• Interviews,  Issue 36

    The Storm We Made: An interview with Vanessa Chan (MFA ’21) and an excerpt from her debut novel

    interview by LIT Book Editor Jonathan Kesh

    Vanessa Chan’s debut novel The Storm We Made is an intense work of historical fiction built on personal family histories, with a few aspects of spy drama thrown in. 

    Set during the brutal Japanese occupation of Malaya during World War II, the story follows the Alcantara family as they struggle to stay together under this new regime. We quickly learn the family’s matriarch, Cecily, had collaborated in secret with Japanese forces, driven by a desire to see her country freed from British rule alongside a growing fascination with an enigmatic spy named Fujiwara.

  • Interviews,  Issue 36

    I Heard Her Call My Name: An interview with Lucy Sante

    interview by Vicky Oliver and Charlotte Slivka
    
    

    Lucy Sante has had a long and decorated career as a chronicler of the arts and their environments. From her books including Low Life, Evidence, and Kill All Your Darlings and the pages of the New York Review of Books, she has amassed a devoted readership of her criticism and cultural commentary, assiduously sharp and brimming with curiosity. But for a long time, while in pursuit of artistic truth, she felt unsure of her place, eventually coming to understand that she was evading the truth of her own gender identity.

  • Interviews,  Issue 36

    On Language, Connection, and Peculiar Literature: an Interview with Claire Donato

    by LIT Fiction Editor, Jerakah Greene

    THE CULT OF CLAIRE DONATO

    I first met Claire Donato through Pratt Institute, where many of my friends have studied with her. Before we met in person, I had heard dozens of stories about her teaching ethics, her fascination with poetry and literature on the internet-plane, and her ghostly Victorian style. I admit that I idolized her a bit; she is the kind of literary citizen everyone should aspire to be, a fixture of the New York literary scene, with impeccable taste in film and aesthetics (she recently curated a diptych of Bonjour Tristesse and David Lynch’s Fire Walk With Me at Roxy Cinema,

  • Issue 36,  Translation

    Time Flows Like Water; Sunshine For 10,000 Miles, A Love That Fills The Bed; Hello, September

    Three Poems by A Hua, translated from the Chinese by Xuelan Su and Kathy Z. Fan

     

    Time Flows Like Water

    Use growth rings to tell the story. Get pine resin to seal it in history.
    Leave the stump for egrets to perch on.

    At Weishan Lake, as spring winds blow away the chaos of March,
    wetlands burst with birdsong and flower-scent,

    leaves jostled by rain and pearls of dew become like small boats that bob and sway.

    … later, after lake waters recede,

  • Issue 36,  Translation

    Country Ghosts

    art by Mia Broecke, "eye" 

    by Francesca Diano, translated from the Italian by Laura Valeri 

    The two di Franco sisters lived alone. The younger one, all the same old, was rather short, with a big long nose, eyes like two boiled eggs, and hair dyed a brick red color. The older sister was tall and lanky, with white hair so thin that it showed the rosy hue of her scalp, wore her hair in a bun – a tiny little bun that looked like a bird’s nest. They had a big beautiful house downtown,