A Patchwork of Memories in “More Than Meat and Raiment” – Chicago Review of Books

A Patchwork of Memories in “More Than Meat and Raiment” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] What truly makes a home? While this is a pretty common question literature has posed to its readers, oftentimes authors have a number of deeper considerations to make when writing about something so fundamental to who they are. How can a writer rebuild a home from words alone? How is that connection with the … Read more

Congrats to the Winners of the 2021 CHIRBy Awards! – Chicago Review of Books

Congrats to the Winners of the 2021 CHIRBy Awards! – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] On December 9, 2021, we celebrated the 2021 CHIRBy Awards, co-presented by StoryStudio Chicago. Now in its sixth year, the CHIRBy Awards is a celebration of the Chicago literary community that honors the best Chicago-focused fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and short essays. Congratulations to this year’s winners and to our incredible finalists! (You can read … Read more

Lives and Legacies in “Three Girls from Bronzeville” – Chicago Review of Books

Lives and Legacies in “Three Girls from Bronzeville” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The Chicago literary tradition was built by the foot. Where Los Angeles had the glamour and New York had the grandeur, some of the most influential writers made Chicago come alive on the page through the most intimate depictions of the most intimate of landmarks, from a street in Bronzeville to a house on … Read more

Renarritivizing Violence Against Women in “The Comfort of Monsters” – Chicago Review of Books

Renarritivizing Violence Against Women in “The Comfort of Monsters” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I was first introduced to Willa C. Richards’s The Comfort of Monsters in a 2018 graduate-level writing workshop when Willa brought in two early chapters for discussion. It was the type of reading experience a reader never forgets. In the excerpt, the narrator Peg remembers going to a bar in Milwaukee’s Walker’s Point neighborhood … Read more

The Relentlessness of Real Life in “Who They Was” – Chicago Review of Books

The Relentlessness of Real Life in “Who They Was” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Gabriel Krauze wastes not a single word getting to the action in his debut. Where many novelists hold their readers’ hands in the opening pages, slowly introducing them to the narrator, the world, and the characters that inhabit it, Who They Was instead pushes them face first and mid-sentence: “And jump out the whip … Read more

The Possibility of Change and Movement in “The Five Wounds” – Chicago Review of Books

The Possibility of Change and Movement in “The Five Wounds” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I was first introduced to Kirstin Valdez Quade’s writing in a graduate workshop, when the professor led a discussion on the short story “Nemecia,” from her debut collection Night at the Fiestas. Since then, I return to this story whenever I reach the distinct point of writer’s block where I need to remind myself … Read more

Separation and Belonging in “Bride of the Sea” – Chicago Review of Books

Separation and Belonging in “Bride of the Sea” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] One of fiction’s greatest possibilities is how it can exist as something both intimate and grand, simultaneously exploring the life of a character and the world they are growing into, until one narrative unfolds into many. Bride of the Sea does just this, as the novel intertwines the dissolution and reconstruction of a single … Read more

An Interview with Matt Harvey of The TRiiBE – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Matt Harvey of The TRiiBE – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] At this year’s CHIRBy Awards, The TRiiBE Staff Writer Matt Harvey won the essay/short story prize for his article “When reporting on movement actions, revolutionary joy must be given the same space as the struggle.” What makes his essay particularly exceptional is also what makes it the journalistic standard at The TRiiBE. There are … Read more

Poems to Settle into in “House of Sound” – Chicago Review of Books

Poems to Settle into in “House of Sound” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] We’ve become wanderers in our own backyards these days. Without my daily commute on the bus and the random interactions with strangers that often come with it, I’ve found myself becoming more curious on my afternoon walks. I like to spot pets peeking their heads through open apartment windows, give a mask-veiled smile out … Read more

Monumental Insights in “Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey” – Chicago Review of Books

Monumental Insights in “Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Great historical fiction reaches beyond the era it explores to tell truths about our current moment. Kathleen Rooney achieves this in just the opening sentence of her new novel, Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey, as she writes “monuments matter most to pigeons and soldiers.” Her story follows Charles Whittlesey and homing pigeon Cher Ami, … Read more