Search Results for “zoe tuck” – Michigan Quarterly Review

Search Results for: zoe tuck

The Riches of Content

by Zoe Tuck

…each writer points back outward, whether that is towards people, books, community, or place. To follow these generous clues is to experience another kind of plenty.

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by Zoe Tuck

…each writer points back outward, whether that is towards people, books, community, or place. To follow these generous clues is to experience another kind of plenty.

Creating Our Own Lexicon

* Zoe Tuck *

To say that a literature has emerged is a useful fiction; a shorthand for a host of possibilities, which span many verb tenses and possible relations to existence…we need to be able to exist and thrive as people, in order for our literatures to fully come into their own.

Creating Our Own Lexicon Read More »

* Zoe Tuck *

To say that a literature has emerged is a useful fiction; a shorthand for a host of possibilities, which span many verb tenses and possible relations to existence…we need to be able to exist and thrive as people, in order for our literatures to fully come into their own.

On J U P I T E R

* And during the Covid-19 shutdown, where could we go? Why not Jupiter? the one that comes after all the asteroids— the one swirling cold with ammonia and water— The biggest one with the bloody eye . . . Why not this place to mobilize alienation? to revel in black feminist interiority? to practice like

On J U P I T E R Read More »

* And during the Covid-19 shutdown, where could we go? Why not Jupiter? the one that comes after all the asteroids— the one swirling cold with ammonia and water— The biggest one with the bloody eye . . . Why not this place to mobilize alienation? to revel in black feminist interiority? to practice like

In Search of Elsewhere

We learned about Columbus on a Friday. It was October 1999, the year the world expected computers to collapse. The year papi’s mind began to gray and mami consumed herself with God and the twins laughed at everything they heard, prayers and pop songs and curse words. The Arizona heat had finally subsided. For months,

In Search of Elsewhere Read More »

We learned about Columbus on a Friday. It was October 1999, the year the world expected computers to collapse. The year papi’s mind began to gray and mami consumed herself with God and the twins laughed at everything they heard, prayers and pop songs and curse words. The Arizona heat had finally subsided. For months,

Meet Our Contributors: Issue 59:4 Fall 2020

MONCHO ALVARADO is a Latinx-queer-poet, translator, visual artist, and educator. They’ve been published in Tahoma Literary Review, Merdian, Foglifter, Poets.org, and other publications. They are a recipient of fellowships and residencies from The Helen Wurlitzer Foundation, Lambda Literary, Poets House, Troika House, the Summer Seminar at Sarah Lawrence College, and won the Academy of American

Meet Our Contributors: Issue 59:4 Fall 2020 Read More »

MONCHO ALVARADO is a Latinx-queer-poet, translator, visual artist, and educator. They’ve been published in Tahoma Literary Review, Merdian, Foglifter, Poets.org, and other publications. They are a recipient of fellowships and residencies from The Helen Wurlitzer Foundation, Lambda Literary, Poets House, Troika House, the Summer Seminar at Sarah Lawrence College, and won the Academy of American

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