" . . . my writing works against the literary morés, standards, culture, and legacies. As a disabled writer, who is also gay and Jewish, I often write at the intersection of these identities."
Read More"A finely honed philosophical and autobiographical reflection on transcendence and self-acceptance."
Read More"In Tanizaki’s story we are shown how disability can, in certain contexts, be advantageous, as well as how the nondisabled use disability for their own purposes."
Read More"As a disabled writer, I’m wary of using a medical marker to define an era, because HIV/AIDS is a sociopolitical issue as well as a medical one."
Read More"If ever I needed the presence of the gods, now is the time. . . . Ever since finding out the test results in Dr. Shay’s office, I have felt, for what seems like the first time, that my life has been split—now there is a before and an after."
Read MoreEchoes of the extermination of the 'unfit' carried out by the Third Reich can still be heard today.
Read More"I was told most people with disabilities were hidden away, a combination of lack of access and family shame. However, as I began to discover, disability has been an important, one might even say crucial, part of Japanese culture for a very long time."
Read More"I realize why the guidebook photo is a close-up of a tiny corner edge of the garden: it is impossible to see all at once; the experience of Ryōan-ji is cumulative."
Read More"In the unsettled and often angry world of disability politics, Kenny Fries' memoir enters centre stage, projecting an oasis of calm and insightful enquiry."
Read More". . . to read it is to experience what true literary achievement really means," says Julia Bouwsma in her Connotation Press review.
Read More"As In the Province of the Gods shows, Japan was the right place at the right time. It changed my life."
Read MoreArt and Understanding Magazine's review says In the Province of the Gods is written "from a unique perspective, with singular personal insight, and an ironic sense of humor."
Read MorePublishers Weekly includes In the Province of the Gods in its "Be Here Now" round-up of ten travel titles to read this fall.
Read MoreOn the 72nd anniversary of the atomic bombing in Hiroshima Kenny Fries remembers his meeting with Suzuko Numata.
Read MoreIn the Gardens of Japan has been published by Garden Oak Press. The poem sequence is a companion to In the Province of the Gods.
Read MoreForeword, in its upcoming August issue, reviews In the Province of the Gods: "Beneath the restrained tones, there's also elation. . . . This unusual blend of travelogue and introspection manages elegance and rawness in the same breath."
Read MoreRead Kenny Fries's essay "What's Wrong with This Picture?" in Hineni Magazine.
Read MoreRead Kenny Fries's contribution to the Letters to the Revolution project.
Read MoreRebecca Maskos's interview with Kenny Fries that originally appeared in German in Mondkalb has been translated into English and can read at Lambda Literary.
Read MoreRead Kenny Fries's poem "To the Poet Whose Lover Has Died of AIDS" at The Good Men Project.
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