Art and Individuality in “The End Of The World is a Cul de Sac” – Chicago Review of Books

Art and Individuality in “The End Of The World is a Cul de Sac” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] What do we ask of art? How, indeed, can we know what it is? On this, the philosophers tend to disagree. At some level, we know it when we see it, as the Supreme Court once said about some other hard-to-define thing. In the twenty-first century, it is probably the most politic to say … Read more

A Manifesto for Progressive Bookselling in “The Art of Libromancy” – Chicago Review of Books

A Manifesto for Progressive Bookselling in “The Art of Libromancy” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Bookseller, co-owner, and self-proclaimed libromancer at Porter Square Books in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Josh Cook offers us a backstage view of some of the inner workings of the world of independent bookselling in his new work of nonfiction. What is a libromancer, you might ask? The suffix –mancer indicates someone who uses magic and the … Read more

10 Books, Art, and Music That Embody the City – Chicago Review of Books

10 Books, Art, and Music That Embody the City – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In avery r. young’s words, these are “10 Chicago, books, art, music that I dig. People do what they want to do. Check them out or miss out.” We couldn’t agree more. The Curtis album By Curtis Mayfield Curtom Records, 1970 It’s like the funk of Cottage Grove found its way to The Lyric … Read more

Art, Love, and Rivalry in 1920s Paris” – Chicago Review of Books

Art, Love, and Rivalry in 1920s Paris” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Kiki de Montparnasse. Such a great name. It’s an exciting name, an erotic name, a name that evokes a certain place and a certain time. But it’s not a name that we immediately recognize, although her image is. I asked my small circle of friends and associates—most of whom have more than a passing … Read more

Translation as Art and Science in “Translating Myself and Others” – Chicago Review of Books

Translation as Art and Science in “Translating Myself and Others” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It is tempting to separate the arc of Jhumpa Lahiri’s career in two distinct eras—her early work, sparse, understated fiction of the Indian diaspora, and her later work, in and out of the Italian language and immersed in Italian culture. Yet, upon reading her collection of essays Translating Myself and Others, which focuses primarily … 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

The Art of the Smith in “Companion Piece” – Chicago Review of Books

The Art of the Smith in “Companion Piece” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “There’s a way to be playful even in times of really terrible doubt,” posits the narrator of Ali Smith’s new novel Companion Piece. It’s hard to think of an author more playful than Smith, whose work consistently breaks the conventional rules of contemporary fiction as taught in most American MFA programs—with consistently incandescent results. … Read more

Life, Art, and Fiction in “Love” – Chicago Review of Books

Life, Art, and Fiction in “Love” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] For all the antagonizing, ruminating, and even moralizing that comes with defining the parameters of literary fiction, perhaps the one point of (near-) universal agreement debators enjoy is over the notion that such a book should be in some way realistic, should faithfully reflect life and those who live it. How this is to … Read more

The Art of Dying in “Aurelia, Aurélia” – Chicago Review of Books

The Art of Dying in “Aurelia, Aurélia” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Maybe it’s odd to compare your husband’s cancer diagnosis to the plot of Lost. Maybe it’s odd to recognize the absurdity of death’s first partial hold on us in the structure of a television show. Yet this is precisely what Kathryn Davis does in her memoir: she sees that “the system governing [cancer’s] bestowal … Read more