

Zach Issenberg
2.3K posts





This is my first truly great read of the year, the stories of Inés Arredondo! Her stories throttle toward madness in arched, Gothic prose. Her play with the shadow of consciousness places her alongside John Hawkes and Diamela Eltit. A beautiful translation by Cynthia Steele.



5 books that you have read the most times: 5 Brossard, She Would be the First Sentence of my Next Novel 4 Derrida, The Post Card 3 Nabokov, Lolita 2 Barthes, The Pleasure of the Text 1 Bulgakov, The Master and Margarita





My writing's taken off! A week and some of self-study helped me find the particular textures needed for this new project. I can't read while writing, but I'm happily making the goal of at least 2k words daily. For me, it's necessary to have the correct playlist while drafting.





António Lobo Antunes is one of the greatest writers alive and working today! From the sheer leaps and bounds he takes to evolve Faulkner's styles, to his modulation of forms, there is no peer. Thanks to these great Porturguese translators, you can read him in English too.









"Aujourd’hui, Grand-père s’en va à la mer. Maman dit qu’il a besoin de calme, de récupération, alors on l’emmène dans une maison de repos à l’ouest d’Alger ..." La maison de repos — @DbDjamel minorliteratures.com/2026/02/12/la-…



I'm back to drafting and editing! And it feels like a great jog every time I return. Besides a new playlist to write alongside, I'm trying a new writing exercise. At either end of day, I'm copying sentences from novels with atmospheres I admire. It's slow and granular, but fun.