Barrelhouse Reviews: A Rupture in the Interiors by Valerie Witte
Living in a human body is complex and nuanced. Acknowledging these subtleties is a way of embracing full existence, including life’s enigmas.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Gender/Fucking by Florence Ashley
They discuss the messiness and double standards that come from talking about gender, sexuality, and eroticism, especially in academic settings.
Barrelhouse Reviews: The Life of Tu Fu by Eliot Weinberger
A sobering reminder that the mountain and the mosquito will be here long after we are gone.
A Note About Some Poems that May Have Been Plagiarized
Like some of our literary magazine friends, Barrelhouse recently found out that in our online Gray Issue in 2022, we published some poems purported to be written by a person has turned out to be a serial plagiarist.
Barrelhouse Reviews: The Way Back by Russell Karrick
It seems the way back for Karrick is a matter of allowing for beauty in every moment, even in what he might initially find irritating or ugly.
Issue 24 Preview: Domino, by David LeGault
I like that a game is not a matter of rules, but of possibility: each board or card or piece gives possibility to beautifully imagined worlds and challenges. I like the ways that games encourage us to work in collaborative metaphors, to create beautiful conflicts to overcome.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Ardor by Alyse Knorr
An adventurous collection, filled with humor and optimism, Ardor is a future-thinking text.
Barrelhouse Reviews: The Loneliness Files by Athena Dixon
Measured sentences draw the reader into the emotional dome she inhabits. The book’s even tone avoids associative leaps and instead mirrors the quotidian effort to keep going, day after day.
Issue 24 Preview: The Body Made Curious, by Megan Walsh
At night, flesh. Her tits sliding into her armpits, her stomach pushing against the elastic of her panties. The elbow with the dry patch that’s cracking, the crick in her neck. All of her sinking, spilling, oozing into the mattress, sloppy and sweating with a pillow between her knees, an itch on her ribcage she can’t ignore. Her stomach growling, her heart thumping. Meat.
Issue 24 Preview: Poem in Which I Write Us Into Episodes of The Sopranos, by P. Scott Cunningham
While visiting Bowdoin College, Tony and Meadow walk around the campus. We’re reading together beneath a tree. We’re too old to be in college, but we don’t look like professors either. Our presence is unsettling, a foreshadowing of the daytime murder of Fabian Petrulio, which takes place later in the episode.
Barrelhousing with “Heading North” Author Holly M. Wendt
We interviewed Holly M. Wendt, author of the novel Heading North, about their path to publication, hockey twitter, and of course Patrick Swayze movies.
The Swayze Question
Since it’s founding in 2004, Barrelhouse has ended every interview with the same question: what is your favorite Patrick Swayze movie? We’ve asked The Swayze Question, quite literally, to anybody who would talk to us, everyone from Emmylou Harris to Ian MacKaye to Malcolm Gladwell to the Hold Steady.
Barrelhouse Reviews: The Long Form by Kate Briggs
The Long Form resists reading as a period of sustained focus or unilateral attention, and instead insists on the irreplaceability of life.
All Things Edible, Random, and Odd: Barrelhousing with Sheila Squillante
Sheila Squillante’s essay collection, All Things Edible, Random, and Odd, forthcoming from Clash Books, is equal parts memoir, celebration of her late father and the love of food that he passed on to his daughter, and exploration of the way these things continue influence her family’s life. We sat down around the virtual dinner table to talk about the book, the difference between writing memoir and essays, poetry and painting, and uncoolness, the Eighties, and of course Patrick Swayze.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Dispatches from Puerto Nowhere by Robert Lopez
His central question: what does being Puerto Rican mean to me now, given that it has meant nothing through most of my life?
Barrelhouse Reviews: Freedom House by KB Brookins
The crux of Brookins’ resistance: to find beauty in the fight, and to acknowledge that imagining is good, but having is better.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Charm Offensive by Ross White
Realizing that you are driving, or perhaps living, toward an unattainable life fuels the collection’s philosophical musings.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Elektrik
Elektrik is translation operating as good translation should: as a megaphone for writers who might otherwise remain unheard in the Western canon.
My Big Little Break: Sara Lippmann
In My Big Little Break, we ask authors to talk about the first piece they ever had published, how it felt to finally break through, and what they’ve learned since then. This week we’re pleased to be speaking with one of the featured authors at our upcoming conference in Philadelphia on September 23, Sara Lippmann.
My Big Little Break: Athena Dixon
In My Big Little Break, we ask authors to talk about the first piece they ever had published, how it felt to finally break through, and what they’ve learned since then. This week we’re pleased to be speaking with one of the featured authors at our upcoming conference in Philadelphia on September 23, Athena Dixon.