Celebrating The Mystery of How Language Courses Through The Body: An Interview with Ae Hee Lee

Celebrating The Mystery of How Language Courses Through The Body: An Interview with Ae Hee Lee

[ad_1] Born in South Korea, raised in Peru, and currently living in the United States, Ae Hee Lee is a citizen of the world, and of the word; and that’s reflected in Asterism, which was selected by the esteemed John Murillo for the 2022 Dorset Prize. It’s indicative of the collection that an asterism is … Read more

A Conversation with Ani Gjika about “An Unruled Body” – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation with Ani Gjika about “An Unruled Body” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Ani Gjika’s An Unruled Body follows the author from the turbulent final years of Albanian communism through an era of transition and on to a somewhat fated path to Boston—as a matter of fact, it is her “grandmother’s faith that gets [her] family to the U.S.” In this memoir, the passage from girlhood to … Read more

The Mourning Body in “Swim Home to the Vanished” – Chicago Review of Books

The Mourning Body in “Swim Home to the Vanished” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Grief is a powerful emotion. It demands and deserves respect. We may fight it, repress it, or swim against it, but in the end, denying grief only prolongs the pain that must eventually come. For the poet and novelist Brendan Shay Basham, that reckoning transpires in the body. While the mind may try to … Read more

Permission, Encouragement, and Proof in “Body Work” – Chicago Review of Books

Permission, Encouragement, and Proof in “Body Work” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The four essays in Body Work, the new book by Melissa Febos, pull at several underlying power struggles that are inherent in acts of creative writing: vulnerability risks judgment, writing your side of the story privileges your memories and perspective over others in the story, presenting a perspective at odds with hegemonic forces invites … Read more

The Body and Environment in “Variations on the Body” – Chicago Review of Books

The Body and Environment in “Variations on the Body” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The characters in María Ospina’s debut collection are haunted by the marks that time and trauma have left upon their bodies. Variations on the Body (translated from the Spanish by Heather Cleary) features a cast of loosely connected characters, all hailing from Ospina’s hometown of Bogotá, Colombia. Thematically, with its emphasis on the complex … Read more

The Body of History and the Memory of Home in “The Wild Fox of Yemen.” – Chicago Review of Books

The Body of History and the Memory of Home in “The Wild Fox of Yemen.” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Yemeni American poet and translator Threa Almontaser won the 2020 Walt Whitman Award of the Academy of American Poets for her brilliant debut poetry collection, The Wild Fox of Yemen. Her poems touch on young rebellion, the thin veil of protection a language grants you, and how history is often stored in the body. … Read more

Storytelling is Power in “A Girl is a Body of Water” – Chicago Review of Books

Storytelling is Power in “A Girl is a Body of Water” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Kirabo presses against the boundaries of tradition in her small village of Nattetta, Uganda. She does not outright reject her people’s customs, but her desire to learn where she comes from—specifically, the history of her mother—drives her to seek help along the edge of what tradition allows to find her own way into womanhood. … Read more

Chronic Complexities in “If the Body Allows It” – Chicago Review of Books

Chronic Complexities in “If the Body Allows It” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I’ve been lucky enough to know Megan Cummins for over a decade, ever since we did an MA in Creative Writing together at UC Davis. It’s been thrilling to see her sharp, lyrical, and hilarious stories find a final form in her debut collection, If The Body Allows It. The book centers on Marie, … Read more