In this issue, Shawna Kay Rodenberg shares the prologue from her memoir, Kin, out now from Bloomsbury.
Marjorie Tesser explores aging, getting famous, and how friendships may or may not endure major life changes in “Miles and Myles.”
And Beth Weinstock reflects on loss and the fragments we save when the righteous die in two poems beginning with “On Troy Hill above Pittsburgh.”
This issue features photographs by Theresa Babb (1868–1948), who photographed the harbor and hills of Camden, Maine, at the turn of the twentieth century, recording both the intimacies of social life and her hometown’s industrial and seafaring traditions.

Featured art: Theresa Babb

Photographing the harbor and hills of Camden, Maine at the turn of the twentieth century, Theresa Babb (1868–1948) recorded both the intimacies of social life and her hometown’s industrial and seafaring traditions. What stands out most about Babb’s images is how they let us glimpse into a personal world of female friendship, captured in such a way that seems both timeless and strikingly modern. From Public Domain Review.

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