The Eternal Return of Conflict in “Before the Rain” – Chicago Review of Books

The Eternal Return of Conflict in “Before the Rain” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It’s a recognizably portentous way to begin a war film: a field of farmers bent over stalks of tomato plants, picking their crop under a blazing sun. Viewers like myself, accustomed to Deer Hunters and Apocalypse Nows, will be primed for these peasants to be mowed down momentarily in a hail of machine gunfire. … 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

6 Queer Books to Read While You Wait for Netflix’s Heartstopper

6 Queer Books to Read While You Wait for Netflix's Heartstopper

[ad_1] Our hearts MAY have just stopped… because the first teaser trailer for the Heartstopper TV series just dropped! It’s a live-action adaptation of the bestselling and beloved graphic novel series by Alice Oseman, and we can’t wait to see our faves Charlie, Nick, Darcy, Tao, Tori, and more come to life on screen! While … Read more

The Intimacy of Translation in “Fifty Sounds” – Chicago Review of Books

The Intimacy of Translation in “Fifty Sounds” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Translation—the conveyance of ideas, sentences, a story, a feeling, from one language to another—is inherently contradictory: be as exact as possible, or risk failing at the act. But since the transference of meaning is something so subjective, so tied to cultural and social cues, one could argue “exact” is impossible. Translation becomes its own … Read more

The Power of Empathy in “When I Sing, Mountains Dance” – Chicago Review of Books

The Power of Empathy in “When I Sing, Mountains Dance” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Irene Solà is an award-winning Catalan poet, novelist, and visual artist who won the 2020 European Union Prize for Literature for her second novel, When I Sing, Mountains Dance. Translated by Mara Faye Lethem, When I Sing, Mountains Dance depicts the griefs and joys of one human family against the vibrant backdrop of the … Read more

Life, Art, and Fiction in “Love” – Chicago Review of Books

Life, Art, and Fiction in “Love” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] For all the antagonizing, ruminating, and even moralizing that comes with defining the parameters of literary fiction, perhaps the one point of (near-) universal agreement debators enjoy is over the notion that such a book should be in some way realistic, should faithfully reflect life and those who live it. How this is to … Read more

The Legacy of the Witch Hunts and Why Women Are Still on Trial” – Chicago Review of Books

The Legacy of the Witch Hunts and Why Women Are Still on Trial” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In Defense of Witches: The Legacy of the Witch Hunts and Why Women Are Still on Trial, by Mona Chollet, is a revelatory collection of histories and experiences that have been carefully ignored across centuries of time. Even a devoted reader will find it difficult to think of a book besides Chollet’s that does … Read more

The Cost of Leaving in ‘Seeking Fortune Elsewhere’ – Chicago Review of Books

The Cost of Leaving in ‘Seeking Fortune Elsewhere’ – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Among the array of ignorant comments some Americans make about immigrants is one that anyone is lucky to live here. Setting aside this country’s terrible history (and very flawed present), such reductionist remarks ignore the significant costs of leaving one’s home country. Sindya Bhanoo’s debut story collection, Seeking Fortune Elsewhere, confronts these tolls head-on, … Read more

Coping with Life and its End in “The Believer” – Chicago Review of Books

Coping with Life and its End in “The Believer” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I’ve heard people claim that they wish that they were religious in the fundamentalist mode, because it would be so much easier. Easier, they mean, because while the non-believer is a grown-up person who understands that God—like Santa; or like notions of fairness and romance—is dead, the believer still trusts with childish naivety in … Read more

The Art of Dying in “Aurelia, Aurélia” – Chicago Review of Books

The Art of Dying in “Aurelia, Aurélia” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Maybe it’s odd to compare your husband’s cancer diagnosis to the plot of Lost. Maybe it’s odd to recognize the absurdity of death’s first partial hold on us in the structure of a television show. Yet this is precisely what Kathryn Davis does in her memoir: she sees that “the system governing [cancer’s] bestowal … Read more