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Grove at Home: October 18—24

…in 1970, Menéndez started her career writing for the Miami Herald on that city’s Little Havana. She would go on to publish a number of works of fiction, including the…

Grove at Home: October 11—17

…across the country face different challenges depending on any number of factors, including their local economies and how they have been affected by the coronavirus. But some broad trend lines…

Grove at Home: October 4—10

…it had 330,000 people.” That’s one of a number of excellent points that Carl Smith, author of Chicago’s Great Fire, made when he appeared this week on “Reset,” on Chicago’s…

Grove at Home: July 12—18

…Kathrine Tschemerinsky for a brief interview, in which she touched on a number of fascinating subjects: the book that has catapulted her to global literary attention, the culture of Mandate-era…

Charles Kaiser on Aretha Franklin

…to Atlantic Records in 1965. Within two years, she had a number-one hit with “Do Right Woman—Do Right Man.” From 1967 to 1970 she sold nine million singles and three…

Celebrate Women in Translation Month with Grove Atlantic

…She Said / Marguerite Duras / Translated from French by Barbara Bray and Helen Lane Cumberford We’ve published a number of works by French literary great Marguerite Duras, author of,…

Browsing the Backlist: Six Quintessential Earth Day Reads

…great title for Earth Day, as well as a route into Flannery’s extensive oeuvre—we’ve published a number of great titles by the author, including works on extinct animals, climate change,…

Browsing the Backlist: Celebrating National Poetry Month

…imprisonment, celebrating family and the bonds of friendship, and heightening appreciation for the environment. We’ve published a number of outstanding works by Baca—a novel, a memoir, and a short story…

Akwaeke Emezi On NPR’s “Weekend Edition”

number of the novel’s central themes, providing an emotional, spiritual, and intellectual map of the book Sam Sacks of the Wall Street Journal calls “[A] witchy, electrifying story of danger…

The Daily Beast Review: Hue 1968

…the battle with extraordinary skill and dexterity, anchoring the narrative firmly in the experiences of scores of participants—mostly American Marines and soldiers, some South Vietnamese, and a surprisingly large number