Here comes a flood of literary brilliance. From June 20โ22, the Deep Water Literary Fest returns to the hamlet of Narrowsburg (pop. 370), and for one weekend a year, the Sullivan Catskills become the sun-dappled epicenter of the global literary brain trust. This yearโs themeโMetamorphosis and Transformationโis loose enough to let a hundred interpretations bloom and resonant enough to tie together a dazzling array of events: from the opening-night performance of Marie Howe’s poetry sung by soprano Jennifer Zetlan accompanied by pianist Kevin Hays to a fire-red fog of pink smoke unfurling across the landscape in Raphaele Shirleyโs 100 Pink Smoke Flares Twice.
The lineup is stacked like a bookshelf thatโs going to collapse on your head in the best possible way: Douglas Stuart (Shuggie Bain), Susan Choi (Trust Exercise), Marlon James (A Brief History of Seven Killings), Cristina Henrรญquez (The Great Divide), Peter Pomerantsev, Lynn Nottage, Rebecca Donner, Madeleine Thien, Burhan Sรถnmez, and more.
Let us pause here for a beat of deep admiration for Geoff Dyer, who will appear on a panel called โOn Becoming,โ alongside Choi and Stuart. Dyer, who has made a genre out of evading genre, is a sentence-level genius. He writes like someone who has both seen God and been embarrassed by the experience. His essays feel tossed off, in the way only something obsessively crafted can. There is no one else who could write a book that is kind of about D. H. Lawrence and kind of about trying not to write about D. H. Lawrence and call it Out of Sheer Rageโand make it work. His presence alone justifies the trip.
Elsewhere on the program, expect discussions of exile and displacement, historical resistance, literary remix culture (Kafka reimagined, anyone?), and more. The second annual Deep Water Independent Book Fairโcurated by Ahu Terzi of The Hound Books in Roscoeโreturns to Narrowsburg Union on June 21 to spotlight indie publishers and their daring catalogues.
โItโs thrilling to be able to bring two Booker Prize winners, two National Book Critics Circle Award winners, two Pulitzer Prize winners, and a National Book Award recipient to this river town on the New York-Pennsylvania border,โ says founder and director Aaron Hicklin. โBringing together writers and readers for a weekend of conversation, story-telling, and communion is indescribably magical.โ
What other literary event can pack this much star power into a town with fewer residents than a Brooklyn block? With two-thirds of events free and the rest a mere $15, Deep Water continues to democratize literary conversationโone transformative sentence at a time.
This article appears in June 2025.








