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The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
The more I read Ploughshares, the less I'm into this kind of "high brow" literature. I mean, I went to school for writing, so I'm not one to talk about "prestige." But my goodness, some of it is too much for me.That being said, there are a few standout pieces in this collection:It starts out fabulously with Katherine Damm's The Middlegame. One sibling in the hospital, the other visiting to play chess. It's presented day by day, like these things are when someone close to you is terminally ill. I...
Really liked the pieces by Taylor Koekkoek and Christopher Kennedy.
When I started reading the Spring 2016 edition of Ploughshares I thought it would be a quick read before I sunk my teeth into Ron Chernow's biography of Alexander Hamilton - a book I've promised myself I would finish prior to seeing Hamilton on Broadway June 10. Typically Ploughshares is something I can devour in a couple days - five at most. But apparently that was not to be this time around.Ploughshares has given me so many delightful editions over the past three years of my romance, subscript...