A bit of news that feels strange, half-unbelievable, but also wonderful to announce: I have a full-length book of poetry coming out, and this is it!
https://t.co/6V2kAQ7roa
"Within days a man came forward to take credit for killing the premier. This was news to the man who’d actually done it": Flash fiction by George Saunders. https://t.co/Ze8CL7DAZd
The writer @bethbachmann shares a book that has been an inspiration and touchpoint for her writing on war: “The Original Bambi: The Story of a Life in the Forest,” by Felix Salten. Read her new Flash Fiction: https://t.co/mGxF63VYAN
"Don’t let the novel’s slimness fool you; Hollow Bones is an incredibly rich work of literature."
Bowled over by this thoughtful review by Bradley Sides in Chapter 16, one of my favorite bookish publications. https://t.co/onsuTsUofl
"His toy cars are out of gas, creating chaos at the checkpoint, but the plastic horses can still get through": this week's Flash Fiction piece is "The Boy at War and at Home" by Beth Bachmann. https://t.co/Y0I9vcejdH
"His toy cars are out of gas, creating chaos at the checkpoint, but the plastic horses can still get through": this week's Flash Fiction piece is "The Boy at War and at Home" by Beth Bachmann. https://t.co/Y0I9vcejdH
Excited to share “The Boy at War and at Home” @NewYorker Summer Short #Fiction 🎩🧐🦋 part of the book i’m writing about a boy and a horse and a war
https://t.co/BSUhCjZ8ZS
Honored and grateful to be selected by @JamilJanKochai as winner of the @Zoetrope_Mag Short #Fiction Contest. A glimpse of the #novel I’m writing about a #boy and a #war and the more I write it, the stranger it becomes
https://t.co/3eHBiFCMgr
Judge @daniellevalore writes, “it would take a citation almost the length of ‘The First Robot’ [by @bethbachmann] to properly catalog its virtues. The story feels grounded in a recognizable world while anchored to the strangeness of its perspective.”
https://t.co/QRnAsNCmnx
Judge @daniellevalore writes, “it would take a citation almost the length of ‘The First Robot’ [by @bethbachmann] to properly catalog its virtues. The story feels grounded in a recognizable world while anchored to the strangeness of its perspective.”
https://t.co/QRnAsNCmnx
Judge @daniellevalore writes, “it would take a citation almost the length of ‘The First Robot’ [by @bethbachmann] to properly catalog its virtues. The story feels grounded in a recognizable world while anchored to the strangeness of its perspective.”
https://t.co/QRnAsNCmnx
“Every time the horse reads AI, he thinks animal intelligence. There’s so little men know.”
Selected by judge @daniellevalore as the winner of our 2023 Short Fiction Contest—read “The First Robot” by Beth Bachmann.
https://t.co/QRnAsNCmnx