It’s the last day of Women in Translation Month! For our third and final roundtable discussion featuring Aleshia Jensen, Cristina Sandu, Erin Moure, Kari Dickson, Rachel Rankin, and Kristen Renee […]
Continue readingMonthly Archives: August 2021
Women in Translation Month Roundtable Interview: Part Two
August may be coming to an end, but we are still celebrating Women in Translation Month! As promised, we’re pleased to share part two of our three-part roundtable interview with […]
Continue readingActive Listening: Erase and Rewind by Meghan Bell
Our Active Listening series invites authors to create playlists for their books, and offers them a space to draw parallels between the two.
Continue readingFall 2021 Poetry Preview: Iceland is Melting and So Are You by Talya Rubin
Our Fall 2021 preview series continues with Iceland is Melting and So Are You by Talya Rubin. The urgency of the climate emergency is explored in this latest collection by […]
Continue readingWomen in Translation Month Roundtable Interview: Part One
Women in Translation Month is in full swing! To continue our month-long celebration we are pleased to bring you a three-part roundtable interview series featuring several women working in translation. […]
Continue readingWomen in Translation Month — Reading Recommendations
Happy Women in Translation Month! Women in Translation Month was launched in 2014 by book blogger Meytal Radzinski in response to her observation that women wrote only approximately 30% of […]
Continue readingFall 2021 Fiction Preview: Because Venus Crossed an Alpine Violet on the Day That I Was Born by Mona Høvring, Translated by Kari Dickson and Rachel Rankin
It’s time to meet the Fall 2021 authors and their books! We’ll be diving more deeply into the books we introduced in our Fall 2021 season reveal, previewing individual titles.
Continue readingActive Listening: The Union of Synchronized Swimmers by Cristina Sandu, Translated by Cristina Sandu
Book*hug’s Active Listening series invites authors to create playlists for their books, and offers them a space to draw parallels between the two.
Continue reading