Caroline Hagood,
Caroline Hagood is a poet and writer living in New York City.
Ultimately, the presence of the gods in The Infinities draws our attention, not to the heavens, but to the characters' spaces within, and the inner infinite in us all.
James McGrath Morris,
Biographer
In one stroke, Pulitzer simultaneously elevated the common man and took his spare change. The World was good and readers flocked.
James B. Steele,
Contributing Editor, Vanity Fair, and two-time Pulitzer winner
Nobody knows what the future holds for print, but Harris has given us a book that will inspire journalists to pursue public service journalism in whatever format it takes.
Jane Isay,
Writer and Editor
The news is on my nerves. I'm feeling sad for the world, and for my country. By now the sights that emerge around the clock from Haiti don't teach me anything more than I already know about the suffering.
Esther Iverem,
Founder and Editor, SeeingBlack.com
In Precious, director Lee Daniels returns to the formula that has won him acclaim in the past: stories of poor Black women who are too pathetic, sick and incapable of caring for themselves or their children.
Small Publisher Hits It
President of Book Passage
When our head buyer, Sheryl Cotleur, told me she had fallen in love with a novel, I was amazed that it came from a press that's connected to a hospital that makes most of us think of mental illness.
Steve Leveen,
CEO and co-founder of Levenger, Writer
Choose the best book of award-winning fiction of the past 60 years? Impossible! Yes, but let's do it anyway.