A Love Letter to Adventurous Women in “The Arctic Fury” – Chicago Review of Books

A Love Letter to Adventurous Women in “The Arctic Fury” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Greer Macallister’s thrilling historical fiction novel, The Arctic Fury, is a love letter to adventurous women, unlikely friendships, and finding possibilities in a bleak, unforgiving wilderness. Set in the 1850s, a mysterious, wealthy woman hires guide Virginia Reeve to lead an expedition to find her husband lost in the Arctic North. The novel opens … Read more

Canonical Queerness and Gothic Horror in “Plain Bad Heroines” – Chicago Review of Books

Canonical Queerness and Gothic Horror in “Plain Bad Heroines” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In 1902 at The Brookhants School for Girls, The Story of Mary MacLane is found on the bodies of Flo and Clara, two girls, in love, stung to death by yellow jackets in an apple orchard. The little red book mysteriously disappears, only to be found again and again by the women who need … Read more

Recovering Narratives in “Black in the Middle” – Chicago Review of Books

Recovering Narratives in “Black in the Middle” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Black Midwesterners live complex lives full of love, creativity, and community; but, that’s not usually the story told in mainstream depictions of Middle America. In 2017, scholars, artists, activists, and students banded together at the University of Minnesota to form the Black Midwest Initiative to promote work that more accurately captured the truth of … Read more

Theo Germaine – Chicago Review of Books

Theo Germaine – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “The Artist’s Bookshelf” is a column about books that inspire the CHIRB staff’s favorite artists. Theo Germaine has range. If you’ve seen them in Abby McEnany’s Work In Progress on Showtime, you’ll know them as Chris, the compassionate, joyful love interest of the protagonist, Abby. Together, they run around Chicago backdrops I know and … Read more