Lumina Journal
Lumina Journal
Lumina Journal
Official podcast for Sarah Lawrence College's literary journal, Lumina.
In conversation with Sarah Manguso
Sarah Manguso speaks with Lumina Journal about her books, 300 Arguments and Ongoingness: The End of a Diary. Sarah Manguso is the author, most recently, of 300 Arguments (2017), a work of aphoristic autobiography. Her other nonfiction books include Ongoingness: The End of a Diary (2015), an essay on self-documentation, motherhood, and time; The Guardians (2012), an essay on friendship and suicide; and The Two Kinds of Decay (2008), an essay on living with chronic illness. Her work has been supported by Hodder and Guggenheim fellowships and the Rome Prize, and her books have been translated into six languages. She lives in Los Angeles.
May 26, 2020
39 min
In conversation with Adam Nemett
The Lumina Podcast team speaks with Adam Nemett about his debut novel, We Can Save Us All. Adam Nemett graduated from Princeton University and received his MFA in Fiction/Screenwriting from California College of the Arts. He serves as creative director and author for History Factory, where he's written award-winning nonfiction books for Lockheed Martin, Brooks Brothers, City of Hope Medical Center, and Huntington Bank, and directed campaigns for 21st Century Fox, Adobe Systems, HarperCollins, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, New Balance, Pfizer and Whirlpool. An excerpt of his debut novel, We Can Save Us All, was anthologized in The Apocalypse Reader. 
May 26, 2020
51 min
In conversation with Donna Stonecipher
The Lumina Podcast team speaks with Donna Stonecipher about her poetry collections, Model City and Transaction Histories.  Donna Stonecipher grew up in Seattle and Tehran. She is the author of five books of poetry: The Reservoir, Souvenir de Constantinople, The Cosmopolitan, Model City, and Transaction Histories. She also published a book of criticism titled Prose Poetry and the City. Her poems have been published in The Paris Review, New American Writing, and Conjunctions, and have been translated into eight languages. She translates from German, and her translation of Swiss author Ludwig Hohl's novella Ascent was published in 2012. She lives in Berlin.
May 26, 2020
35 min
In conversation with Philip Matthews
Philip Matthews speaks with Lumina Journal about his recently published poetry collection, Witch. Philip Matthews is from Eastern North Carolina. He is the author of Witch, recently published by Alice James Books. He also collaborated with the photographer David Johnson on the project, Wig Heavier Than A Boot, which was launched in October 2019 by Kris Graves Projects. His work investigates the spiritual, queer power, questions of home, and ecological shift.
May 25, 2020
47 min
In conversation with George Saunders
George Saunders discusses the importance of humor, the myth of bad story ideas, trusting the subconscious, and the "great relief" of his writing life in this final episode of season one. George Saunders is a Syracuse University graduate and professor of creative writing, the author of the short story collections CivilWarLand in Bad Decline, Pastoralia, In Persuasion Nation, Tenth of December, and the novel Lincoln in the Bardo. He has been a finalist for the National Book Award, received both the Guggenheim and MacArthur fellowships, and his novel won the 2017 Man Booker Prize.
Sep 30, 2019
52 min
In conversation with sam sax
Part two of our genre-specific series. LUMINA's Poetry Editor, Anna Binkovitz, and sam sax, discuss poetry craft, the intersections of community and creation, and what it means to embody the heritage of Judaism while eschewing a Zionist framework. Also discussed: sweaty basements, tiaras, and pigs.  Theme music by Myles Karp. 
May 1, 2019
26 min
Genre Series: Poetry
In our curated poetry content episode, Assistant Poetry Editor Brynn Bogert invites three Sarah Lawrence graduate poets to share current work and to discuss the various facets of their pieces in casual post-reading interviews. We hear from Shuang Ang, Emma Stewart, and Lucy Walker. Throughout these poems, a sense of permeability and duality weaves itself into three very different narratives. These poems explore borderlands; thresholds; tent flaps, and the impermanence of petals and pearls. They travel the spaces between what is true, what is allowed, and what is lurking just beneath or behind what our eyes can register. Theme music for the podcast was composed by musical artist and producer, Myles Karp.
May 1, 2019
23 min
Genre Series: Creative Nonfiction
Firefly is excited to launch our spring genre-specific series. This episode is brought to you by Casey Haymes, LUMINA's Nonfiction Editor. Last month, Casey brought to the studio three Sarah Lawrence MFA writers with distinct voices, whose pieces all happen to orbit a unifying question: what does it mean to be at home? While these essays explore a range of styles and themes, each one engages in contemplation of what it means to be at home; whether that home is defined as a body, a city, a society, or a religion. Through their musings, we begin to get a sense for what it means inhabit the spaces where we find ourselves, and to find ourselves changed by that space. This episode features the work of Brynn Bogert, Amanda Claire Buckley, and Vanessa Friedman. Theme music for the podcast was composed by musical artist and producer, Myles Karp. 
Apr 24, 2019
29 min
In conversation with Angela Palm
LUMINA Journal's Nonfiction Editor, Casey Haymes, sits down with author Angela Palm to discuss the craft of memoir and essay: the power and pitfalls of accessing memory as a part of writing about trauma, how to experiment with time, and what the use of an exclamation point! can say about our collective mental health. Palm also shares an excerpt from new work that is forthcoming. Angela Palm wrote Riverine, A Memoir from Anywhere But Here, winner of the Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize and a Kirkus Best Book. Her work has been published in Tin House, Long Reads. Ecotone, Creative Nonfiction, and elsewhere. She's been a finalist for the Vermont Book Award, Indiana Emerging Author Award, and Stanford Library Soroyan International Writing Prize. For more on Palm: http://www.angipalm.com/
Apr 19, 2019
1 hr 3 min
In conversation with David Ryan
Talking craft with David Ryan and his thoughts on the lines between literary and musical theory. David Ryan is the author of the story collection Animals in Motion (Roundabout Press) and Malcolm Lowry's Under the Volcano: Bookmarked (Ig Publishing). His fiction is forthcoming, or has appeared, in Conjunctions, Bellevue Literary Review, Esquire, BOMB, Tin House, Fence, Electric Literature, No Tokens, The Encyclopedia Project, Booth, Denver Quarterly, Alaska Quarterly Review, New Orleans Review, Cimarron Review, the Mississippi Review, and elsewhere, and anthologized in WW Norton's Flash Fiction Forward, The Mississippi Review: 30, and Akashic Book's Boston Noir 2: The Classics. Essays, reviews and interviews have appeared in The Paris Review, The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature, Tin House, BookForum, and elsewhere. A recipient of the Elizabeth Yates McGreal Writer in Residence, a Connecticut state arts grant and a Macdowell fellowship, he currently teaches in the writing program at Sarah Lawrence College and in the low residency program at New England College.
Apr 7, 2019
53 min
Load more