Refusing the Spectacle of Post-Apocalyptic Survival in “Termush” – Chicago Review of Books

Refusing the Spectacle of Post-Apocalyptic Survival in “Termush” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Termush, a 1967 novella by Sven Holm (translated into English by Sylvia Clayton), is an understated accounting of events at a luxury resort that has been transformed into a safe haven for a select group of survivors of a nuclear disaster. While concerns about wealth inequality and post-apocalyptic survival remained relevant throughout the Cold … Read more

A Conversation with Beth Uznis Johnson – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation with Beth Uznis Johnson – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] You never can tell where life will take you. When I met Beth Uznis Johnson at an MFA alumni event for Queens University of Charlotte, she lived in Michigan, and I lived in Chicago. Who’d have guessed that a decade later, she’d live a few blocks from me, and we’d meet for Monday writing … Read more

A Brutal History Reimagined in “You Dreamed of Empires” – Chicago Review of Books

A Brutal History Reimagined in “You Dreamed of Empires” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] When the Mexica emperor Moctezuma sent his emissaries to report on the Spanish conquistadors under Hernán Cortés in 1519, neither side understood what the other was saying. It was only through a chain of translations between a Franciscan friar named Aguilar who spoke some Mayan and a young Nahuatl woman given to Cortés as … Read more

An interview with İnci Atrek, Author of Holiday Country – Chicago Review of Books

An interview with İnci Atrek, Author of Holiday Country – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] First thing, let me get something out of the way: I’ve known İnci Atrek, author of Holiday Country, for a long time. We went to Wellesley College together and both took an especially memorable travel writing class our senior year. I saw the earliest glimmers of Holiday Country in the personal essays Atrek shared … Read more

A Study of the Complex Humanity Behind True Crime in Kate Brody’s Novel “Rabbit Hole” – Chicago Review of Books

A Study of the Complex Humanity Behind True Crime in Kate Brody’s Novel “Rabbit Hole” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] We live in a golden age of the armchair detective, a person who aims to help solve a real-life mystery without the official qualifications for such work. Global fascination with true crime has led to an explosion of documentaries, websites, online forums, and more; a 2023 Pew Research Center study1 found that true crime … Read more

10 Books to Read When You Want To Feel Better About Your Dysfunctional Family – Chicago Review of Books

10 Books to Read When You Want To Feel Better About Your Dysfunctional Family – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] If your fondest holiday memories also involve hiding in the bathroom (or closet, or floorboard, or passenger seat of your cool older cousin’s car) to get a moment’s peace from your [insert adjective] family, you’re probably already sold on a distraction. Books can’t yell at you! Or guilt you! Or punish you! Unless they … Read more

Our Favorite Debuts of 2023 – Chicago Review of Books

Our Favorite Debuts of 2023 – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I both love and hate end of the year book lists—love because they’re fun roundups full of great titles. But they also make me cringe, even silently rage, because without fail, they leave out amazing books that deserve the spotlight, arguably more than the mega bestsellers often dominating the lists. But the cold mechanics … Read more

In Solidarity with the Shattering in “The White Mosque” – Chicago Review of Books

In Solidarity with the Shattering in “The White Mosque” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the winter of 2016, in a classroom on the ground floor of the English department where I teach, my colleagues and I gathered to hear Sofia Samatar give a job talk for a tenure-track teaching position. The classroom had once been part of a large indoor pool, specifically the shallow end, whose only … Read more

Neurodiversity and Exhaustion in “All the Little Bird-Hearts” – Chicago Review of Books

Neurodiversity and Exhaustion in “All the Little Bird-Hearts” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] This year’s Booker prize longlist has featured numerous introspective, hyperfocused character studies, and Viktoria Lloyd-Barlow’s All the Little Bird-Hearts is no exception. Centering Sunday Forrester, an eccentric woman who lives her life according to a highly structured, self-made routine, the novel takes an intriguing and slightly sinister turn as new neighbors move in: the … Read more

On Writing Through Loneliness – Chicago Review of Books

On Writing Through Loneliness – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] A few months into the pandemic, the apartment building across the street from mine had a parking lot party. Tucked away in the tree-lined Germantown section of Philadelphia on a hot summer day this was unusual. Over the months leading up to that afternoon, my neighborhood of buses, cars, and a lively population had … Read more