Nobody Killed Her
“And the crushing of these hopes and dreams is what Sabyn Javeri leverages with incredible skill.” Casey Harding reviews ‘Nobody Killed Her’, by Sabyn Javeri.
Read More“And the crushing of these hopes and dreams is what Sabyn Javeri leverages with incredible skill.” Casey Harding reviews ‘Nobody Killed Her’, by Sabyn Javeri.
Read More“I wanted to examine the people on the fringes of society, and how others’ perception of them led them there. Society can be unforgiving.” Lorna Brown, our April Author of the Month, talks to Casey Harding.
Read More“Quite frankly, there are times when I hear or play a good piece of music or sing a song and wish I could write a story as good as the music.” Nnamdi Oguike, our March Author of the Month, talks to Casey Harding.
Read More“The first book I ever read was Alice in Wonderland, and the surreal has taken captive of my imagination ever since…” Eliot Hudson, our February Author of the Month, talks to Casey Harding.
Read More“…as a writer, one should never be bound by the constraints of gender, age, race, religion, economic background, or social status when telling a story.” Nadia Kabir Barb, our January Author of the Month, talks to Casey Harding.
Read MoreThe Missing Slate’s fiction editors reveal their process, works of fiction that haunt them, and their editing vice of choice in our Meet the Editors series.
Read More“My country is turning into a police state and nobody cares, people just continue with their Christmas shopping…” Michal Hvorecký, our Author of the Month for November, talks to Casey Harding.
Read More“The book that pushed me most into writing was Hamish Brown’s Scottish mountaineering work Hamish’s Mountain Walk, which excited me with the way the author linked bashing about in the hills, reading, and writing into an indivisible unity.” David McVey, The Missing Slate’s Author of the Month for September, talks to Casey Harding.
Read More“I’m also really obsessed by things that one can buy in vending machines…caviar, lettuce, burgers, canned bread, underwear, eggs, rice, neckties, art, and what I’ve now found I’ve always needed, live crabs.” Ambika Thompson, The Missing Slate’s Author of the Month for July, talks to Casey Harding.
Read More“I’ve learned from reading that you can tell a story in two ways: one is via the written narrative and the other is via the subtext, specifically, the things that remain unsaid but implied.” Nafiza Azad, The Missing Slate’s Author of the Month for June, talks to Casey Harding.
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