Poets and Writers

The Anthologis­t

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Dragon riders, timetravel­ing best friends, and androids all make an appearance in A People’s Future of the United States: Speculativ­e Fiction From 25 Extraordin­ary Writers

(One World, February), edited by Victor LaValle and John Joseph Adams. The editors asked writers to tell stories that “release us from the chokehold of the history and mythology of the past…and give us new futures to believe in.” Contributo­rs include Charlie Jane Anders, Daniel José Older, and Alice Sola Kim. To celebrate the fifteenth anniversar­y of the Story Prize, director Larry Dark has

compiled The Story Prize: 15 Years of Great Short Fiction (Catapult, March), an anthology of stories published by the fourteen writers who have won the annual $20,000 prize. Featuring work by Edwidge Danticat, George Saunders, and Daniyal Mueenuddin, among others, the book “underscore­s the essential truth that the best writers have distinctiv­e voices, interests, and obsessions.”

Sixty-five poets, including Elizabeth Acevedo, Chen Chen, Ocean Vuong, and Ada Limón, have contribute­d to Ink Knows No Borders: Poems of the Immigrant and Refugee Experience (Triangle Square, March). Editors Patrice Vecchione and Alyssa Raymond seek to reach young readers and address the issues immigrants and refugees face, such as cultural and language difference­s, homesickne­ss, and social exclusion.

Writers Dinty W. Moore, Erin Murphy, and Renée K. Nicholson invited other writers, along with health care profession­als, to pen personal essays

for Bodies of Truth: Personal Narratives

on Illness, Disability, and Medicine (University of Nebraska Press, January). “We found that there is a need for an anthology that includes a variety of voices and conditions from all facets of care,” write the editors. Contributo­rs include poet Sandra Beasley and nonfiction writer Sonya Huber.

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