Diego Báez On Memory, Language and Belonging – Chicago Review of Books

Diego Báez On Memory, Language and Belonging – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Where are your roots? How does language—that which you speak and that which speaks through you, if not literally then ancestrally—shift your identity and place in the world at large, and in your own community? Diego Báez’s collection Yaguareté White is an assured and intelligent debut that is lyrical and powerful, sharply examining such … Read more

Separation and Belonging in “Bride of the Sea” – Chicago Review of Books

Separation and Belonging in “Bride of the Sea” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] One of fiction’s greatest possibilities is how it can exist as something both intimate and grand, simultaneously exploring the life of a character and the world they are growing into, until one narrative unfolds into many. Bride of the Sea does just this, as the novel intertwines the dissolution and reconstruction of a single … Read more

Belonging and metaphysical horror in “That Time of Year” – Chicago Review of Books

Belonging and metaphysical horror in “That Time of Year” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It’s hard to sum up Marie NDiaye’s That Time of Year (Un temps de saison, translated from French by Jordan Stump), a short novel that unfolds with a dreamlike logic. Every year Herman, a math teacher from Paris, spends the month of August with his wife Rose and their son in a small country … Read more