Book Review
For those of us who have been taking shelter among words during the Covid-19 pandemic, a new collection of Wisconsin poetry created just for the occasion has arrived.
The Blondes of Wisconsin provides an intimate look into the lives of the working-class Polish-Americans who live and love and work in northern Wisconsin.
A family’s history, like an old jigsaw puzzle, often has missing pieces, stories forgotten or kept secret.
A picaresque autobiographical journey that focuses on the simultaneous sense of belonging and dispossession that immigrants and their first-generation children often face.
Few things have shaped our state more than the Wisconsin Idea. But what the heck is it?
What constitutes reality and what is merely enticing fantasy?
“Who’s native and who’s been introduced?” asks a character in Chris Fink’s story, “The Bush Robin Sings.” The question in many ways fits tidily into the other stories within his new collection, Add Thi
A semi-fictional narrative about a slave settlement on Washington Island changes our understanding of Door County.
Maids is Abby Frucht’s first collection of poetry, and, as she says on her website, probably her last.
In Copper Yearning, poet Kimberly Blaeser fills the pages with light, lore, and love.
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