Rachel Hadas’s most recent books are Talking to the Dead (prose, Spuyten Duyvil, 2015), and Questions in the Vestibule (poems, Northwestern University Press, 2016). She is currently completing verse translations of Euripides’s two Iphigenia plays. Hadas is Board of Governors Professor of English at Rutgers-Newark.
CONTRIBUTOR ARTICLES

“Within Our Walls”: The Theater of War’s Production of Aeschylus’s “The Suppliants”
Rachel Hadas appreciates Theater of War’s production of Aeschylus’s “The Suppliants,” featuring Ukrainian actors....

A Tree of Many: A Review of Three New Poetry Anthologies
Rachel Hadas considers three recently released poetry anthologies....

“The Flavor Blooms in Warmth”: On Judith Baumel’s “Thorny”
Rachel Hadas appreciates the urgent concoctions of “Thorny,” a collection of poems by Judith Baumel....

“An Awful Order”: On Danielle Blau’s “p e e p”
Rachel Hadas hearkens to “p e e p,” an Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize-winning collection by Danielle Blau....

“A Country One Never Really Leaves”: On Allison Adair’s “The Clearing”
Rachel Hadas finds herself in “The Clearing” by Allison Adair....

Train of Thought: On Matt Morton’s “Improvisation Without Accompaniment”
Rachel Hadas reviews “Improvisation Without Accompaniment” by Matt Morton....

Art as Target. Art as Grid: On Mary Jo Salter’s “The Surveyors”
Rachel Hadas reviews Mary Jo Salter’s “The Surveyors.”...

Time’s Technique: On Lynne Sharon Schwartz’s “No Way Out But Through”
Rachel Hadas considers “No Way Out But Through” by Lynne Sharon Schwartz....
