“All Water Has Perfect Memory” – Chicago Review of Books

“All Water Has a Perfect Memory” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Chicago Review of Books is excited to feature the cover reveal of Nada Samih-Rotondo’s debut memoir, All Water Has Perfect Memory (out September 2023 with Jaded Ibis Press).  The blurb, author bio, and quotes that follow are all courtesy of the book’s publicist, Addie Tsai/ Levee Break Lit: “Life changed forever for six year … Read more

Revising Worlds and Worldviews in “Some Desperate Glory” – Chicago Review of Books

Revising Worlds and Worldviews in “Some Desperate Glory” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Emily Tesh’s World-Fantasy-Award-winning Silver In the Wood and its sequel Drowned Country are deeply lovely books: quiet, yearning, and full of ancient straining curses and redemption. Tesh turning her novelistic sights to space opera is an event that should make every speculative fiction reader take note: Some Desperate Glory is a masterful take on … Read more

“All Water Has a Perfect Memory” – Chicago Review of Books

“All Water Has a Perfect Memory” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Chicago Review of Books is excited to feature the cover reveal of Nada Samih-Rotondo’s debut memoir, All Water Has a Perfect Memory (out September 2023 with Jaded Ibis Press).  The following blurb, author bio, and following quotes are all courtesy of the book’s publicist, Addie Tsai/ Levee Break Lit: “Life changed forever for six … Read more

12 Must-Read Books from StoryStudio Authors – Chicago Review of Books

12 Must-Read Books from StoryStudio Authors – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] StoryStudio Chicago is celebrating its 20th Anniversary this year! The organization first opened its doors in 2003 with just four students. Today, StoryStudio has become an important literary institution in Chicago and across the country, welcoming more than 1,200 writers each year to dedicated writing classes, readings, events, festivals, and more. At its heart, … Read more

An Interview with Joe Milan Jr. on “The All-American” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Joe Milan Jr. on “The All-American” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Joe Milan Jr.’s debut novel, The All-American, follows Bucky Yi as he comes of age through some of the most harrowing events a teenager can witness: the poverty of his hometown, the near death of his only male role model, deportation, conscription into a foreign military, and the violence and madness resulting from isolation, … Read more

The Woman Carrying a Corpse

The Way Spring Arrives | Tor.com

[ad_1] We’re excited to reprint “The Woman Carrying a Corpse” by Chi Hui, translated from Chinese by Judith Huang, from the groundbreaking anthology The Way Spring Arrives and Other Stories, edited by Yu Chen and Regina Kanyu Wang, out now in paperback! “The Woman Carrying a Corpse” was originally published as 背尸体的女人 in December 2019 … Read more

An Aesthetic of Regret in “The Disappeared” – Chicago Review of Books

An Aesthetic of Regret in “The Disappeared” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the first story of Andrew Porter’s latest collection, The Disappeared, the narrator is a guest at a house party in Austin, Texas. He is middle-aged with a wife and two kids, and it’s his first time seeing his old friends together for some time. While they sit around a fire pit smoking cigarettes … Read more

An Interview with Elizabeth McKenzie on “Dog of the North” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Elizabeth McKenzie on “Dog of the North” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In Elizabeth McKenzie’s rollicking new novel Dog of the North, a woman named Penny is contacted by a man named Burt Lampey, who claims to be her grandmother Dr. Pincer’s accountant. When Burt asks Penny to help him evacuate her grandmother from her home in Santa Barbara, Penny agrees to— she’s recently suffered a … Read more

Lessons in Loving in “Blue Hour” – Chicago Review of Books

Lessons in Loving in “Blue Hour” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The shortest novels I have read tend to follow one of two trajectories: a steady build towards a climactic event, or regular shifts between calm and upset. Tiffany Clarke Harrison’s debut novel Blue Hour is of the latter variety, keeping you poised for disaster with the turn of every page. The multi-ethnic photographer who … Read more