Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2013

    Page 50
    Prev Next


      Anna Sanford is a senior at Piedmont High School in the Bay Area. She has spent much of her seventeen years in the company of books, many of whom she considers best friends. When not reading, Anna enjoys running, cooking, and spending time with friends. This is her first year of BANR, an experience that has not only taught her about the unusual longevity of a remote Greek island and the courage of a one-eyed matador, but changed her perspective on life itself.

      Frances Saux is a senior at San Francisco’s Ruth Asawa School of the Arts, where she studies creative writing. She spends most of her free time reading books by David Foster Wallace. She hopes to someday publish her own stories and essays.

      Abigail Schott-Rosenfield, seventeen, is a senior at the Ruth Asawa School of the Arts in San Francisco. At the moment she is enjoying Tell Me a Riddle by Tillie Olsen. She is also learning Arabic (Ahlan wasahlan. Ismi samir). She is pleased to have completed her second term on the BANR committee. Her muse is Hosanna Rubio.

      Hannah Shevrin is a senior at Community High School in Ann Arbor. This is her third year on BANR, where she has spent her Tuesday evenings laughing with her fellow readers/editors about the oddities of life. She enjoys walking long distances on overcast days while listening to early 2000s R&B soul. One of the neatest moments of her life was when she was on a piece of land owned by a man whose last name was Land. She frequently receives compliments on her handwriting, and she is thinking of selling it. Watch out, Comic Sans!

      Kate Shrayber is seventeen years old and a senior at Gateway High School in San Francisco. In her spare time she enjoys dirty chais and long walks on the beach. She’s currently completing a twelve step program with Bookaholics Anonymous due to her addiction to novels.

      Sarah Starman is a senior at Pioneer High School in Ann Arbor. Summer is by far her favorite season, and her friends are tired of her saying that. She bakes cakes for people on their birthdays. She has an old-fashioned rotary telephone on her bed, and even when it rings at 2 a.m. she doesn’t disconnect it (mostly because she’s so tired she falls back asleep). She loves ’80s music, raspberries, and of course, BANR.

      Miranda Wiebe is seventeen and a senior at Piedmont High School in the Bay Area. She enjoys running, gardening, ROFL-ing, and listening to Foxy Brown. Being on the BANR committee taught her many important life lessons, such as the theory of Schrodinger’s Cat and how to listen.

      Emma Pearl Willmer-Shiles has too many names, is sixteen years old, and a senior at Sacred Heart High School in San Francisco. She enjoys reading science fiction in both English and Spanish, and has been obsessed with Greek mythology since her brother gave her The Golden Fleece in fifth grade. Drawing is one of her favorite activities and almost everything she owns has doodles on it.

      Sabrina Yerena, fifteen years old, is a sophomore at Immaculate Conception Academy in San Francisco. At ICA, she is part of student council. After school, she can be found at 826 Valencia’s drop-in tutoring program, which she has attended for seven years now. In her free time she likes to play basketball and draw.

      Oscar Zapata graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School in 2013 and has lived in San Francisco for the majority of his life. His hobbies include but are not limited to: taking apart his computer and putting it back together again, engaging strangers in friendly conversation, spending way too much money on his collection of hi-fi headphones, and wasting time on the internet.

      Very special thanks to Scott Cohen, Nicole Angeloro, and Mark Robinson. Thanks also to 826 National, 826 Valencia, 826 Michigan, Laura Howard, Dan McKinley, Sunra Thompson, Brian McMullen, Alyson Sinclair, Isaac Fitzgerald, Jordan Bass, Sam Riley, Henry W. Leung, Jia Tolentino, Mimi Lok, Juliana Sloane, McKenna Stayner, Rachel Khong, Soraya Okuda, Jordan Karnes, Clara Sankey, Em-J Staples, Cliff Mayotte, Brian Christian, Chelsea Hogue, Gerald Richards, Ryan Lewis, Yalie Kamara, Raúl J. Alcantar, Emilie Coulson, Lauren Hall, María Inés Montes, Miranda Tsang, Gretchen Schrafft, Dana Riess, Naoki O’Bryan, Allie Washkin, Nolan Boomer, Erica Plumlee, Jessica McHugh, Paolo Yumol, Alex Ryan Bauer, and Nate Rogers.

      Notable Nonrequired Reading of 2012

      CHRIS ADRIAN

      Grand Rounds, Granta

      DANIEL ALARCON

      The Provincials, Granta

      KATYA APEKINA

      Maureen and Marjorie, The Iowa Review

      MATTHEW BAKER

      A Cruel Gap-Toothed Boy, The Missouri Review

      SHANE BAUER

      Solitary in Iran Nearly Broke Me. Then I Went Inside America’s Prisons, Mother Jones

      JOSH BEGLEY

      A Gated Community, Tomorrow Magazine

      BRIAN BOIES

      A House Well Furnished, Zyzzyva

      GINA LUJAN BOUBION

      The American Dream is a Combination Lock, The Antioch Review

      CHARLES BOWDEN

      Return to the Arkansas Delta, National Geographic

      JENNIFER CACICIO

      The Jackson Six, Lemon

      MELISSA CHADBURN

      The Throwaways, The Rumpus

      PAMELA COLLOFF

      The Innocent Man, Texas Monthly

      RICH COHEN

      Pirate City, The Paris Review

      GUY DELISLE

      Jerusalem, Drawn and Quarterly

      JAMES DEWILLE

      Last Days on Rossmore, American Short Fiction

      JUNOT DÍAZ

      Miss Lora, The New Yorker

      SUSAN DOMINUS

      What Happened to the Girls in Le Roy, The New York Times Magazine

      ROB EHLE

      Chemistry, Zyzzyva

      PATRICIA ENGEL

      Aida, The Harvard Review

      KIERA FELDMAN

      Grace in Broken Arrow, This Land Press

      AMITY GAIGE

      The Soul Keeps the Body Up, One Story

      J. MALCOLM GARCIA

      City of the Dead, New Letters

      VARUN GAURI

      The Assistant Secretary, The Asian American Literary Review

      JIM GAVIN

      Bermuda, Zoetrope: All-Story

      ROXANE GAY

      We Are the Sacrifice of Darkness, American Short Fiction

      DAVID GESSNER

      Brant’s Requiem, Orion Magazine

      ELIZABETH GILBERT

      The Finest Wife, The Rumpus

      JENNIFER GONNERMAN

      The Man Who Charged Himself With Murder, New York Magazine

      RIGOBERTO GONZÁLEZ

      The Great Poetry Caper, The Poetry Foundation

      AMELIA GRAY

      These Are the Fables, Hobart

      L.K. HANSON

      Some Pages from the Story of My Hand, Ploughshares

      JOSHUA HARMON

      The Annotated Mix-Tape #8, Make Magazine

      JOEANN HART

      Piece of History, Fifth Wednesday Journal

      JUSTIN HECKERT

      The Hazards of Growing Up Painlessly, The New York Times Magazine

      ALEKSANDAR HEMON

      War Dogs, Granta

      A.M. HOMES

      Hello Everybody, Electric Literature

      RENÉ HOUTRIDES

      Griffonia, The Georgia Review

      GEETHA IYER

      The Glass World-Builder, Gulf Coast

      TANIA JAMES

      The Scriptological Review, A Public Space

      LACY M. JOHNSON

      The Addict, Creative Nonfiction

      HEIDI JULAVITS

      This Feels So Real, Harper’s

      JESSICA FRANCIS KANE

      American Lawn, A Public Space

      JAY CASPIAN KANG

      Question of Identity, Grantland

      PATRICK RADDEN KEEFE

      Cocaine Incorporated, The New York Times Magazine

      VICTORIA KELLY

      Finding the Good Light, The Carolina Quarterly

      DAWNA KEMPER

      Joshua Tree, Zyzzyva

      PATRICIA GRACE KING

      Rubia, The Florida Review Publications

      PHIL KLAY

      After Action Report, Tin House

      NAIRA KUZMICH


      The Fearcatcher of East Hollywood, Cutbank

      CLARENCE LAI

      Start Here, Hunger Mountain

      Dan P. LEE

      4:52 on Christmas Morning, New York Magazine

      J. ROBERT LENNON

      The Cottage on the Hill, Unstuck

      BEN LERNER

      Contest of Words, Harper’s

      GIDEON LEWIS-KRAUS

      Dance Dance Revolution, GQ

      PHILLIP LOPATE

      Why I Remain a Baseball Fan, Ploughshares

      CHARLES C. MANN

      State of the Species, Orion Magazine

      ANDY MARTIN

      Hair Piece: Derrida in the Wilderness, Raritan

      ERIK MARTINY Sartorius, Fjords

      KELLY MCEVERS

      The Crackdown, The Washington Monthly

      DAVID MCGLYNN

      Leviathan, Creative Nonfiction

      BRUCE MCKAY

      The Wheel at the Cistern, Zyzzyva

      KYLE MELLEN

      Lighting in You a Tremendous Fire, The Mid-American Review

      CHINA MIEVILLE

      Oh, London, You Drama Queen, The New York Times Magazine

      MARY MILLER

      He Says I Am a Little Oven, The Mid-American Review

      OTTESSA MOSHFEGH

      Disgust, The Paris Review

      LENORE MYKA

      Wood Houses, West Branch

      DINA NAYERI

      Arya, The Alaska Quarterly Review

      AMANDA PARRISH

      Prime Time, N+1

      KIRK PERRY

      Heaven’s Chief Musician, The Alaskan Quarterly Review

      RICHARD POWERS

      Genie, Byliner

      JOSEPHINE ROWE

      The Vending Machine at the End of the World, The Iowa Review

      SABRINA RUBIN ERDELY

      The Gangster Princess of Beverly Hills, Rolling Stone

      EMILY RUSKOVICH

      An Impending Change of Heart, Zoetrope: All-Story

      KAREN RUSSELL

      Reeling for the Empire, Tin House

      RUSS RYMER

      Vanishing Voices, National Geographic

      ELI SANDERS

      The Shooter, River Teeth

      ELI SASLOW

      A Trip to the Threshing Floor, ESPN the Magazine

      GEORGE SAUNDERS

      The Semplica-Girl Diaries, The New Yorker

      ELIZABETH SCHULTE Borders, Ninth Letter

      MOLLY SENTELL HAILE

      Wild Man Blues, Oxford American

      MAGGIE SHIPSTEAD

      The Great Central Pacific Guano Company, American Short Fiction

      JOHANNA SKIBSRUD

      The Electric Man, Ecotone

      ANNA DELLA SUBIN

      A Very Still Life, Bidoun

      LAURA VAN DEN BERG

      Lessons, American Short Fiction

      MARK WARREN

      Daddy: My Father’s Last Words, Esquire

      DANIEL WESSLER RIORDAN

      The Earth Will Swallow You, Indiana Review

      TOM WILLIAMS

      The Hotel Joseph Conrad, Jelly Bucket

      JANE WONG

      Unsent Correspondence, Memoir Journal

      JENNY ZHANG

      Outsider/Insider, Rookie

      About 826 National

      Proceeds from this book benefit youth literacy

      A LARGE PERCENTAGE OF the cover price of this book goes to 826 National, a network of eight youth tutoring, writing, and publishing centers in eight cities around the country.

      Since the birth of 826 National in 2002, our goal has been to assist students ages 6–18 with their writing skills while helping teachers get their classes passionate about writing. We do this with a vast army of volunteers who donate their time so we can give as much one-on-one attention as possible to the students whose writing needs it. Our mission is based on the understanding that great leaps in learning can happen with one-on-one attention, and that strong writing skills are fundamental to future success.

      Through volunteer support, each of the eight 826 chapters—in San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Ann Arbor, Chicago, Seattle, Boston, and Washington, DC—provides drop-in tutoring, class field trips, writing workshops, and in-schools programs, all free of charge, for students, classes, and schools. 826 centers are especially committed to supporting teachers, offering services and resources for English Language Learners, and publishing student work. Each of the 826 chapters works to produce professional-quality publications written entirely by young people, to forge relationships with teachers in order to create innovative workshops and lesson plans, to inspire students to write and appreciate the written word, and to rally thousands of enthusiastic volunteers to make it all happen. By offering all of our programming for free, we aim to serve families who cannot afford to pay for the level of personalized instruction their children receive through 826 chapters.

      The demand for 826 National’s services is tremendous. We work with more than 6,000 volunteers and over 30,000 students nationally. We host hundreds of field trips and workshops, and we welcome over 200 students per day for after-school tutoring. At many of our centers, our field trips are fully booked almost a year in advance, teacher requests for in-school tutor support continue to rise, and the majority of our evening and weekend workshops have waitlists.

      826 National volunteers are local community residents, professional writers, teachers, artists, college students, parents, bankers, lawyers, and retirees from a wide range of professions. These passionate individuals can be found at all of our centers after school, sitting side-by-side with our students, providing one-on-one attention. They can be found running our field trips, or helping an entire classroom of local students learn how to write a story, or assisting student writers during one of our Young Authors’ Book Programs.

      All day and in a variety of ways, our volunteers are actively connecting with youth from the communities we serve.

      To learn more or get involved, please visit:

      826 National: www.826national.org

      826 San Francisco: www.826valencia.org

      826 New York: www.826nyc.org

      826 Los Angeles: www.826la.org

      826 Chicago: www.826chi.org

      826 Ann Arbor: www.826mi.org

      826 Seattle: www.826seattle.org

      826 Boston: www.826boston.org

      826 Washington, DC: www.826dc.org

      826 VALENCIA

      Named for the street address of the building it occupies in the heart of San Francisco’s Mission District, 826 Valencia opened on April 8, 2002 and consists of a writing lab; a street-front, student-friendly retail pirate store that partially funds its programs; and satellite classrooms in two local middle schools. 826 Valencia has developed programs that reach students at every possible opportunity—In school, after school, in the evenings, or on the weekends. Since its doors opened, over fifteen hundred volunteers—including published authors, magazine founders, SAT course instructors, documentary filmmakers, and other professionals—have donated their time to work with thousands of students. These volunteers allow the center to offer all of its services for free.

      826 NYC

      826NYC’s writing center opened its doors in September 2004. Since then its programs have offered over one thousand students opportunities to improve their writing and to work side by side with hundreds of community volunteers. 826NYC has also built a satellite tutoring center, created in partnership with the Brooklyn Public Library, which has introduced library programs to an entirely new community of students. The center publishes a handful of books of student writing each year.

      826 LA

      826LA benefits greatly from the wealth of cultural and artistic resources in the Los Angeles area. The center regularly presents a free workshop at the Armand Hammer Museum in which esteemed artists, writers, and performers teach their craft. 826LA has collaborated with the J. Paul Getty Museum to create Community Photoworks, a months-long program that taught seventh-graders the basics of photographic composition and analysis, sent them into
    Los Angeles with cameras, and then helped them polish artist statements. Since opening in March 2005, 826LA has provided thousands of hours of free one-on-one writing instruction, held summer camps for English language learners, given students sportswriting training in the Lakers’ press room, and published love poems written from the perspectives of leopards.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026