“I was obsessed with the notion of a poem as a kind of social grenade,” declares a major figure in Allegra Hyde’s “Eleutheria.” She and her creator both, I’d say. Hyde plants all sorts of IEDs in her ...
New collections by Allegra Hyde, Daphne Kalotay, Tova Reich and Alejandro Varela range in subject from everyday minutia to our dystopian future. Credit...John Gall Supported by By Gwen E. Kirby The ...
"Eleutheria is propulsive, lyrical, and intimate--a book that's deeply invigorating and endlessly thrilling. In a novel that confronts utopias and dystopias, alongside their promises and burdens and ...
Allegra Hyde was young when she first realized that although she was most likely too nervous to chain herself to a tree, she did want to find a way to save them. “I’ve always been someone who cared ...
Hyde (Eleutheria) continues in the vein of her previous dystopian fiction with an inventive speculative collection. In “The Future Is a Click Away,” Hyde considers the trade-offs of online shopping, ...
In her sensitively constructed debut collection, Hyde weaves 12 short stories into an uplifting examination of fractured utopias—paradoxical and imaginary worlds that each generation has failed to ...
Mary Allegra Hyde, 42, passed away at her home in Springfield, Missouri, on Thursday, April 3, 2025 of complications from Moyamoya disease. Allegra and her twin sister were born in South Korea and ...
“I was obsessed with the notion of a poem as a kind of social grenade,” declares a major figure in Allegra Hyde’s “Eleutheria.” She and her creator both, I’d say. Hyde plants all sorts of IEDs in her ...
From “Dear Employee,” which was published in Issue 80 of Conjunctions. The announcement came in the mail: effective immediately, everyone was assigned a new job. Pay was $0 a week.… ...
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