Shapiro’s writing also appears in Electric Literature, Poets and Writers, and Literary Hub (forthcoming). A former housing attorney and non-profit leader, she is a 2026 MFA candidate at Randolph College in Virginia.
At Electric Lit Shapiro tagged eight novels "set in countries that have fractured, shifting our maps and our conceptions of the world. The reconfigurations covered on these pages take many different shapes, but all are born of violence, and the scars are still visible." One title on the list:
The Ministry of Pain by Dubravka UgrešićRead about the other entries on the list at Electric Lit.
Dubravka Ugrešić’s narrator is a Yugoslav woman living in Amsterdam after the disintegration of her country. She gets a job teaching studentswho also came from Yugoslavia, and together they seek to document memories of their now fractured home. This thought-provoking novel raises many questions about displacement and loss. Is it even possible to speak of “our country”, “our people”, and “our language” in the aftermath of war and division? Can there be shared memories of a home country that no longer exists? In the narrator’s words, “with the disappearance of the country came the feeling that the life lived in it must be erased.” As the narrator’s life spirals out of control, she seeks to hold onto an identity that is no longer recognized, while building a future in a place that remains foreign.
--Marshal Zeringue














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