An Interview with Jill Bialosky on “The Deceptions” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Jill Bialosky on “The Deceptions” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] We often pigeonhole people and their abilities: you’re a writer or an editor, a poet or a novelist, creative or strategic. My (admittedly anecdotal) experience suggests that such binaries are a fallacy, and Jill Bialosky is a distinctive example of how one can successfully juggle “all of the above.” As Executive Editor of W.W. … Read more

A Window Into Both Past and Present in “Hawa Hawa” – Chicago Review of Books

A Window Into Both Past and Present in “Hawa Hawa” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Satire often depends on specific moments in time and place. The challenge of writing great satire is in transcending those limits. For instance, Jonathan Swift’s A Modest Proposal spoke to a time and place, anchored to a historic period, but rendered irrelevant by Ireland’s economic rise and the period of the Celtic Tiger. Or … Read more

An Interview with Massoud Hayoun – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Massoud Hayoun – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Author of the Arab American Book Award-winning When We Were Arabs, Massoud Hayoun has two novels out this year: Building 46, which was released in May, and Last Night in Brighton, which will be released this week. Together, these two make up the Ghorba Ghost Story Series, which is a curious categorization for books … Read more

A Conversation with Dipika Mukherjee – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation with Dipika Mukherjee – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] A trained sociolinguist, and the author of two novels, a short story collection, and three collections of poetry, Dipika Mukherjee has been exploring languages, cultures, and places since she was a young girl, as the child of an Indian diplomat. In her most recent poetry collection, Dialect of Distant Harbors, Mukherjee paints scenic pictures … Read more

The Prodigiousness of Genius in “Dickens and Prince” – Chicago Review of Books

The Prodigiousness of Genius in “Dickens and Prince” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] What does Dickens (Victorian Englishman, man of letters, and social reformer) have in common with Prince (Midwesterner, composer, and multi-instrumentalist)? On the face of it, not much. This unexpected pairing is, however, the basis for Nick Hornby’s new book Dickens and Prince, which aims to show how each artist was a “particular kind of … Read more

Saints and Sinners in “Almost Deadly, Almost Good” – Chicago Review of Books

Saints and Sinners in “Almost Deadly, Almost Good” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In her new collection of short stories, Almost Deadly, Almost Good: Sins and Virtues, Alice Kaltman crafts a wicked and ribald catechism from the vices and redemptions of contemporary America and its litany of temptations. Neither morality tale nor fable, the collection’s fourteen stories forge hardened hearts and tempered spirits in those crucibles of … Read more

Beware the Power of Social Capital in “Face” – Chicago Review of Books

Beware the Power of Social Capital in “Face” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The world of Joma West’s debut novel, Face, is one where people can design an unborn baby that someone else delivers. Physical touch has been rendered obsolete. Individuals called menials are “programmed” to serve other people without question. Romantic relationships have evolved into transactional partnerships between people based on personal gain. What’s most compelling … Read more

An Interview with Anne K. Yoder on “The Enhancers” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Anne K. Yoder on “The Enhancers” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Take a chill pill” is a harmless enough—albeit rude—imperative: Calm down. Relax. Hush. But the phrase quickly transforms from harmless to insidious with a brief Internet search. Not only can you buy Chill Pills® for “natural relief” from anxiety and insomnia, but “chill pill” is, historically, a slang term for ADHD medication. The phrase … Read more