Focus: Supply Chains
Volume 46, Number 3
Fall 2025
Excerpts available through Project Muse; full articles available to Project Muse subscribers.
From the Editor
The Paradox of Postliberal Humanism by Jeffrey R. Di Leo
Focus: Supply Chains
Introduction: Supply-Chain Capitalism by Christopher Breu and Jeffrey R. Di Leo
The Beer Game by Miriam Posner
Out of Supply, Indefinitely by Jeffrey R. Di Leo
Supply Chains in a Blasted Landscape by H. Aram Veeser
Rich Man’s Cognitive Mapping? by Crystal Bartolovich
The Fentanyl Supply Chain, or Corporations as Cartels by Gina Arlene Stinnett
Israel, Divestment, and the American Libidinal Order by Nicole Simek
Organizing Life in the Ruins of Supply-Chain Capitalism by Tierney S. Powell
Everything Airy Becomes Solid by Christopher Breu
Sound
Fiction
Sharon O’Dair reviews Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck
Jonathan Cohen reviews In My Eyes, You are Beautiful by David Unger
Edward M. Bury reviews You Shouldn’t Worry about the Frogs by Eliza Marley
Brian Counter reviews Parade by Rachel Cusk
Lori O’Dea reviews The Worst Thing of All Is the Light by José Luis Serrano
David Celani reviews Wild about Harry by Henry Grinberg
Jane Rosenberg LaForge reviews The Atlas of Remedies by Paul Jaskunas
Screenplay
Jim Feast reviews The Crucifixion of Truth: A Screenplay by Bernard Starr
E-feature
Cartographies
Elizabeth T. Gray Jr. reviews T’shuvah by Richard Jeffrey Newman
Jerry Harp reviews Best Barbarian: Poems by Roger Reeves
Miho Kinnas reviews Sukun: New and Selected Poems by Kazim Ali
T.C. Marshall reviews In the River of My Sleep by Paul Dresman
Michael T. Young reviews Dora/Lora by Larissa Shmailo
Sara Massafra reviews Anon by Steven Seidenberg
Rhina P. Espaillat reviews Poems of Good Love … and Sometimes Fantasy by Pedro Mir
Law
Julie Stone Peters reviews Judicial Uses of Images: Vision in Decision by Peter Goodrich
Technology
Memoir
Anna Rollins reviews Teeth: An Oral History by John Patrick Higgins
Criticism
From Our Own
Scenes
Sagging Meniscus Press: An Interview with Jacob Smullyan
Poetics to Come
Do We Need a Poetics of Stupidity Now? by Daniel T. O’Hara
The Departed
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ARCHIVES
Archives: Charles Johnson reviews Richard Wright
Charles Johnson reviewed Richard Wright's American Hunger in the inaugural issue of the American Book Review, Volume 1 , No. 1, December 1977.








