The Refractions of Death and of Pandemic in “How High We Go In The Dark” – Chicago Review of Books

The Refractions of Death and of Pandemic in “How High We Go In The Dark” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] What is there to say when you are confronted by a dying loved one in the midst of a pandemic? Most of us have more than likely had to answer that question more frequently, courtesy of COVID-19. Sequoia Nagamatsu’s debut novel, How High We Go In The Dark, tackles this issue, through a different … Read more

Context and Contradiction in “Lorraine Hansberry” – Chicago Review of Books

Context and Contradiction in “Lorraine Hansberry” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Chicago-born author Lorraine Hansberry was one of the most significant playwrights of the twentieth century. In 1959, her work A Raisin in the Sun became the first play written by a Black woman to be performed on Broadway. Its brilliance has never dimmed: the play continues to be performed regularly on both professional and … Read more

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

Becoming Alive in Death, as Examined in “Life of the Party” and “Dreaming of You” – Chicago Review of Books

Becoming Alive in Death, as Examined in “Life of the Party” and “Dreaming of You” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the acknowledgments of the novel Dreaming of You, author Melissa Lozada-Oliva includes the following credit: “Thank you Olivia Gatwood, for being so obsessed with dead girls & dying with me.” At this point in her career, such an expression of gratitude is no surprise; poets Lozada-Oliva and Gatwood’s work have been integrally intertwined … Read more

A Tale of Resilience and Survival in “Out Front the Following Sea” – Chicago Review of Books

A Tale of Resilience and Survival in “Out Front the Following Sea” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Ruth Miner, a young woman living in a brutal 17th-century New England, can’t seem to catch a break. She flees her hometown after allegations of witchcraft and becomes a stowaway on a ship with her childhood friend Owen Townsend as the first mate, but danger abounds amidst the other lecherous crew members. And this … Read more

Stuck Somewhere Around Purgatory in “To Paradise” – Chicago Review of Books

Stuck Somewhere Around Purgatory in “To Paradise” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Hanya Yanagihara is not merely a maximalist; she is more specifically a writer of extremity. In internet terms, her novels are a lot: long, serious, and interested in the psychology of horrible people, or of un-horrible people trapped in horrible situations. They attempt to be less stylistically or conceptually dense than emotionally dense. A … Read more

The Collected Stories of Grace Paley with Jami Attenberg – Chicago Review of Books

The Collected Stories of Grace Paley with Jami Attenberg – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Welcome to another installment of a collaboration between the Chicago Review of Books and the Your Favorite Book podcast. Malavika Praseed, frequent CHIRB contributor and podcast host, seeks to talk to readers and writers about the books that light a fire inside them. What’s your favorite book and why? This week’s guest is Jami … 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

Writing Myself Home” – Chicago Review of Books

Writing Myself Home” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Jami Attenberg and I both hail from the Northwest suburbs of Chicago. Early in her new collection of essays, she even mentions my hometown by name, and from this entry point, I anticipated kinship. Her musings on the writing life, on self-actualization, on finding home in a variety of places, these all felt wholly relatable … Read more