Trauma, T.V. and Time Travel Shape Identity in “Flux” – Chicago Review of Books

Trauma, T.V. and Time Travel Shape Identity in “Flux” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Jinwoo Chong’s debut novel Flux bends time and identity equally as three characters take turns sharing the narrative spotlight in a story that explores trauma, regret, Americanness and dealing with everything in between. Bo, who is eight years old, suffers the tragic loss of his mother and finds solace in a detective show. Brandon, … Read more

The Boundary Between Intrigue and Obsession in “Y/N” – Chicago Review of Books

The Boundary Between Intrigue and Obsession in “Y/N” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] You may scoff, but I attribute the day that I watched my first K-pop video as one of the most influential days in my short life.  In May 2020, the Minnesota lakes were heating up amidst a raging pandemic. I returned home in March as everything shut down, desperate for stability while people fell … Read more

Laird Hunt Takes This World Sentence by Sentence – Chicago Review of Books

Laird Hunt Takes This World Sentence by Sentence – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] A friend explains that the world is divided into paragraph and sentence writers. A paragraph writer is like a brick mason, working with consistent materials and focused on maintaining a clean line as a wall unfolds. Building a stone wall, a sentence writer in contrast begins with a pile of rocks—clots of material formed … Read more

“I Had to Have a Different America:” An Interview with Catherine Lacey about “Biography of X” – Chicago Review of Books

“I Had to Have a Different America:” An Interview with Catherine Lacey about “Biography of X” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Open Catherine Lacey’s Biography of X and you will find a fictional book called Biography of X—though its writer, CM Lucca, admits early on that the title is a lie. Lucca’s wife, X, a multidisciplinary artist with a career full of controversy, has died and an unauthorized biography has been published. Lucca is determined … Read more

The Moral Sacrifices of Love in “Tell Her Everything” – Chicago Review of Books

The Moral Sacrifices of Love in “Tell Her Everything” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] By most accounts, one is considered a wild success if he grows up in poverty in a rural village in India and then overcomes the obstacles imposed by those circumstances to become become a surgeon in London, then a senior department leader in a hospital, and then retires in a riverside penthouse—the type of … Read more

A Conversation with Aram Mrjoian – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation with Aram Mrjoian – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Anthologies are simultaneously one of the most important venues for literature and an almost impossible task to create. Readers expect to be enlightened on multiple levels, with each individual entry telling a cohesive story while also working collectively with the other entries to add up to a larger meaning. At the heart of every … Read more

“as if time has already collapsed, and at the same time, extends, reaches:” Notes and Dispatches from Peter Orner and Robert Lopez

“as if time has already collapsed, and at the same time, extends, reaches:” Notes and Dispatches from Peter Orner and Robert Lopez

[ad_1] The review is late. I’m stalling. Every attempt is a false start, a throat clearing. I stare out the window, nuzzle the dog, dispel a crust of sleep from his eye. Soon, my children will leave home and I’ll have no one to over-parent but the dog. Already I’m bereft. I get up to … Read more

Trauma, Memory, and Innocence in Künstlers in Paradise – Chicago Review of Books

Trauma, Memory, and Innocence in Künstlers in Paradise – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Salomea Künstler, known as Mamie and all of eleven, has just arrived in California with her parents and grandfather when Cathleen Schine’s Künstlers in Paradise begins. An orange tree grows in the garden of their new home in Santa Monica, and in the “odd, shining fog” of their first morning, they ate oranges, “as … Read more

A Conversation with Patricia Smith About “Unshuttered” – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation with Patricia Smith About “Unshuttered” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] A list of Patricia Smith’s achievements in poetry could take up much of this interview. A poet, playwright, essayist, educator and mentor, she’s deservedly won nearly every accolade and award, including the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize for lifetime achievement, and earlier this year she was elected a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. … Read more

Blurring Relationship Boundaries in “Thirst for Salt” – Chicago Review of Books

Blurring Relationship Boundaries in “Thirst for Salt” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Our unnamed narrator meets Jude, a local antique dealer and washed-up actor, while on vacation with her mother in an isolated Australian coastal town. Jude is forty-two. Our narrator is twenty-four. Jude recognizes her copy of Marguerite Duras’s The Lover. Our narrator is smitten. And so we embark on a doomed romance serving as … Read more