Pauline Uchmanowicz
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Articles and Blog Entries
Pauline Uchmanowicz reviews Rebecca Wolff’s The Beginners.
Two Hudson Valley writers Nick Flynn and Djelloul Marbrook release new, project-based poetry books. Reviewed by Pauline Uchmanowicz.
A poem by Pauline Uchmanowicz
Pauline Uchmanowicz speaks with Tobias Wolff, author of “This Boy’s Life” and
“Old School,” about his life, career, and craft.
Pauline Uchmanowicz reviews “The Ticking Is The Bomb” by Nick Flynn.
Pauline Uchmanowicz reviews the latest novel from Gail Godwin.
Pauline Uchmanowicz visits Ellenville’s new bistro, Aroma Thyme.
Pauline Uchmanowicz visits the Hudson River Psychiatric Museum.
Pauline Uchmanowicz profiles poet Charles Simic.
Pauline Uchmanowicz visits Wood Classics in Gardiner.
The ultimate guide to health food on the go.
Pauline Uchmanowicz profiles Gail Godwin.
Pauline Uchmanowicz reviews two books of poetry: Body of Water by Janet Hamill and Falling Forward by Rebecca Schumejda.
Cartoonist and writer Jessica Abel chats about the history of her career as a graphic novelist, her work as a teacher, and what to do after you buy Maus.
Peter Trachentenberg assess human suffering in relation to circumstance, endurance, justice, God, and obligation in The Book of Calamities.
Bordewich tells the seldom-told tale of the city’s ultimate birth on the banks of the Potomac.
One of only four Vanderbilt biographies to date, Renehan’s book prominently features the Hudson River and surrounding environs, from which Vanderbilt launched his remarkable career.
Local 111’s chef, David Wurth, uses the bistro’s close proximity to regional farmland to create new, rustic American cuisine that emphasizes local organic and grass-fed ingredients.
Largely devoid of setting, definitive narrative structure, character development, and other familiar conventions, these 57 stories defy easy categorization.
Graphic novels have increasingly opened to women as well, with notable nonfiction titles including Marjane Satrapi’s Iranian-girlhood portrait Persepolis and Alison Bechdel’s familial tragicomedy Fun Home.
Wry and episodic, Jaems Canon’s magical realist novel Tales from the Town of Widows opens in November of 1992, when Marxist guerillas come recruiting in tiny Mariquita, Colombia.