New Letters

New Letters No other university writing program has this three-part, national publishing and broadcasting power. New Letters has won a National Magazine Award.

New Letters, a magazine of writing and art, and its companions, New Letters on the Air and BkMk Press, continue to publish the best new short stories, essays, memoirs, poetry and article, and to broadcast interviews with writers. BkMk Press has won a PEN/Faulkner. New Letters on the Air has won the Clarion. Those are just a few honors. For over 80 years, New Letters have published writers such as

Edgar Lee Masters, J.D. Salinger, e.e. cummings, May Swenson, Robert Bly, Joyce Carol Oates, William Gass, Charles Simic, John Updike, Gwendolyn Brooks, Allen Ginsberg, Walker Percy, Janet Burroway, Sherman Alexie, Marilyn Hacker, Maxine Kumin alongside many writers waiting to be discovered. In 2008, New Letters won the National Magazine Award for editorial excellence in the essay category, surpassing such competitors as The New Yorker, Elle and The Georgia Review. Three works published in New Letters magazine have been chosen to appear in “The Pushcart Prize # # , Best of the Small Presses (2010).”

MICRO REVIEW: Kick the Latch by Kathryn Scanlan, New Directions, 2022I learned more about the backside of horse tracks f...
06/01/2025

MICRO REVIEW: Kick the Latch by Kathryn Scanlan, New Directions, 2022

I learned more about the backside of horse tracks from this book than from any other source, and for this alone, I loved it. I also loved the voice of the book, which is narrated by a woman called Sonia. Sonia is typical of people who work with racehorses, who ask not what the job can do for them—the work is nomadic, incredibly dangerous, and in all but a few cases, doesn’t pay even close to a living wage—but what they can do for the job. They do it for the love of horses.

This book is built from slender chapters, Sonia narrating her experiences in first person in a colloquial, talkative style, to the effect that you feel as if you’re simply listening to an expert, someone who has groomed and trained horses all her life, telling the kinds of stories you’d expect to hear—about the scrappiness a person has to display just to make it in that business, the inevitable injuries, rivalries, dangers and yes, friendships. Those who choose this life are in constant danger of injury, of losing their positions and other financial hardships, to the extent there’s no sense of a future, only survival, and the effect is riveting, nail-biting.

The author of Kick the Latch based the novel on interviews she conducted with “Sonia,” a real person whose real name isn’t disclosed. The book’s publisher seems to go a little too far out of its way to shut down any objections a reader might have to how the book was written, noting that the book is a novel that, while based on interviews, was carefully crafted by its writer. Still, I had a weird feeling in many places that what I was reading amounted to basically a transcription—the voice of the narrator was so strong I couldn’t help but feel that much of the book was directly quoted. After I finished the book I retreated into a little think tank in my mind about how art is created, how much of any story is invented and crafted versus observed or “taken,” why some books credit their subjects as authors or co-authors (“as told to” and the like) and others don’t. I suppose it’s none of my business, but I kept wondering if Sonia was compensated in any way for her story. If I learned anything from the book, I’d have to conclude probably not. But I still loved the book and will remember Sonia’s character for a long time.

—Christie Hodgen, editor-in-chief, New Letters

If you haven’t checked out the remarkable artwork of Melanie Johnson in the latest issue of New Letters, you should. Get...
03/01/2025

If you haven’t checked out the remarkable artwork of Melanie Johnson in the latest issue of New Letters, you should. Get your copy here: bit.ly/3X6fhmV.

Today we give you “Amendment to the Pledge I Signed Promising to not Promote RadicalTheories About the Overthrow of the ...
01/01/2025

Today we give you “Amendment to the Pledge I Signed Promising to not Promote Radical
Theories About the Overthrow of the State While Teaching for the State” by Jacob Sunderlin. Read the rest of this poem here: bit.ly/3ZUwCjY.

MICRO REVIEW: RATTLEBONE by Maxine Clair, McNally Editions (June, 2022)Maxine Clair’s RATTLEBONE is at the top of my lis...
30/12/2024

MICRO REVIEW: RATTLEBONE by Maxine Clair, McNally Editions (June, 2022)

Maxine Clair’s RATTLEBONE is at the top of my list of the best books I’ve read in the last decade or so. Set in a starkly-segregated Kansas City, KS neighborhood in the 1950s, the book is a collection of stories with different focal characters. But at the heart of the book is Irene, who we first meet as an elementary student and follow until she comes of age. Each story is complete in itself, investing us in its characters as they are propelled toward surprising, and sometimes even shocking, turns of events and important resolutions. And yet each story also serves as an integral part of the larger whole—a portrait of the Rattlebone neighborhood and its residents, their victories and defeats, the tenuous peace they make with each other and the world around them, which is threatening in myriad ways. Clair’s prose, as a whole, is somehow both dazzling in its beauty and also just enough, never too much. Clair is both expansive and judicious; she can convincingly convey a whole lifetime in ten pages or so.

That I studied for five years toward a PhD in the history of the short story and never came across Maxine Clair’s writing seems like not only a terrible oversight but an injustice. This re-issue by McNally feels like the rarest of gifts, found treasure. Though these stories are set in the 50s, they are as relevant today as any contemporary collection. I cannot recommend this book highly enough.

—Christie Hodgen, editor-in-chief, New Letters

What happens when myth meets the gravel roads of Salina, Kansas? Chloe Chun Seim’s CHURN tells a story of fire, survival...
20/12/2024

What happens when myth meets the gravel roads of Salina, Kansas? Chloe Chun Seim’s CHURN tells a story of fire, survival, and transformation. Dive into David Newkirk’s evocative review now on the New Letters website. Read it here: bit.ly/3DcSy0U.

Today we give you “It’s Important I Remember That Sojourner Truth Hadn’t Suffered Enough—” by Cortney Lamar Charleston. ...
18/12/2024

Today we give you “It’s Important I Remember That Sojourner Truth Hadn’t Suffered Enough—” by Cortney Lamar Charleston. Read the rest of this poem here: bit.ly/3BbENyY.

In the long, cold year after Iris died, what I could and could not bear was often a matter of very minor degree. For man...
16/12/2024

In the long, cold year after Iris died, what I could and could not bear was often a matter of very minor degree. For many hours of the day I wanted to be alone in the little house I’d shared with her, to suffer with no witnesses. Then, without warning, I would need desperately to be anywhere else. I would sit for long hours in coffee shops, or in the downtown Reno library, or in a casino sportsbook—places in which I would be required to act like a living man just long enough for it to seem true.

—from Christopher Coake’s short story “Souvlaki.” Read the rest of this story here: bit.ly/3ZzQPtU.

Congrats to Marissa Davis and Bethany Schultz Hurst, New Letters’ Pushcart Prize nominees for poetry! You can read their...
13/12/2024

Congrats to Marissa Davis and Bethany Schultz Hurst, New Letters’ Pushcart Prize nominees for poetry! You can read their poems in Vol. 90 nos. 1 & 2 and Vol. 90 nos. 3 & 4 of New Letters. Order your copies of these issues here: ⁠bit.ly/3zCGtNt.

Congrats to Ted Kooser and Patrick Hunt, New Letters’ Pushcart Prize nominees for the essay! You can read their essays i...
11/12/2024

Congrats to Ted Kooser and Patrick Hunt, New Letters’ Pushcart Prize nominees for the essay! You can read their essays in Vol. 90 nos. 3 & 4 of New Letters. Order your copy of this issue here: bit.ly/3zCGtNt.⁠

Congrats to Scott Ditzler and Hema Padhu, New Letters’ Pushcart Prize nominees for fiction! You can read their stories i...
09/12/2024

Congrats to Scott Ditzler and Hema Padhu, New Letters’ Pushcart Prize nominees for fiction! You can read their stories in Vol. 90 nos. 3 & 4 of New Letters. Order your copy of this issue here: bit.ly/3zCGtNt.

Tana French’s THE HUNTER revisits Cal, Trey, and Lena in a gripping tale of buried secrets, strained loyalties, and the ...
06/12/2024

Tana French’s THE HUNTER revisits Cal, Trey, and Lena in a gripping tale of buried secrets, strained loyalties, and the haunting question of what it means to truly belong. Read more in this must-see review on New Letters: bit.ly/3YVfUPL.

Today we give you “Female Model on Platform Rocker, 1977-78” by Joshua Garcia. Read more of Garcia’s work here: bit.ly/3...
04/12/2024

Today we give you “Female Model on Platform Rocker, 1977-78” by Joshua Garcia. Read more of Garcia’s work here: bit.ly/3Og68ma.

Is that him? They rolled up on him at Sonic of all places. Yeah, that’s him. You ready to go? He nodded, already had the...
02/12/2024

Is that him? They rolled up on him at Sonic of all places. Yeah, that’s him. You ready to go? He nodded, already had the padlock in his hand, the latch looped around his knuckle. They pulled the truck up right behind him and it was on from the start. You been talking s**t about my sister? Get out of the car, mo********er. You been talking s**t about my sister? No? That’s not what she’s been saying. He was trying to act hard at first, said he didn’t have time for this kind of bulls**t, just trying to get himself a fu***ng limeade. I didn’t say s**t about nobody’s sister. Then that padlock came across and changed the conversation real quick.

—from Scott Ditzler’s short story “August, 1999.” Read the rest of this story here: bit.ly/3CD99dS.

In Jeanne Yu’s review of When Your Sky Runs Into Mine, Rooja Mohassessy’s poetry emerges as a poignant meditation on dis...
22/11/2024

In Jeanne Yu’s review of When Your Sky Runs Into Mine, Rooja Mohassessy’s poetry emerges as a poignant meditation on displacement, resilience, and the delicate art of reconciling past and present. A review as lyrical as the collection it celebrates—don’t miss it. Check it out here: bit.ly/3AEEGeX.

Today we give you “First Miracle” by Bethany Schultz Hurst. Read the rest of this poem here: bit.ly/4hSmiQk.
20/11/2024

Today we give you “First Miracle” by Bethany Schultz Hurst. Read the rest of this poem here: bit.ly/4hSmiQk.

There is a picture of him. He’s wearing a western style shirt with no pants or underpants. In other words, n**e from the...
18/11/2024

There is a picture of him. He’s wearing a western style shirt with no pants or underpants. In other words, n**e from the waist down. I don’t know why he let them take it or why he let them put it out there. His testicles are bigger than his p***s and that would embarrass me but nothing embarrassed him. Even though the c**k and balls are visible that’s not what the eye is drawn to. He knew how to take a picture. He had a beautiful face. No, beautiful isn’t the right word (it’s almost never the right word).

—from Bryan D. Price’s short story “Performance.” Read the rest of this story here: bit.ly/4i10AtI.

Thank you to everyone who entered our Editor’s Choice Award. We’re excited to dig in and read your work! Stay tuned for ...
15/11/2024

Thank you to everyone who entered our Editor’s Choice Award. We’re excited to dig in and read your work! Stay tuned for the winner’s announcement in March 2025! ⁠

13/11/2024

Today’s THE day—the deadline to enter the Editor’s Choice Award! You have until 11:59 PM CST to submit your best short work (1,000 words or less). Enter here: bit.ly/3fQn7v5.

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