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_roughdraft

Mansi

Women in Marigold(Stillhouse Press,2026)

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🏵️COVER REVEAL🏵️

@debutiful has the behind-the-scenes info on how the cover for WOMEN IN MARIGOLD by Mansi Dahal (@_roughdraft) was created!

The debut poetry collection is set to release on September 22, 2026, by @stillhousepress. The cover features photography by Tirtha Lawati (@tirthrabinlawati).

Head to Debutiful.net to read a Q&A with Dahal about how the cover was created.

#graphicdesign #novel #book #coverart #debutiful


297
34
3 weeks ago


I’m sharing this news with a strange mix of joy and disbelief that my debut poetry collection: WOMEN IN MARIGOLD, will be published in September 2026 by the brilliant team at @stillhousepress

Though being a poet has always felt like a private truth to myself (maybe even the truest center of who I am), in a world full of global disorder and chaos I keep asking: How to be a writer during these times? How to keep faith in language when it feels both urgent and inadequate?

This book for now carries some threads of what I’ve always longed to write. And moving forward I hope I’ll find the courage to say what needs saying and keep believing that language, even in its limit, can offer something.


487
105
7 months ago

I’m sharing this news with a strange mix of joy and disbelief that my debut poetry collection: WOMEN IN MARIGOLD, will be published in September 2026 by the brilliant team at @stillhousepress

Though being a poet has always felt like a private truth to myself (maybe even the truest center of who I am), in a world full of global disorder and chaos I keep asking: How to be a writer during these times? How to keep faith in language when it feels both urgent and inadequate?

This book for now carries some threads of what I’ve always longed to write. And moving forward I hope I’ll find the courage to say what needs saying and keep believing that language, even in its limit, can offer something.


487
105
7 months ago

I’m sharing this news with a strange mix of joy and disbelief that my debut poetry collection: WOMEN IN MARIGOLD, will be published in September 2026 by the brilliant team at @stillhousepress

Though being a poet has always felt like a private truth to myself (maybe even the truest center of who I am), in a world full of global disorder and chaos I keep asking: How to be a writer during these times? How to keep faith in language when it feels both urgent and inadequate?

This book for now carries some threads of what I’ve always longed to write. And moving forward I hope I’ll find the courage to say what needs saying and keep believing that language, even in its limit, can offer something.


487
105
7 months ago

I’m sharing this news with a strange mix of joy and disbelief that my debut poetry collection: WOMEN IN MARIGOLD, will be published in September 2026 by the brilliant team at @stillhousepress

Though being a poet has always felt like a private truth to myself (maybe even the truest center of who I am), in a world full of global disorder and chaos I keep asking: How to be a writer during these times? How to keep faith in language when it feels both urgent and inadequate?

This book for now carries some threads of what I’ve always longed to write. And moving forward I hope I’ll find the courage to say what needs saying and keep believing that language, even in its limit, can offer something.


487
105
7 months ago

I’m sharing this news with a strange mix of joy and disbelief that my debut poetry collection: WOMEN IN MARIGOLD, will be published in September 2026 by the brilliant team at @stillhousepress

Though being a poet has always felt like a private truth to myself (maybe even the truest center of who I am), in a world full of global disorder and chaos I keep asking: How to be a writer during these times? How to keep faith in language when it feels both urgent and inadequate?

This book for now carries some threads of what I’ve always longed to write. And moving forward I hope I’ll find the courage to say what needs saying and keep believing that language, even in its limit, can offer something.


487
105
7 months ago

I’m sharing this news with a strange mix of joy and disbelief that my debut poetry collection: WOMEN IN MARIGOLD, will be published in September 2026 by the brilliant team at @stillhousepress

Though being a poet has always felt like a private truth to myself (maybe even the truest center of who I am), in a world full of global disorder and chaos I keep asking: How to be a writer during these times? How to keep faith in language when it feels both urgent and inadequate?

This book for now carries some threads of what I’ve always longed to write. And moving forward I hope I’ll find the courage to say what needs saying and keep believing that language, even in its limit, can offer something.


487
105
7 months ago

Thawing 🧊🪭


303
10
2 weeks ago


Thawing 🧊🪭


303
10
2 weeks ago

Thawing 🧊🪭


303
10
2 weeks ago

Thawing 🧊🪭


303
10
2 weeks ago

Thawing 🧊🪭


303
10
2 weeks ago

Thawing 🧊🪭


303
10
2 weeks ago

Thawing 🧊🪭


303
10
2 weeks ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago


Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago


Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Asha Bhosle sings, “You don’t know what’s ahead of you; you don’t know what was behind. Whatever it is, it is this moment.” To the month of just living for the month, writing in friends living rooms and kitchens and dining tables and floating and dreaming and daydreaming. 🍭💭


275
5
2 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Things that kept me sane in this brutally cold month 🪭:
1. Ruth Asawa’s exhibition @themuseumofmodernart
2. Writing sessions @landtoseanyc
3. James Turrell’s skyspace @momaps1 🪂
4. Pandan Coconut iced latte @kinhfolk with @aliceevelynyang ‘s debut
5. Larissa Pham in conversation with Jamie Hood @booksaremagicbk
6. Vaginal Davis’s iconic desk
7. Japanese Breakfast @okonomi_yujiramen 🧂
8. Finally reading: The Year of Magical Thinking
9. @h_mohsin99 ‘s life-changing Bombay toast
10. @harsheeyss playlist at @snvvfkin ‘s living room. Sound or shelter? 🪩
11. Four women yelling across a busy bar.
12. Su-chefing for @bakingandmoshkari . White cake with brown-butter-sugar🍥


107
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Sun-warmed oranges, good Nepali cricket, long wanderings and meeting @beeeeekayyy after a decade! Ahhhh a life changing Kathmandu winter 🍊🧶


397
4
3 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

Buildings of Kathmandu that have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in 2025. Then there is faith, of-course,but only after cynicism. 🫀


390
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The only yearly wrap I have to offer is a landscape of my favorite writing spots:

1. The tall leather chair under that forgiving yellow light and the slim steel-legged desk. Portland, Maine.

2. The arched window overlooking Bouddhanath Stupa. Can’t slack in front of those unblinking eyes of Buddha. Kathmandu, Nepal.

3. A desk I call a writer’s dream. Trees swaying through the tall transparent windows, the chiaroscuro of light doing what it always does. Kalimpong, India.

4. A partitioned desk beside a stubborn old TV and a dusty DVD player. The furnitures always know how to pose. Music Library, Columbia University, New York.

5. To be Nepali means living next to the destructions and then the construction. Buildings and then rebuilding. Patan, Nepal.

6. The library stacks, chilled and dim, where I always wished to be wilder than my predictable rituals. Butler Library, New York.

7. Aftermath of a birthday: wilting bouquet and a lit scented candle. Harlem, New York.

8. Tall conifers interrupting the electricity poles. Off-frame: the mountains behind them, humbling everything. Lete, Nepal.

9. Aama’s tiny plant, a pile of books I told myself I’d finish in three months, and the spicy instant fish packets I carry in my purse everywhere. Biratnagar, Nepal.

10. Small flowers on the tables and baristas who knew my cortado by heart. My most-frequented café of 2025: Sipsteria, Upper West Side, New York.

11 & 12. The same desk: one lit by the devotion of night work and another bathed in daylight. Sunflowers and H-Mart snacks shall be seen in my future acknowledgement page. Harlem, New York.

13 My residency chair in Maine, a moment for its pointed elbows. Portland, Maine.


228
8
4 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

The festivals will come and go but my grandmother will not stop making her garlands 🪷🪕


234
1
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Excerpts from a new piece: a hybrid of personal essay and a play review, out now in @michiganquarterlyreview Full piece linked in bio.

@mishachowdhury ‘s work has held me again and again, but last May, after watching Rheology, I found myself acting its scenes out for my friends, calling my parents to tell them about specific moments, and re analyzing parts with friends who live far away. Because everyone who understood me needed to understand this play. Nothing can capture the experience except being in the theater itself, but here’s my attempt.


73
6
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

Thanks to my Master-ji for always bringing all my visions to life. The pleasure of a well fitting blouse is all I wish for everybody. 🪡🧵


238
7
5 months ago

☁️🎧 🚂


252
11
6 months ago

☁️🎧 🚂


252
11
6 months ago

☁️🎧 🚂


252
11
6 months ago


ストーリー保存 - ストーリー、リール、写真、ビデオ、ハイライト、IGTVをスマホに保存する最良の無料ツール

Story-save.comは、インスタグラムからストーリー、写真、ビデオ、IGTVなどのさまざまなコンテンツをダウンロードして保存するための直感的なオンラインツールです。Story-Saveを使えば、インスタグラムから簡単に多様なコンテンツをダウンロードでき、インターネット接続なしでも後で見ることができます。インスタグラムで面白いコンテンツを見つけたときに、後で見るために保存したいときに最適です。Story-Saveを使用して、インスタグラムでのお気に入りの瞬間をお見逃しなく!

私たちの利点:

登録不要

アプリのダウンロードやサインアップなしで、ウェブでストーリーを保存。

高品質なコンテンツ

低品質なコンテンツにさようなら、解像度の高いストーリーだけを保存。

すべてのデバイスでアクセス可能

どのブラウザ、iPhone、AndroidでもInstagramのストーリーをダウンロード。

完全無料で使用

完全に無料で、どのストーリーもダウンロード可能。

よくある質問

Instagramストーリーのダウンロード機能は、インスタグラムのストーリーを安全かつ高品質でダウンロードする方法を提供するために設計されています。ユーザーフレンドリーで、登録やサインアップは不要です。リンクをコピーして貼り付けるだけで、コンテンツを楽しめます。
Instagramのストーリーをダウンロードする手順は簡単です。
  • 1. Instagramストーリーダウンロードツールにアクセス。
  • 2. Instagramのユーザー名を入力し、ダウンロードボタンをクリック。
  • 3. 現在の24時間内に利用可能なすべてのストーリーが表示されます。ダウンロードしたいものを選んで、ダウンロード。
選択したストーリーは迅速にデバイスのローカルストレージに保存されます。
残念ながら、プライベートアカウントからストーリーをダウンロードすることは、プライバシー制限によりできません。
Instagramストーリーのダウンロードサービスには回数制限はありません。無制限に使用でき、完全に無料です。
はい、商業目的で使用しない限り、他のユーザーのInstagramストーリーをダウンロードして保存することは合法です。商業的に使用する場合は、元のコンテンツ所有者の許可を得て、ストーリーを使用するたびにクレジットを付与する必要があります。
ダウンロードしたストーリーは、通常、Windows、Mac、またはiOSのコンピューターのダウンロードフォルダに保存されます。モバイルデバイスの場合、ストーリーは電話のストレージに保存され、ダウンロード後すぐにギャラリーアプリに表示されます。