Share This
Description
"She sighed, and he understood. The American in A?ri buying a pregnancy test. The rumors that would spread." Joshua Idaszak's "May It Come Easy," set in eastern Turkey and involving a young American teacher, his Muslim lover, and her unsuspecting uncle, draws us, rapt, through a daylong bureaucratic odyssey in which emotional and cultural tensions thicken around an anxious quest for an exit stamp. Idaszak's story is just one of the gems to be found in the Sept/Oct issue of the Kenyon Review. You'll also find stories by Jonathan Blum, Dariel Suarez, and Haïm Hazaz; a memoir by Lesley Jenike dealing with singing, voice, motherhood, family, and connection; and poetry by Mary Ruefle, Yuki Tanaka, Kazim Ali, Chet'la Sebree, Brian Brodeur, and Roger Desy, among others.
Tag This Book
This Book Has Been Tagged
Our Recommendation
Notify Me When The Price...
Log In to track this book on eReaderIQ.
Track These Authors
Log In to track Atar Hadari on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Chet'la Sebree on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Dariel Suarez on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Kazim Ali on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Kenyon Review on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Mary Ruefle on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Roger Desy on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Wendy Singer on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track Yuki Tanaka on eReaderIQ.
Log In to track David Lynn on eReaderIQ.