The Unadorned Grace of “Agatha of Little Neon” – Chicago Review of Books

The Unadorned Grace of “Agatha of Little Neon” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] A common refrain in the teaching of the craft of writing, to whatever extent that can in fact be done, is that one’s form and content, story and structure, should each be sculpted with the other in mind, a sort of mechanical drinking bird for the art of fiction, where the pressures of one … Read more

Already binged season 2 of Outer Banks? Here’s your perfect read!

Already binged season 2 of Outer Banks? Here’s your perfect read!

[ad_1] If you already obsessively watched season 2 of Outer Banks on Netflix and are craving the romance, waterside drama, and wild plot twists, allow us to introduce you to your next perfect read: Dark and Shallow Lies  by Ginny Myers Sain! Scroll down to read more about the this twisty debut, and click here to start reading the … Read more

Cover Reveal: CINDER & GLASS by Melissa de la Cruz

Cover Reveal: CINDER & GLASS by Melissa de la Cruz

[ad_1] Today we’re revealing the cover for Cinder & Glass by Melissa de la Cruz, the Cinderella retelling you’ve been waiting for! Though, for this princess, winning the crown is no fairytale. 1682. The king sends out an invitation to all the maidens in France: their presence is requested at a number of balls and events that will be … Read more

Gender and Greatness in “She Who Became the Sun” – Chicago Review of Books

Gender and Greatness in “She Who Became the Sun” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Who do stories belong to? Some would say a story belongs to the author who wrote it, and copyright law would back up that interpretation, at least for the first 75 years after publication. In the case of a story based on a person from history or myth, the discussion broadens: is ownership even … Read more

The Fleeting Oomph of “Intimacies” – Chicago Review of Books

The Fleeting Oomph of “Intimacies” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Katie Kitamura’s fourth novel, Intimacies, is deeply concerned with place. At lunch with her boss, our unnamed protagonist is asked, “Where is your family,” meaning, where do you belong? It’s a question that comes up more than once, and one the protagonist can’t answer. She’s stuck between cultures, between languages, between moral positions; even … Read more

Unleashing Inner Monsters in “Nightbitch” and “A Touch of Jen” – Chicago Review of Books

Unleashing Inner Monsters in “Nightbitch” and “A Touch of Jen” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Recently I got coffee with a friend and we fell, as one does these days, to talking about the awkward process of socializing again in the post-pandemic world. “I feel like I’m emerging from a cave with these weird new habits I have to explain,” she said. I compared myself, not entirely ironically, to … Read more

Poignancy and Optimism in “The Past is Red” – Chicago Review of Books

Poignancy and Optimism in “The Past is Red” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “My name is Tetley Abednego, and I am the most hated girl in Garbagetown.” From this very first sentence of The Past is Red by Catherynne M. Valente, Valente ensures her readers know where Tetley stands. Tetley knows too, but it doesn’t bother her. “Everyone says they only hate me because I annihilated hope … Read more

Otherworldly Encounters in “Strange Beasts of China” – Chicago Review of Books

Otherworldly Encounters in “Strange Beasts of China” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Caveat lector. You’ll have a decision to make when you start reading Yan Ge’s Strange Beasts of China. Will you willpower yourself to one story a night and savor each paragraph, immersing deeply in an alternate world? Or will you forego sleep and race through, riding the momentum of breathtaking inventions and repetitions that … Read more

Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell in Dante Alighieri’s “Purgatorio,” Translated by Mary Jo Bang – Chicago Review of Books

Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell in Dante Alighieri’s “Purgatorio,” Translated by Mary Jo Bang – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Reading the poet Mary Jo Bang’s new translation of Dante Alighieri’s Purgatorio, I thought of a widely-circulated photograph from the COVID pandemic. An Italian doctor in a surgical gown and two face masks holds a sign reading, “When this hell ends:/…And then we emerged again to see the stars.” The quote is from the … Read more

Flâneurs and the Found Poetry of the City in “To Walk Alone in the Crowd” – Chicago Review of Books

Flâneurs and the Found Poetry of the City in “To Walk Alone in the Crowd” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] ​​The narrator of Antonio Muñoz Molina’s To Walk Alone in the Crowd is a man with a 20th-century sensibility exiled in the excesses of the 21st. He’s recovering from a terrifying depressive episode, in a state alternating between “the twin poles” of nostalgia and anxiety. And because he is, above all, a passionate reader, … Read more