A Feel-Bad Romance” – Chicago Review of Books

A Feel-Bad Romance” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Fasten your seatbelts and make sure you know where the oxygen masks are: John Waters’ first novel Liarmouth: A Feel-Bad Romance is a hopscotching, subversive and full-versive, madcap version of Planes, Trains and Automobiles. Though I don’t want to spoil the plot’s twists and twists and twists—it’s a delicious literary strawberry Twizzler embedded with … Read more

Embracing the Eternal Present in “The Hurting Kind” – Chicago Review of Books

Embracing the Eternal Present in “The Hurting Kind” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the first poem of the much-anticipated new collection from poet Ada Limón, The Hurting Kind, Limón wonders: “Why am I not allowed / delight? A stranger writes to request my thoughts / on suffering”. The collection that follows is Limón’s response to the stranger, and an exhortation to the reader: as much about … Read more

Celebrating Poetry Month with a Dozen Collections – Chicago Review of Books

Celebrating Poetry Month with a Dozen Collections – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I don’t really know why I do this to myself. There’s no way to narrow down the fantastic poetry of any year into a brief list. Personal tastes aside, my hope is that you pick up as many poetry books—and chapbooks—as you can. Though the focus of this list is contemporary poetry, read any … Read more

Portrait of the Artist Transforming Grief in “Time Is a Mother” – Chicago Review of Books

Portrait of the Artist Transforming Grief in “Time Is a Mother” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Like many, I’ve been eagerly anticipating Ocean Vuong’s Time Is a Mother, his second collection of poems following the success of Night Sky with Exit Wounds and his debut novel On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous. But whether it’s a sign of our temporally unrooted times or my increasingly scattered mind, I found myself considering … Read more

An Interview With Meghan O’Rourke About “The Invisible Kingdom” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview With Meghan O’Rourke About “The Invisible Kingdom” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Talking with Meghan O’Rourke—the accomplished poet and editor-in-chief of The Yale Review—about her new book was a rare and meaningful opportunity for a substantive personal and professional conversation about a subject that impacts every aspect of my day-to-day life. Deciding how to write an introduction for this interview presented the real challenge: how much of … Read more

The Many Shades of Passion in “A Hundred Lovers” – Chicago Review of Books

The Many Shades of Passion in “A Hundred Lovers” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] After two years of physical and psychic anxiety and what feels like a permanent, unwanted reframing of our bodies in the world and in proximity to others, there’s something especially beautiful and necessary about Richie Hofmann’s A Hundred Lovers.  Wandering through this collection is similar to a luxurious meander through one’s favorite museum, with … Read more

Replications and Multiverses in “Present Tense Machine” – Chicago Review of Books

Replications and Multiverses in “Present Tense Machine” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Your appreciation of Gunnhild Øyehaugh’s Present Tense Machine, translated by Kari Dickson, will be partially predicated on how much you think about multiverses, or déjà vu, or ever have had the indescribable sense of something missing, in yourself, in others. What elevates this novel beyond the admittedly fascinating realm of such scientific ruminations is … Read more

Poetry Collections for Midwinter Nights – Chicago Review of Books

Poetry Collections for Midwinter Nights – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In Persian culture, on the winter solstice, we have a variety of rituals to mark the longest night of the year, one of which is to read poetry. Perhaps it’s no surprise that poetry books are some of my favorites to review, given that cultural DNA. Concurrently, at this time of year in the … Read more

A Literary Thanksgiving From Chicago Review of Books – Chicago Review of Books

A Literary Thanksgiving From Chicago Review of Books – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Thanksgiving is upon us, and I’m especially grateful for my Chicago Review of Books colleagues, whose collaborative generosity and literary talents are matched by their passion for books of all kinds. I asked them an impossible question, which, as is my wont, turned in a multi-part query: what’s a book that you’re thankful for, or return … Read more

An Interview with Kaveh Akbar – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Kaveh Akbar – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It’s been several years since Calling a Wolf a Wolf shot into the literary consciousness, and since its tremendous success, the award-winning poet Kaveh Akbar has also made a measurable impact as an educator, the current Poetry Editor of The Nation, and a remarkably generous poetry supporter. His sophomore collection, Pilgrim Bell, enters into … Read more