Immortal Longings in “The Stars Undying” – Chicago Review of Books

Immortal Longings in “The Stars Undying” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “Give me my robe. Put on my crown. I have / Immortal longings in me,” announces Shakespeare’s Cleopatra, in one of her famous—and final—invocations. In Emery Robin’s sweeping space opera, The Stars Undying, Cleopatra’s crucial accessory is not her crown but a pearl-sized computer, alleged to contain the consciousness of Alekso, her god. This … Read more

Exploring Utopian Possibility in “The Mandorla Letters” – Chicago Review of Books

Exploring Utopian Possibility in “The Mandorla Letters” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] While award-winning creative flutist, composer, and bandleader Nicole Mitchell Gantt is no longer based in Chicago, she has certainly left a legacy. She was the first woman president of Chicago’s Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) and founder of the Black Earth Ensemble (BEE), “a musical celebration of the African American cultural … Read more

Where in the (Modern) World is Africa? – Chicago Review of Books

Where in the (Modern) World is Africa? – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The old adage begins with a drunkard and a streetlight. Hunched over, he strains his eyes toward the ground; cursing, as he looks for the keys he has somehow misplaced on his nightly walk home. A neighbor strolls by and our drunkard—now quite desperate for a helping hand—explains his predicament. The neighbor asks while … Read more

A Satire of Russian Life in Alisa Ganieva’s “Offended Sensibilities” – Chicago Review of Books

A Satire of Russian Life in Alisa Ganieva’s “Offended Sensibilities” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Vladimir Sorokin’s Day of the Oprichnik imagines a near-future dystopia in which a wall separates Russia from the rest of the world and the old Tsarist autocracy has been restored, complete with Ivan the Terrible’s Oprichnina, a sixteenth-century forerunner of the secret police. Sorokin’s novel, which was translated by Jamey Gambrell, envisions a Russian … Read more

The Line Between the Original and the Imposter in “Case Study” – Chicago Review of Books

The Line Between the Original and the Imposter in “Case Study” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “Who is to say which is the original and which is the imposter?” queries Graeme Macrae Burnet in his 2022 Booker-Prize-nominated novel, Case Study. The question is applicable to a character in the novel, to documents reproduced within the novel and, most intriguing, to the author himself. Burnet is the ultimate unreliable narrator, and … Read more

An Interview with Jamil Jan Kochai – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Jamil Jan Kochai – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Jamil Jan Kochai was sitting with his parents, aunts, uncles, and cousins on the second story of his aunt’s home in Logar, Afghanistan, sipping tea and taking in the evening breeze around sunset, when his phone buzzed, and he saw that he was tagged in a tweet by the National Book Foundation. But before … Read more

Self-Examination in “Novelist as a Vocation” – Chicago Review of Books

Self-Examination in “Novelist as a Vocation” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] If an aspiring storyteller were to pick up Haruki Murakami’s Novelist as a Vocation, translated by Philip Gabriel & Ted Goossen, expecting a step-by-step guide to putting a novel together, they may well be disappointed. However, what Murakami’s memoir does offer is certainly of equal value. It is one novelist looking back over his … Read more

The Failed Promise of the American Dream in “Cheap Land Colorado” – Chicago Review of Books

The Failed Promise of the American Dream in “Cheap Land Colorado” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] One version of the American dream is based on the idea of owning a piece of the land. That dream seems harder to achieve every year for most Americans priced out of home ownership. Colorado’s San Luis Valley promises an exception. Cheap land can be yours in five acre plots at an affordable price. … Read more

Landscapes of Memory in Dorthe Nors’ “A Line in the World” – Chicago Review of Books

Landscapes of Memory in Dorthe Nors’ “A Line in the World” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Lines suggest beginnings and endings, possibilities and limits, differences and connections. Lines can be made by humans. Hand-drawn borders on maps mark one sovereign’s subjects from another’s, their consequences cascading down generations in languages spoken and traditions shared. Lines can be made by nonhumans, too. The horizon stretches across the sea. Waves reach up … Read more

Translating Narrative Tension in “Traces of Boots on Tongue” – Chicago Review of Books

Translating Narrative Tension in “Traces of Boots on Tongue” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] When an occupation has ended, what do we have left? Traces of Boots on Tongue: And Other Stories addresses the question in micro and macro forms, within the narratives of the story, and in a broader sense of time and place. Set in the early years of independent India, this short story collection delves … Read more