“Since the 2016 U.S. presidential election, many of my nondisabled American friends often blithely talk about leaving the country and settling elsewhere. Often, I read Facebook posts about their intentions to move,. . .When I post a comment mentioning the difficulties that a person with a disability faces when immigrating, the few replies are basically “I never knew.”
Read MoreIn honor of Kenny’s reading in Mexico City, four of his poems were published by tallerigutur.com in Spanish translations by Maria Vázquez Valdez and Andrés Millán Calhoun.
Read More“What do teacups have to do with religion? . . . It is upon these teacups that Cunningham dances—yes, you’ve read that right, she dances on teacups—as she upends our preconceptions about both religion and disability.”
Read MoreKenny on the Disability Beat for How We Get To Next: “How Everyday Language Harms People with Disabilities.”
Read MoreKenny’s first monthly column, “The Stories We Tell About Disability,” is up at How We Get To Next.
Read More“If my time in Japan taught me anything, it is that in the ancient culture of Japan, unlike in the West, the idea of the actual, the original, does not seem to matter as much, or matter at all.”
Read MoreThe New York Times publishes Kenny as one of ten poets in “Poetry is a Way of Being in the World that Wasn’t Made For Us.”
Read More“Work by important disabled writers goes unnoticed by both mainstream publishers and reviewers. Meanwhile, books by nondisabled writers about their disabled children or siblings are given space in what is considered ‘the mainstream.’”
Read More"In the summer of 1989, I began searching for the words with which to begin speaking about my own experience living with a congenital physical disability . . ." So begins Kenny's essay, "The Body's World: Writing the Body Different,” now published by LA Review of Books.
Read MoreThe Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center, through a combination of conferences and residency programs, supports the work of scholars, artists, thought leaders, policymakers, and practitioners who share in the Foundation’s pioneering mission to “promote the well-being of humanity around the world.”
“The CMLP Firecracker Awards for Independently and Self-Published Literature spotlights books and magazines making a sparkling contribution to our literary culture, and publishers striving to introduce important voices to readers far and wide.”
Read MoreIn the Province of the Gods is a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in Gay Memoir/Biography.
Read More"Open the book to page ninety-nine and read, and the quality of the whole will be revealed to you."
- Ford Madox Ford
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"Is this why I came to Japan? To ferry my dead across the Tamagawa?"
Read More"All is color and excess bordering on “kitsch,” for which there is no Japanese word."
Read More"These books move disability from the margins to the center, where they provide a critical lens to look at how we—disabled and nondisabled alike—live, or might live, our lives."
Read More"Japanese culture looks at impermanence as a part of life. . . It permeates so much of the culture from noh to butoh to garden design to the wonderfully crazy obsession with flowers, most evident to us in cherry blossom festivities."
Read More“Being disabled my entire life, I have yet to experience the kind of loss that MM must feel. To me, disability is the norm.”
Read More"I have always loved the way [Kenny Fries's} writing links the events of his own life with questions raised by the narratives of history. I had much I wanted to ask him about after reading In the Province of the Gods."
Read More"What makes a life worth living? Do looks, ability, and talent make your life more valuable than someone else's? Kenny Fries has made it his life’s work to understand just that."
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