An Interview with Lesley Harrison on “Kitchen Music” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Lesley Harrison on “Kitchen Music” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “My house holds sound / like the sea inside a shell,” writes Lesley Harrison in the poem “Convergence.” And this is the sense one has while reading Kitchen Music, a poetry collection filled with as much sea and wind as a house on the coast of an island. Conversing with a variety of artists … Read more

10 Books That Depict Mental Health and Mental Illness – Chicago Review of Books

10 Books That Depict Mental Health and Mental Illness – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] This Mental Health Awareness Month, our team sat down to think about some of our favorite books that depict mental health and mental illness in thoughtful and considered ways. Living with mental illness can all too often be an isolating experience. Thankfully, books offer us a window into someone else’s mind and life, allowing … Read more

A Conversation with Annelyse Gelman about “Vexations” – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation with Annelyse Gelman about “Vexations” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Annelyse Gelman’s curiosity and passion for language, multi-disciplinary collaboration, and experimentation imbue all her projects. Two of them—her new full-length poem, Vexations, and website Midst—also prove her fascination with craft and process. In our free-ranging conversation—encompassing poems as objects, durational art, text scores, endless beginnings and endings, and generative collaborations—Gelman’s enthusiasms are front and … Read more

Impression and Expression in “The Lost Journals of Sacajewea” – Chicago Review of Books

Impression and Expression in “The Lost Journals of Sacajewea” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Of all the people who ever lived, only a tiny proportion have their names remembered by history. And even when someone’s name is remembered, celebrated, taught in the history books, the knowledge of who that person actually was—not just a name we recognize—is elusive. This is particularly true of women in history, and even … Read more

The Dignity of Life in “The Late Americans” – Chicago Review of Books

The Dignity of Life in “The Late Americans” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Brandon Taylor’s new novel, The Late Americans, begins with a character you wouldn’t want to be stuck with in your MFA workshop. Seamus is the only white male student in his graduate poetry seminar, where he doesn’t think anyone’s work is any good, since it’s all tied up in their individual traumas and not … Read more

From Surviving to Thriving in “Meet Me Tonight in Atlantic City” – Chicago Review of Books

From Surviving to Thriving in “Meet Me Tonight in Atlantic City” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] When you get to know someone, you aren’t presented with their life story in a linear narrative with well-timed beats. Instead, anecdotes and feelings bubble to the surface irregularly; clear personal development is established in retrospect, if at all. Jane Wong’s debut memoir, Meet Me Tonight in Atlantic City, resembles the latter, creating what … Read more

An Arc of Forgiveness in “Women We Buried, Women We Burned” – Chicago Review of Books

An Arc of Forgiveness in “Women We Buried, Women We Burned” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Rachel Louise Snyder’s propulsive new memoir Women We Buried, Women We Burned begins with the death of her mother. Her father then marries another woman, moves to the Midwest, and raises Snyder in a suffocating Christian household where religion is repeatedly used to justify abuse. Snyder’s impeccable prose lets us live vicariously through her … Read more

Transgenerational Trauma in “Close to Home” – Chicago Review of Books

Transgenerational Trauma in “Close to Home” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Sean Maguire was supposed to be the exception. After making it out of a West Belfast community haunted by economic precarity and the ever-present ghost of the Troubles, Sean was destined to get his college degree in Liverpool and never return. But outpacing your past, and leaving behind the city that molded you, is … Read more

A Life” – Chicago Review of Books

A Life” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In King: A Life—the first major biography of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. published in decades—Jonathan Eig describes King as “a gravitational force” in the Freedom Movement. From the earliest days of his involvement, Eig writes, King proved capable of “pulling in reporters, financial donors, and young volunteers,” and transforming a social … Read more