Monthly- Archives: March 2026



TIMPER XU

Rather than saying Larry’s essay is a pure reflection on the Idaho chapter of State by State: A Panoramic Portrait of America, saying that it is a guide that leads readers to understand the history that is behind this chapter would be more reasonable and accurate.

Anthony Doerr

The series, WPA State Guides is the starting point of this history: it is the first series that gathered and edited the information of every state, which revealed how the USA isn’t only what you see in your own hometown or state.

Decades later, State by State is written; it is more interesting, shorter, and easier to understand compared to the “lengthy books named the WPA State Guides”. 

In A Panoramic Portrait of America, every author of every state is independent, so every chapter is equally important and interesting, and when we consider that we live in a federal republic of fifty more or less interdependent states with their own governments and laws, we can see that the book is a valiant and accurate reflection of our country. 

Look at Idaho! The author never wrote boring, dry, outdated history: the author shown his views on Idaho with the conflicts between the US government and “the Tukudeka tribe”, the author wrote about the natural landscape, and his own thinkings about change (“The history of our planet is one of absolutely relentless change. Everything…eventually goes extinct”). 

The most special part of A Panoramic Portrait of America is that it is alive, you can feel emotions and thoughts from it, like a person telling you a tale from their hometown.



HARRISON WANG

Midwinter

The snowy backyard, with a grey stone patio, 

on top of it a puddle of 

blurry ice. With 

a great orangish yellow sunset

beginning,

the tree, all 

leafless and dead, stands there

still 

with tiny bits of snow on its branches. Grey 

stairs, chipped and chiseled 

throughout many years, have a

tiny finish of 

ice on top. The old umbrella used for 

sunbathing is battened down.

The

entire backyard is beat

down, old.

Three Pictures of Winter

The ground is covered in white snow

The sky above is light blue

Tall trees stand very still

They have no leaves on them

Long shadows lay on the snow

Everything is quiet and calm.

It is a peaceful winter.

A white wooden roof stands in the yard

Chairs sit under it in the snow

Red seats look cold and hard

No one is sitting there now

Footprints are pressed in the snow

The sun shines softly on a slant 

The air is chilly and fresh, though. 

Warm inside, I take the shot. 

The driveway is dark and smooth

Snow is piled on both sides

Tall trees stand near the road

The sun is low in the sky

Shadows stretch across the ground

The light is soft and warm

The cold air fills the yard

The day is almost over.