10 Books I Love by AAPI Writers – Chicago Review of Books

10 Books I Love by AAPI Writers – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] For most people who study literature in school, be it at the high school, collegiate, or graduate level, we embrace the Western canon at the exclusion of other work, and to truly grow as a reader it takes a conscious unlearning. For me, I’ve found tremendous meaning in contemporary works by BIPOC writers.  In … Read more

A Feel-Bad Romance” – Chicago Review of Books

A Feel-Bad Romance” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Fasten your seatbelts and make sure you know where the oxygen masks are: John Waters’ first novel Liarmouth: A Feel-Bad Romance is a hopscotching, subversive and full-versive, madcap version of Planes, Trains and Automobiles. Though I don’t want to spoil the plot’s twists and twists and twists—it’s a delicious literary strawberry Twizzler embedded with … Read more

Vulnerable Revelations in “What Flies Want” – Chicago Review of Books

Vulnerable Revelations in “What Flies Want” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Emily Pérez’s new book of poetry, What Flies Want, is a stunning look at the peripheries of womanhood and the recipient of the 2021 Iowa Poetry Prize. Her uniquely crafted poems spark fresh ideas about the trials of marriage, being female when every man is a “ticking bomb,” sexual harm, mental health, school violence, … Read more

Embracing the Eternal Present in “The Hurting Kind” – Chicago Review of Books

Embracing the Eternal Present in “The Hurting Kind” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the first poem of the much-anticipated new collection from poet Ada Limón, The Hurting Kind, Limón wonders: “Why am I not allowed / delight? A stranger writes to request my thoughts / on suffering”. The collection that follows is Limón’s response to the stranger, and an exhortation to the reader: as much about … Read more

A Transformation Unnamed in “GIRL” – Chicago Review of Books

A Transformation Unnamed in “GIRL” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1]  “Some languages, but by no means all, have the luxury of the word ‘daughter,’ but in many—and French is one of them—your sex is not distinct from your relationship to your parents. You will only ever have this one word to describe your being and your lineage, your dependence and your identity.” This entwinement … Read more

Our Adolescent Nation in “Teenager” – Chicago Review of Books

Our Adolescent Nation in “Teenager” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Bud Smith is kind of a legend. The Jersey City writer has been publishing since 2009, but has been writing for much longer. Under his belt he’s got a story collection (Double Bird, Maudlin House), a poetry collaboration with his wife, Rae Buleri (Dust Bunny City, Disorder Press), a memoir (WORK, Civil Coping Mechanisms), … Read more

Your Favorite Book with Nghi Vo – Chicago Review of Books

Your Favorite Book with Nghi Vo – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Welcome to another installment of a collaboration between the Chicago Review of Books and the Your Favorite Book podcast. Malavika Praseed, frequent CHIRB contributor and podcast host, seeks to talk to readers and writers about the books that light a fire inside them. What’s your favorite book and why? Our guest is Nghi Vo, … Read more

Seduction is Performance in “Acts of Service” – Chicago Review of Books

Seduction is Performance in “Acts of Service” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] There are good reasons why love triangles appear so often in literary plots. Triangles are inherently unstable. They force characters to make choices through constant negotiation and compromise. As far as triangles go, the one in Lillian Fishman’s debut novel Acts of Service is a perfectly messy inquiry into the nature of power and … Read more