logo for Harvard University Press
The Jataka-mala
Stories of Buddha's Former Incarnations, Otherwise Entitled Bodhisattva-Avadana-Mala, by Arya-Cura, Edited in Sanskrit (Nagari letters)
Hendrik Kern
Harvard University Press

front cover of Jaws of Life
Jaws of Life
Stories
Laura Leigh Morris
West Virginia University Press, 2018

In the hills of north central West Virginia, there lives a cast of characters who face all manner of problems. From the people who are incarcerated in West Virginia’s prisons, to a woman who is learning how to lose her sight with grace, to another who sorely regrets selling her land to a fracking company, Jaws of Life portrays the diverse concerns the people of this region face every day—poverty, mental illness, drug abuse, the loss of coal mines, and the rise of new extractive industries that exert their own toll.

While these larger concerns exist on the edges of their realities, these characters must still deal with quotidian difficulties: how to coexist with ex-spouses, how to care for sick family members, and how to live with friends who always seem to have more. 

[more]

front cover of Joyriders
Joyriders
Stories
Greg Schutz
University of Massachusetts Press, 2025

In this collection of stories set across the Midwest and rural Appalachia, lonely people travel half-haunted landscapes and discover moments of light.

In this debut collection, tangled bonds of love and family collide with a natural world both fragile and ferocious. Upended by grief, a widowed veterinarian seeks solace by fostering a litter of orphaned opossums. A young lawyer embarks on an affair, only to fall into a deeper, stranger entrancement with her lover’s nine-year-old daughter during a weekend on the Lake Huron coast. In the depths of a Wisconsin winter, a recovering alcoholic risks everything to plot a careening course toward atonement. And in the title story, two teenagers steal a car, discover a loaded rifle in the backseat, and set off consequences both devastating and tender for a series of strangers they’ll never meet. 

Set across the Midwest and rural Appalachia, the stories in Joyriders offer a resonant vision of rural and small-town life: lonely, half-haunted landscapes are pierced with moments of light, and even the most taciturn faces conceal inner worlds both rich and strange. Comfort and heartache abound—entangled, inseparable. “What was Kevin suggesting,” wonders Valerie, after struggling for years to steer her innocent, angry, mysteriously afflicted son through the world, “that she loved him less because of his troubles? Oh, preposterous. More, she wanted to tell him, more.” Characters’ paths repeatedly bend in unforeseen directions, and the shape of each story surprises—illuminating, in this way, the surprising contours of entire lives. 

[more]


Send via email Share on Facebook Share on Twitter