Measured Violence in “Wild Houses”

Measured Violence in "Wild Houses"

[ad_1] The real world doesn’t deliver adversity in novel-sized chapters. Rarely do we enjoy perfect hindsight or the ability to glean meaning from violence or misfortune. In that sense, the unforgiving Ireland of Colin Barrett’s new novel, Wild Houses, feels uncomfortably familiar in its complexity and matter-of-fact ruthlessness.  Barrett accomplishes much with an economy of … Read more

The Gallows Humor of Alexander Sammartino’s “Last Acts” – Chicago Review of Books

The Gallows Humor of Alexander Sammartino’s “Last Acts” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It is difficult to talk about guns in America without talking about denial. With every new tragedy, we look the other way in a naive attempt to escape responsibility for our role in sustaining the cycle of gun violence.  Alexander Sammartino shows a keen sensitivity to this dynamic in his raucous, irreverent debut novel, … Read more

The Mystery of Consciousness in “The Apple in the Dark” – Chicago Review of Books

The Mystery of Consciousness in “The Apple in the Dark” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] We like to think we are masters of our bodies and minds and, for the most part, we possess total agency and comprehension of our thoughts and actions. This assumption is embedded so thoroughly in our society that it seems unnecessary to even observe it.  But that is exactly what the legendary Brazilian writer … Read more

The Mourning Body in “Swim Home to the Vanished” – Chicago Review of Books

The Mourning Body in “Swim Home to the Vanished” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Grief is a powerful emotion. It demands and deserves respect. We may fight it, repress it, or swim against it, but in the end, denying grief only prolongs the pain that must eventually come. For the poet and novelist Brendan Shay Basham, that reckoning transpires in the body. While the mind may try to … Read more

Yearning for Nature in Kathryn Bromwich’s “At the Edge of the Woods” – Chicago Review of Books

Yearning for Nature in Kathryn Bromwich’s “At the Edge of the Woods” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The pandemic forced everyone indoors, but while some spent their quarantine staring longingly out the window, growing stir crazy and desperate for human contact, others heaved a sigh of relief, secretly grateful for an excuse to shut out our chaotic, complicated society. Author and journalist Kathryn Bromwich clearly sympathizes with both views. In fact, … Read more