Current Issue

This issue of VQR features the kind of extraordinary, expansive photography that has come to define the magazine for the better part of two decades. Lynn Johnson’s portfolio of portraits revolves around a curious art project that has turned a hardscrabble Sicilian neighborhood into a public veneration of the community’s mothers. Veteran reporter Bianca Stancanelli pens the introductory essay (translated by Antony Shugaar), through which readers will come to know the history of this fascinating, often-overlooked part of Southern Italy.

Meanwhile, Alessandro Cosmelli’s riveting portraits and landscapes help bring to life Marzio Mian’s in-depth reporting tour of the Russia–Estonia border—arguably among the most vulnerable borders in Europe’s face-off with Russia. Through their extensive investigative project, translated by Elettra Pauletto, Cosmelli and Mian deliver a story whose images and prose move the sensory details of this Eastern European front closer with all its tension and even flashes of macabre humor.

Finally, Mandy Barker offers a lush and layered photo essay that possesses the hypnotic vividness of a cabinet of curiosities. This time, however, the main subjects are Australia’s Flesh-footed Shearwaters, birds that mistakenly but habitually feed on the tiny plastic debris in the surrounding ocean waters. Barker’s autopsy is as mesmerizing as it is chilling, and it does more in its simple gestures of cataloging the Shearwaters’ plight than any white paper on marine pollution, laying out the visual testimony on the ravages of plastic in the Earth’s waters.

The issue also includes Sofi Thanhauser’s essay on how the “war on cancer”—a campaign originating with the Nixon administration’s public-health platform—has been a boon for Big Pharma while providing cover for Congresses that have yet to address the environmental causes of cancer.

In Donovan Hohn’s reported essay on 2024’s double emergence of cicada broods, an entomological curiosity becomes a meditation on the measures of time and the fluid relationship between humankind and its understanding of the fauna that surround it.

Bill Cheng, Mimi Lok, and William Pei Shih contribute fiction. The issue also includes poetry by Nikki Giovanni, Leslie Harrison, Sacha Marvin, Erin L. McCoy, and Catherine Pond. The #VQRTrueStory columns see Louie Palu continue his behind-the-scenes look into the performances of politics and Capitol Hill photography and JDSH reinterpret the constraints of visa-photo requirements. Illustrator Gambineri introduces a new story to their comic noir series. And Walton Muyumba picks up his Deep Cuts column by exploring the power of Meshell Ndegeocello’s musical translations.

Cover photo by Lynn Johnson.

Summer 2025

Volume 101, Number 2

Cover photo by Lynn Johnson. Portraits of women of Librino as public art installation on side of a roadway. Cover photo by Lynn Johnson.
Print: $20.00
Digital download: $20.00

Table of contents

Reporting 
Essays 
Photography 
Fiction 
Poetry 
Editor's Desk 
Open Letter 
VQR Vault 
#VQRTrueStory 

Contributor Profiles

Mandy Barker is an internationally acclaimed British photographer celebrated for her work involving marine plastic debris. Barker was the recipient of the 2023 International Understanding Through Photography Award, the Royal Photographic Society Environmental Bursary, and a National Geographic Society grant, among others.

Nikki Giovanni (1943–2024) was a poet, activist, mother, grandmother, and educator who grew up in Tennessee and Ohio and graduated with honors from Fisk University in Nashville. The author of more than thirty books, she received seven NAACP Image Awards, the Langston Hughes Medal for Outstanding Poetry, an Emmy Award, and thirty-one honorary degrees. She garnered her most unusual honor in 2007 when a South American bat species—Micronycteris giovanniae—was named in celebration of her. A devoted teacher, she was an honorary member of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., and spent thirty-five years as University Distinguished Professor of English at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia.

Donovan Hohn is the author of The Inner Coast: Essays (Norton, 2020) and Moby-Duck: The True Story of 28,800 Bath Toys Lost at Sea (Viking, 2011), a New York Times Notable Book and runner-up for the PEN/John Kenneth Galbraith Award for Nonfiction and the PEN/E. O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award. He is acting editor of Lapham’s Quarterly.

Mimi Lok is a writer, editor, oral historian, and consultant working at the intersection of narrative and social justice. Her book, Last of Her Name (Kaya Press, 2019), won a PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize and a California Book Award. Lok was also the recipient of a Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award for Social Progress for her work with the nonprofit Voice of Witness, which uses oral history to amplify marginalized voices.

Marzio G. Mian is an award-winning Italian author and correspondent at large covering cultural, social, and geopolitical issues. A former deputy editor in chief for Corriere della Sera, he is now a special contributor for Internazionale, Vanity Fair Italy, Harper’s Magazine, Reportagen, and the Guardian. Mian cofounded The Arctic Times Project, a nonprofit association of journalists based in the US that focuses on the impact of climate change on the Arctic region. He was recently awarded the True Story Award for best reportage worldwide. Mian’s sixth book, Volga Blues: A Journey into the Heart of Russia, is forthcoming (Norton, 2026).

Spring 2025 Centennial Issue Cover
Spring 2025
Volume 101, Number 1
Spring 2024 Cover; Photo by Mathias Depardon
Spring 2024
Volume 100, Number 1
Fiction Issue Cover. Photo by Adam Ekberg.
Fiction 2024
Volume 100, Number 2
Fall 2024 Cover. Cover art by Johanna Goodman.
Fall 2024
Volume 100, Number 3