10 Books to Read This March – Chicago Review of Books

10 Books to Read This March – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] March is always one of our favorite months of the year for books, and this year is no exception! We’re especially excited to see so many great books are out this month from independent presses. Here are some of the books we’re most looking forward to this month. Recollections of My NonexistenceBy Rebecca SolnitViking … Read more

Bent but Not Broken – Chicago Review of Books

Bent but Not Broken – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Remaining insulated from the real world is no longer an easy choice for Wallace in Brandon Taylor’s novel, Real Life. After discovering his grad school biochem research had been contaminated by a jealous and racist peer, setting him back weeks if not months, he leaves the lab to meet with friends only to spend … Read more

10 Sci-Fi and Fantasy Stories to Read Online For Free – Chicago Review of Books

10 Sci-Fi and Fantasy Stories to Read Online For Free – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Need to escape from the dire state of the world? Try reading one of these transporting short stories, all published in 2019 or 2020. Crossing the genres of science fiction, fantasy, and speculative fiction, these stories offer escapes into worlds even stranger than ours. (Full transparency: I’m including all four stories I commissioned for … Read more

A Scathing Portrayal of Our Culture and Political Climate – Chicago Review of Books

A Scathing Portrayal of Our Culture and Political Climate – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Books, perhaps more so than other media, have the remarkable ability to stay timeless after generations on end. The author’s dilemma is finding balance between establishing setting through concrete detail without allowing the material to become dated. But what happens when the author throws this idea out the window? Jeet Thayil’s Low could only … Read more

An Estranged View of the World – Chicago Review of Books

An Estranged View of the World – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] How will the climate crisis impact the planet’s most marginalized communities? That question is at the heart of the Arthur C. Clarke Award-winning author Anne Charnock’s latest novel, Bridge 108. Like her three previous novels, this one reveals how large, systemic problems like economic stratification and climate change are tightly entwined. Her latest is … Read more

Transcending “Kung Fu Guy” – Chicago Review of Books

Transcending "Kung Fu Guy" – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the world of Interior Chinatown, Asian Americans don’t get to play the dashing leads in TV shows. They don’t even get to be the everyman. Limited to one-dimensional roles like Egg Roll Cook, Young Dragon Lady, and Striving Immigrant, there’s no way to advance beyond the exoticism or “perpetual foreigner” status that comes … Read more

A Nuanced Look at Creativity – Chicago Review of Books

A Nuanced Look at Creativity – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Cathy Park Hong’s latest book, Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning, asks readers to be open to nuance and hold two sometimes contradictory notions simultaneously. The Los Angeles-born writer details the peculiarities of identifying as Asian American—a term stretched to encompass a broad swath of people whose ancestors emigrated from the same continent. As Hong … Read more