Books
Featuring nationally reviewed, recent releases by Jayson Greene MFA 鈥21, Amy Hempel, Bret Easton Ellis 鈥86, James Geary 鈥85, Craig Morgan Teicher, Akiko Busch 鈥75, Morgan Jerkins MFA 鈥16, Hugh Ryan MFA 鈥09, Carmen Gim茅nez Smith, Amanda Stern 鈥93, Rolf Potts MFA 鈥11, Donald Hall, Eugenia Kim MFA 鈥01, Natalie Scenters-Zapico, Summer Brennan 鈥01, Irina Reyn MFA 鈥06, Sue Rainsford MFA 鈥17, George Michelsen Foy MFA 鈥98.



JAYSON GREENE MFA 鈥21
Once More We Saw Stars
(Knopf May 2019)
Jayson Greene, the author of Once More We Saw Stars, lost his 2-year-old daughter, Greta, on an ordinary day, while she sat on a city bench with her grandmother. It goes against every instinct that a brick, falling from the eighth story of a crumbling Manhattan building, could end the incandescent life of a child. But that鈥檚 the gutting fact of it. It happened, against all sense.... Greene鈥檚 memoir grapples with this lesson: the ruinous insight that the world can wound loved ones at random and for no reason. The book charts how, in the 15 months between Greta鈥檚 death and the birth of their second child, he and his wife survived overwhelming grief to find a path toward a new normal: a happiness brave enough to accept life鈥檚 constant dangers and complex enough to coexist with sorrow.
鈥The Atlantic
AMY HEMPEL, Bennington Writing Seminars faculty member
Sing to It
(Scribner, March 2019)
Each purified sentence [in Sing to It] is itself a story, a kind of suspended enigma. . . . Hempel, like some practical genius of the forest, can make living structures out of what look like mere bric-a-brac, leavings, residue. It鈥檚 astonishing how little she needs to get something up and going on the page. A pun, a malapropism, or a ghost rhyme is spark enough.
鈥The New Yorker
BRET EASTON ELLIS 鈥86
White
(Knopf; 1st Edition, April 2019)
If Joan Didion is the California ice queen who picked apart the increasingly threadbare fabric of 70鈥檚 American society, then, with White, Bret Easton Ellis is her heir apparent . . . shifting his focus to nonfiction for the first time [and turning his] withering eye to the social-media age.
鈥Vanity Fair



JAMES GEARY 鈥85
Wit鈥檚 End: What Wit Is, How It Works, and Why We Need It
(W. W. Norton & Company, November 2018)
Wit鈥檚 End juggles scholarship, humorous anecdote and critical insight with a diabolical, almost sinister dexterity. No shrinking violet, Geary fully intends to strut his stuff, to glitter and beguile, and he does so with remarkable ingenuity and chutzpah . . . As the playwright Sacha Guitry so shrewdly observed, 鈥測ou can pretend to be serious, but you can鈥檛 pretend to be witty.鈥 Happily, Geary manages to be both.
鈥The Washington Post
CRAIG MORGAN TEICHER, Bennington Writing Seminars faculty member
We Begin In Gladness: How Poets Progress
(Graywolf press, November 2018)
Teicher proposes a well-reasoned alternative: to read poets not so much by their experiences but by the evolution of their words. . . . Teicher perceptively identifies the philosophical undercurrents in much of 20th- and 21st-century poetry and highlights important patterns of poetic influence.
鈥The New York Times Book Review
AKIKO BUSCH 鈥75, Visiting faculty member
How to Disappear: Notes on Invisibility in a Time of Transparency
(Penguin Press, February 2019)
Coming upon How to Disappear was like finding the Advil bottle in the medicine cabinet after stumbling about with a headache for a long time... For [Busch], invisibility is not simply a negative, the inverse of visibility. Going unseen, undetected, overlooked: These are experiences with their own inherent 鈥渕eaning and power鈥; what we need is a 鈥渇ield guide鈥 for recognizing them. ...Inconspicuousness can be powerful鈥攖his may be Busch鈥檚 most radical point, especially at a moment when we鈥檙e conditioned to think power means yelling louder than everyone else in your Twitter feed, or showing the world in Instagram how you鈥檙e living your best life . . . Silence and invisibility, [Busch insists], are part of our everyday lives鈥攖he place our mind wanders when we鈥檙e in the shower or out jogging, the feeling we get looking out the window of an airplane, the pleasure of becoming a stranger on a bustling city street.
鈥The New York Times Book Review (Cover Review)



MORGAN JERKINS MFA 鈥16,
Well-Read Black Girl: Finding Our Stories, Discovering Ourselves (Contributing writer)
(Ballantine Books; reprint edition, October 2018)
These essays build the altars for black women to recognize and support each other鈥檚 work, not as collectibles rendered visible or easily consumed by non-black audiences, but as an acknowledgment of black women as architects of their own futures and universes. . . . Each essay can be read as a dispatch from the vast and wonderfully complex location that is black girlhood and womanhood. . . . They present literary encounters that may at times seem private and ordinary鈥攈ours spent in the children鈥檚 section of a public library or in a college classroom鈥攂ut are no less monumental in their impact.
鈥The Washington Post
HUGH RYAN MFA 鈥09
When Brooklyn Was Queer
(St. Martin鈥檚 Press, March 2019)
A hungry archivist, Hugh Ryan unearths vivid material to populate this story. Taking the Brooklyn Heights publication of Walt Whitman鈥檚 Leaves of Grass as a starting point鈥攈e depicts early queer lives around the city鈥檚 waterfront, from the neighborhoods of Red Hook to the Navy Yard.
鈥The New Republic
CARMEN GIM脡NEZ SMITH, Bennington Writing Seminars faculty member
Be Recorder
(Graywolf Press, August 2019)
With a powerful allegiance to the freedom of free verse, Gim茅nez Smith tells a sort of fragmentary superhero origin story about a girl who faces the disdain of her country to become a woman, poet, and mother. . . . For Gim茅nez Smith, there is no distance between the personal and the political, such that they don鈥檛 even need separate words.
鈥NPR



AMANDA STERN 鈥93
Little Panic
(Grand Central Publishing; reprint edition, June 19, 2018)
Stern鈥檚 frank, funny memoir about living with anxiety鈥攅ased and compounded by a peripatetic childhood amid the gritty glamour of late-鈥70s Greenwich Village鈥攚ill have chronic worrywarts laugh-crying with recognition, especially those who think clocks exist only to remind them that time鈥檚 running out.
鈥O, The Oprah Magazine
ROLF POTTS MFA 鈥11
Souvenir
(Bloomsbury Academic, March 2018)
Few of us would call ourselves collectors, but most travelers have, at some point or other, bought a keychain, pocketed a seashell, or saved a ticket stub from a vacation. Turns out, as Mr. Potts notes in a new little book called Souvenir, there鈥檚 more to this seemingly simple (perhaps frivolous to some) practice than meets the eye . . . Souvenir offers ideas about what may be in play when we seek mementos . . . In the end, Souvenir suggests that the meaning of a keepsake is not fixed (its importance to the owner can change over time) and that its significance is bound up in the traveler鈥檚 identity.
鈥The New York Times
DONALD HALL, Former Writer-in-Residence, Bennington Writing Seminars
A Carnival of Losses: Notes Nearing Ninety
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, July 2018)
It鈥檚 a beauty, brimming with stories, confessions and faded snapshots in time in which he muses about life, settles a few scores and brags a little about his accomplishments . . . . It鈥檚 odd that a book whose subject is loss could be so uplifting. And yet it is. Hall may be telling us what it鈥檚 like to fall apart, but he does it so calmly, and with such wit and exactitude, that you can鈥檛 help but shake your head in wonder.
鈥 Associated Press



EUGENIA KIM MFA 鈥01
The Kinship of Secrets
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (November 6, 2018)
Beautifully illuminate[s] Korea鈥檚 past in ways that inform our present . . . . Kim infuses a coming-of-age story about being an outsider with the realities of the war, which forced many family separations, some of which still persist today.
鈥The Washington Post
NATALIE SCENTERS-ZAPICO, Faculty member
Lima :: Lim贸n
Copper Canyon Press (May 14, 2019)
These poems, with electric brilliance, speak fiercely as they straddle various borders, especially the one between El Paso, TX and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.
鈥 NPR
IRINA REYN MFA 鈥06
Mother Country
Thomas Dunne Books (February 26, 2019)
A modern portrait of America through the lens of the women it fails the most.
鈥Marie Claire



SUE RAINSFORD MFA 鈥17
Follow Me to Ground
(New Island Books, August 8, 2019)
This lyrical book is truly creepy and perfect for this time of year, when the darkness grows.
鈥The Irish Times
SUMMER BRENNAN 鈥01
High Heel
(Bloomsbury Academic, March 21, 2019)
[A] thought-provoking meditation on what it means to move through the world as a woman . . . . Powerful enough to completely change your worldview.
鈥Refinery29
GEORGE MICHELSEN FOY MFA 鈥98
Run the Storm: A Savage Hurricane, a Brave Crew, and the Wreck of the SS El Faro
(Scribner, May 1, 2018)
Run the Storm. . . gracefully covers everything you鈥檇 want to know about El Faro鈥檚 sinking and the 33 lives that went with it.
鈥Outside
Tod Goldberg MFA 鈥09, Julia Pistell MFA 鈥09, and Rider Strong MFA 鈥09,
Literary Disco
A podcast hosted by Tod Goldberg MFA 鈥09, Julia Pistell MFA 鈥09, and Rider Strong MFA 鈥09, the podcast was named one of the best literary podcasts by The Washington Post in 2018.