The Specter of Something More in “Ghost Station”

The Specter of Something More in "Ghost Station"

[ad_1] The eeriness and isolation of uncolonized, hostile worlds make S.A. Barnes’s sophomore novel, Ghost Station, feel claustrophobic. Yet it also remains a work about community and personhood that centers on self-knowledge and self-chosen identity. These opposing thematic threads reflect the motivating force of the story personified in Ophelia Bray, the black sheep of an … Read more

The Cage of Idealism in “The Dimensions of a Cave” – Chicago Review of Books

The Cage of Idealism in “The Dimensions of a Cave” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Some of our best literary characters, such as Adrian Veidt in Alan Moore’s Watchmen or Jay Gatsby, fall from grace due to their idealism being overtaken by bitterness and calculating utilitarianism. Their perspective is lost and therefore so is the world they are striving to achieve. What made them so compelling at first was … Read more

Mapping the Interior by Proceeding through the Exterior in “A Flat Place” – Chicago Review of Books

Mapping the Interior by Proceeding through the Exterior in “A Flat Place” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Memoirs have sometimes been considered a form of fiction, not as false accounts but by being enriched with the layering of symbols, place, and affable narration. Noreen Masud’s A Flat Place: Moving Through Empty Landscapes, Naming Complex Trauma picks up these tools and employs them to full effect, as she takes the reader further … Read more

Chronic Illness Memoir as Epitaph In “Neither Weak Nor Obtuse” – Chicago Review of Books

Chronic Illness Memoir as Epitaph In “Neither Weak Nor Obtuse” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Jake Goldsmith’s memoir opens with both a statement and a confession: “I am very ill. That would be the first and most obvious thing to know.” Suffering from a unique form of cystic fibrosis, he knew early on that he would die far sooner than his peers and that the deterioration of his body … Read more

The Refractions of Death and of Pandemic in “How High We Go In The Dark” – Chicago Review of Books

The Refractions of Death and of Pandemic in “How High We Go In The Dark” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] What is there to say when you are confronted by a dying loved one in the midst of a pandemic? Most of us have more than likely had to answer that question more frequently, courtesy of COVID-19. Sequoia Nagamatsu’s debut novel, How High We Go In The Dark, tackles this issue, through a different … Read more

Meditations on Collective Guilt, Culpability, and the Natural World in “The Impossible Resurrection of Grief” – Chicago Review of Books

Meditations on Collective Guilt, Culpability, and the Natural World in “The Impossible Resurrection of Grief” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The world is dying and it is all humanity’s fault—an on the nose observation, but one that encapsulates Octavia Cade’s novella, The Impossible Resurrection of Grief. We meet marine biologist Ruby in a near-future Australia, immersed in her study of jellyfish while dealing with the fallout of a colleague and friend drowning in the … Read more