Wresting Meaning from Chaos in “Taking a Long Look” – Chicago Review of Books

Wresting Meaning from Chaos in “Taking a Long Look” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In a 2018 interview with the Public Voice Salon, Vivian Gornick responded to a question regarding her role in the revival of the memoir genre by saying, “I did not do anything extraordinary; it was a genre whose time had come.” She echoes this opinion in many of her interviews. According to her, memoir … Read more

An Unexamined Dystopia in “Machinehood” – Chicago Review of Books

An Unexamined Dystopia in “Machinehood” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Exploring the problems of the gig economy and pondering the rights of artificial intelligence, S.B. Divya’s debut novel, Machinehood, is packed with ideas. The setting is arguably a dystopia, but the plot is action-packed and character-driven enough that you might not notice. Somewhat hampered by clunky exposition and unexamined assumptions, the novel is nonetheless … Read more

Heartbreak and Existential Hope in “Sarahland” – Chicago Review of Books

Heartbreak and Existential Hope in “Sarahland” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Sarahland, the debut story collection from Sam Cohen, links disparate stories through a unique framework: each story features a character named Sarah. This architecture allows Cohen to explore a variety of topics from heartbreak to youthful self-discovery. The stories stand alone, but by linking them with Sarahs, the collection manifests something more complex. There … Read more

A review of “In Search of Mycotopia” – Chicago Review of Books

A review of “In Search of Mycotopia” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Online and in an assortment of counter-cultural convergences, a movement to cultivate, research and celebrate fungi, the most unknown of kingdoms, grows every day. All the while pharmaceutical companies, ambitious marketers and other profit-seekers watch and wait for the right moment to strike. In Search of Mycotopia: Citizen Science, Fungi Fanatics, and the Untapped … Read more

Interiority and Precarity in “The Life of the Mind” – Chicago Review of Books

Interiority and Precarity in “The Life of the Mind” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In her final, incomplete work, The Life of the Mind, Hannah Arendt sought to consider how thinking—an action so obvious its exploration appeared unnecessary—links vita activa, the active life, with vita contemplativa, the contemplative mind. Drawing on the intellectual history of ideas, Arendt posited that thinking creates neither morality nor understanding itself; but, instead, … Read more

The Layered Interpretations of “Brood” – Chicago Review of Books

The Layered Interpretations of “Brood” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Single word titles always have a shot at perfection, but they are trickier than they seem. They can easily be obvious, boring, or simply irrelevant. Brood, in title alone, assumes its place among the seraphim, taking on a trio of meanings: active wallowing in unhappy thoughts, a mother doing a mother’s job, and a … Read more

Rediscovered Women Writers Get Their Moment – Chicago Review of Books

Rediscovered Women Writers Get Their Moment – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Is there a more back-handed compliment than to be called a “woman before her time”? There’s something self-congratulatory in the appellation, how it’s both dismissive of an artist’s work in the moment while anticipating a better future for them that might never arrive. Yet it’s a description that seems to be trotted back out … Read more

The Trials of Activism in “Conspiracy to Riot” – Chicago Review of Books

The Trials of Activism in “Conspiracy to Riot” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Lee Weiner was one of the infamous Chicago 7, whose trial became a cause celebre for the left during the manic year of 1968. Weiner was also the only one of the group who actually hailed from Chicago, and whose public profile was smaller than his comrades Tom Hayden and Abbie Hoffman. His memoir … Read more

The Difficult Balance of Text and Subtext in “Klara and the Sun” – Chicago Review of Books

The Difficult Balance of Text and Subtext in “Klara and the Sun” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Kazuo Ishiguro is an author at the top of his craft. But rather than rest on his laurels, the knighted, Booker Award winning, and Nobel laureate author is back with Klara and the Sun, his first new work since winning the Nobel Prize in literature in 2017, and his first novel since 2015’s The … Read more