Nina Shengold
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Articles and Blog Entries
Millbrook’s Merritt Books will have its first ever book festival, complete with story telling, reading, a parade and book signings.
Benjamin Cheever goes the distance in both writing and running.
Hudson Valley children’s authors offer new treats for lions and lambs of all ages.
Nina Shengold profiles Nobel Prize winning author Chinua Achebe.
Six more books worth reading this month.
Six books to fulfill your New Year’s resolution to read more about mind and spirit.
Imagine: A studio drummer who’s never written anything but letters decides to write the definitive book about the Beatles, subject of some 500 previous books.
Nina Shengold picks these page-turners to give.
A celebration of vibrant new work by Hudson Valley poets and independent presses.
Berkshire novelist Andrea Barrett talks with Nina Shengold about fiction,science, and her new novel, The Air We Breathe.
The late Jim Ryan, curator of nearby Olana, once told Kermani, “Someday this house is going to be seen as a major work by John Ashbery.”
Small presses and obscure publications advertise for content.
Nina Shengold gets Charley Rosen to talk candidly about his upbringing, coaching meltdowns, and how he handles enraged bloggers.
Six must-reads for September.
There are few laudatory adjectives that critics haven’t applied to John Ashbery’s 26 books of poetry; “dazzling,” “sublime,” and the like become shopworn.
Susan Krawitz and Nina Shengold offer their picks for picture books, poetry, and young adult titles.
Daniel Pinkwater’s voice—instantly recognizable to NPR listeners—resonates down the stairwell as he appears, a Hitchcockian silhouette dressed in top-to-toe black with a dusting of pet hair.
Paetro told a friend she’s reached the point where her name will be linked to James Patterson’s in her obituary.
Summer reading in many flavors, including three books with upcoming launch parties, plus two more from some of our finest regional publishers.
Morrow writes like an architect, using intricate mathematical structures to create three-dimensional worlds full of beauty and light.
These five new releases offer sustenance to heart, mind, and body, including John Cuneo’s romp through the lowest of chakras.
Whether they’re writing about military realities, queer identity, land use issues up- and downriver, or that iconoclastic bride of Christ, these five local authors are helping to break new ground.
What do gardening, murder, women’s erotica, and Christmas past have in common? A most uncommon edito: Woodstocker Michele Slung.
Nina Shengold profiles essayist, novelist, poet, and writer of children’s books Nancy Willard.
Capsule reviews of books by Kenneth Salzmann, Norma Lehmeier Hartie, Leonard Shengold, Linda Zuckerman, and Sunny Berkley.
Author Mat Johnson does the write thing.
Some of the more memorable—but questionable—seaonal greeting cards that made their way to Mik and Nina.
As editors of Chronogram’s 2006 Literary Supplement, we invited readers to participate in a conservation-minded literary contest called “Joined at the Hip.”
Start your New Year off reading with this quintet of diverse
new releases by Hudson Valley authors.
James Lasdun packs a prodigious literary pedigree. The London-born author has published two acclaimed novels and three collections apiece of short stories and poems.
Nina Shengold visits the multi-dimensional world of pop-up book creators Robert Sabuda and Matthew Reinhart.