Seminary Offsets Honors the Literary History of Chicago’s South Side with the Reissue of “Divine Days” – Chicago Review of Books

Seminary Offsets Honors the Literary History of Chicago’s South Side with the Reissue of “Divine Days” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I am not so audacious as to claim there’s a single quality that weaves together all of us who love literature—readers, writers, booksellers, publishers, librarians, to name just a few. But whatever list of qualities we may come up with to describe everyone under the umbrella of books, high on that list would be … Read more

An Interview with Maggie Smith – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Maggie Smith – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Maggie Smith’s new memoir You Could Make This Place Beautiful starts with a postcard written by Smith’s husband to another woman. The postcard marks the beginning of the end for Smith’s marriage, when she “lost the narrative” and “stopped knowing how to tell herself the story of her life.” Smith brings us along as … Read more

Searching for Our Future in “The Last Catastrophe” – Chicago Review of Books

Searching for Our Future in “The Last Catastrophe” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] For all the ominousness of the title, The Last Catastrophe, Allegra Hyde’s sophomore short story collection, is remarkably hopeful. Not hopeful as to the eventual collapse of ecosystems, or the extinction of species, or technology addiction, or pollution, or the state of American politics (though Hyde’s satire on this front is biting enough to … Read more

Womanhood and Freedom in “The Girls” – Chicago Review of Books

Womanhood and Freedom in “The Girls” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The character of the old maid is not new to literature, as spinsters have appeared in classics from Charles Dickens to the Brontë Sisters to Virginia Woolf to Jane Austen. Most of us today would hesitate to use the same term to describe single, childless women of a certain age, but that doesn’t mean … Read more

Afro-Caribbean Folklore’s Unanswered Questions in “The Human Origins of Beatrice Porter and Other Essential Ghosts” – Chicago Review of Books

Afro-Caribbean Folklore’s Unanswered Questions in “The Human Origins of Beatrice Porter and Other Essential Ghosts” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Despite what its title suggests, Soraya Palmer’s debut novel, The Human Origins of Beatrice Porter and Other Essential Ghosts, does not limit its focus to the title character. Instead, it encompasses the family she helped create. A mysteriously knowledgeable narrator fills in some of the gaps with information about Beatrice, and her husband Nigel, … Read more

Traumatic Repetition and Fresh Starts in “Lone Women” – Chicago Review of Books

Traumatic Repetition and Fresh Starts in “Lone Women” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The Western, as a genre, is rife with horrific elements: its frequently alienating landscapes, its history of violence, and its strange and unrestrained collision of cultures. In Lone Women, Victor LaValle takes horrors both human and supernatural as his subject: a haunted vision of the American dream that accelerates into a bloody exploration of … Read more

Enchanted Retellings in Kelly Link’s “White Cat, Black Dog” – Chicago Review of Books

Enchanted Retellings in Kelly Link’s “White Cat, Black Dog” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Kelly Link’s fiction always brings to my mind the old-timey phrase “spinning a yarn.” Although I’ve learned this idiom has nautical origins, for me, it evokes spindles, spinning wheels, and the realm of folktales. And while Link tends to reinvent her own style so that no two stories are alike, all of them can … Read more