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"And there will be singing"
An Anthology of International Writing
Edited by Jim Hicks, Q. M. Zhang and Ellen Doré Watson
Published by: The Massachusetts Review
300 Pages, 6.00 x 9.00 x 0.80 in
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JIM HICKS is executive editor of the Massachusetts Review and senior lecturer of comparative literature at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He is author of Lessons from Sarajevo: A War Stories Primer and translator of Italian novelist, poet, and essayist Erri De Luca. ELLEN DORÉ WATSON is the author of four books of poems, including her new collection, Dogged Hearts, as well as This Sharpening and Ladder Music, which was the recipient of the New England/New York Award from Alice James Books. Watson is poetry and translation editor for the Massachusetts Review. Q. M. ZHANG is prose editor for the Massachusetts Review and associate professor of cultural psychology at Hampshire College. An alumna of the Juniper Summer Writing Institute and a former resident writer at the Vermont Studio Center, she is author of Accomplice to Memory.
"The Massachusetts Review has been a great boon in raising the profile of a number of key Catalan writers. The magazine's policy and practice are resolutely internationalist. I believe its combination of new writing in English and in translation is without parallel in the English-speaking world."—Peter Bush, translator of The Gray Notebook by Josep Pla
"What the Massachusetts Review has done these last ten years is a guide to our most important crossroads. Visit and revisit this new collection and you'll find yourself participating in a conversation of pleasing depth, one that just might help create a better future for all of us—no walls to be found here."—Edie Meidav, author of Kingdom of the Young
"Somehow, despite its venerable age, the Massachusetts Review remains one of the most provocative and relevant literary magazines I know. Thanks to its internationalist perspective and intellectual and aesthetic range, it offers an outstanding example of what an American literary magazine can be."—Geoffrey Brock, editor of the Arkansas International