India World | Tor.com

India World | Tor.com

[ad_1] One day, Rohit receives the opportunity of a lifetime; a job offer in India with promises of fulfilling the sense of purpose he’s so desperately sought after in a country that seems to have forgotten him. Or so he thinks.     Rohit took a tentative step out of Indira Gandhi International, ducking as … Read more

Delving into the Soul of Art in “The Long Corner” – Chicago Review of Books

Delving into the Soul of Art in “The Long Corner” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] What is art, and maybe more importantly, what isn’t art? It’s a question that only seems to gain relevance, as more and more narratives come to us in the form of franchises, brand tie-ins, and other forms of marketing disguised as story. Thankfully, Alexander Maksik’s latest novel, The Long Corner, is none of those … Read more

Coping with Grief and Reconnecting with Identity in “She Is Haunted” – Chicago Review of Books

Coping with Grief and Reconnecting with Identity in “She Is Haunted” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Paige Clark’s debut short story collection, She Is Haunted, considers how we handle loss in the modern world. Whether due to a casual fling mistaken for intimacy, or the death of a loved one, navigating the end of complicated relationships can raise the question of how much control we have over our own identities. … Read more

Escaping Patriarchal Exploitation in ‘Avalon’ – Chicago Review of Books

Escaping Patriarchal Exploitation in ‘Avalon’ – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Nell Zink’s debut, The Wallcreeper, splashed onto the literary scene eight years ago, a slim volume about a woman trying to find her place in the world despite the patriarchy. Since then, Zink has published four more novels. In her newest, Avalon, she returns to themes found in her debut.   The protagonist and narrator, … Read more

Arbitrium | Tor.com

Arbitrium | Tor.com

[ad_1] Vashti is a pathogenic diplomat—an ambassador to the world of viruses, whom she communicates with through a machine that can translate their chemical signals into images, tastes, smells, sounds, and memories. She begins a negotiation between the US Government and a diplomatic contingent from Arenavirus, a virus which has just begun spreading a deadly … Read more

We All Have a Hunger in “You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty” – Chicago Review of Books

We All Have a Hunger in “You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Five years after the death of her husband, visual artist Feyi Adekola is starting to come out of her shell, wondering if it’s possible to love again. After some casual dating, she starts a mostly platonic—but possibly more serious—relationship with Nasir Blake, a well-connected consultant. Feyi’s personal and professional lives are suddenly thrown into … Read more

10 Books I Love by AAPI Writers – Chicago Review of Books

10 Books I Love by AAPI Writers – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] For most people who study literature in school, be it at the high school, collegiate, or graduate level, we embrace the Western canon at the exclusion of other work, and to truly grow as a reader it takes a conscious unlearning. For me, I’ve found tremendous meaning in contemporary works by BIPOC writers.  In … Read more

A Feel-Bad Romance” – Chicago Review of Books

A Feel-Bad Romance” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Fasten your seatbelts and make sure you know where the oxygen masks are: John Waters’ first novel Liarmouth: A Feel-Bad Romance is a hopscotching, subversive and full-versive, madcap version of Planes, Trains and Automobiles. Though I don’t want to spoil the plot’s twists and twists and twists—it’s a delicious literary strawberry Twizzler embedded with … Read more