels.

Let me explain. 

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Advice for Writers, The Writing Process Brittany Ackerman Advice for Writers, The Writing Process Brittany Ackerman

On Balancing Teaching and Writing

I’ve been teaching in some capacity for the last eight years.  My first time teaching was as part of my MFA program at Florida Atlantic University.  I was technically a graduate student instructor, responsible for a two/two course load of English Composition.  All the instructors got a textbook filled with essays meant to inspire argumentative writing.  Freshman had to take the class, so the rosters were always full and we got a teaching stipend–it was a win-win situation.

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