A Conversation with Gabriel Bump – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation with Gabriel Bump – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Gabriel Bump has always exuded hopefulness in his writing. The young narrator of his debut novel Everywhere You Don’t Belong quickly became a classic voice in Chicago literature, echoing a sense of dazzling and at times unrealized optimism about his community, reminiscent of writers like Sandra Cisneros and Stuart Dybek. But even if home … Read more

Traversing Plastic Surgery’s Choppy Waters in “Pilgrims 2.0” – Chicago Review of Books

Traversing Plastic Surgery’s Choppy Waters in “Pilgrims 2.0” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Writers searching for a subject ripe with juicy satirical possibilities will find a ready friend in plastic surgery. It’s a fleshy-flashy-multibillion-dollar industry which profits off, depending upon whom you ask, either mankind’s lofty desire for perfection or its vainest impulses. And just like every field, it seems, which stirs in sensitive people a sense … Read more

Stories Within Stories in “Baumgartner” – Chicago Review of Books

Stories Within Stories in “Baumgartner” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Paul Auster’s best novels balance intricate and absorbing stories, with deconstructions of the art of narrative in a manner that rarely detracts from the flow or fun of the narrative itself. Unlike the machinations of many metafiction authors, the games Auster plays with storytelling never seem to get in the way of the stories … Read more

Chin-Sun Lee on the Search for Home – Chicago Review of Books

Chin-Sun Lee on the Search for Home – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Upcountry, Chin-Sun Lee’s debut novel, is an enchanting, intertwining tale of three lonely women in the fictional, gossip-hungry Catskills town of Caliban. The story opens when April Ives, a local single mother, has lost her home in foreclosure to Claire Pederson, a city lawyer with upstate roots. Drawn to the property’s dilapidated beauty——“so ruined,” … Read more

Naming Monsters in “The Night Parade” – Chicago Review of Books

Naming Monsters in “The Night Parade” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] As a child, amidst familial turbulence, I prayed to my mouse plush toy, asking existential questions through wordless telepathy. My family was not religionless—we were Buddhists who attended temple on major holidays—but I found comfort in confiding in this stuffed animal that I associated with wisdom of its own. I understand now, after reading … Read more

The Mystery of Consciousness in “The Apple in the Dark” – Chicago Review of Books

The Mystery of Consciousness in “The Apple in the Dark” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] We like to think we are masters of our bodies and minds and, for the most part, we possess total agency and comprehension of our thoughts and actions. This assumption is embedded so thoroughly in our society that it seems unnecessary to even observe it.  But that is exactly what the legendary Brazilian writer … Read more

A Conversation between Jay Besemer and Evan Williams – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation between Jay Besemer and Evan Williams – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Rejection letter erasure poems recently took over literary Twitter/X. Writers scribble over rejection letters they’ve received, omitting words and phrases until another message emerges. That message is often brutally funny, as if a barefaced NO lay submerged beneath the carefully crafted letter all along.  But these erasure poems do more than give writers a … Read more

An Interview with Ben Austen About “Correction” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Ben Austen About “Correction” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In 1870, parole emerged as a progressive-era reform to a growing problem. Disillusioned with the spectacle of punishment, parole would return lawbreakers to full citizenship once they could prove they had changed. Their logic was simple. How could a judge at trial know a person’s capacity for change? If prisons were meant to rehabilitate … Read more

An Interview with Jeremy T. Wilson on “The Quail Who Wears the Shirt” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Jeremy T. Wilson on “The Quail Who Wears the Shirt” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] When I think “satire” as a genre of writing, I think The Onion, or McSweeny’s, maybe A Modest Proposal—writing that is upfront and obvious about its satire. But there’s another level of skill when a writer is able to weave in satire without it being the first thought you have when reading it. Jeremy … Read more

Wrestling with the Beast in John Gray’s “The New Leviathans” – Chicago Review of Books

Wrestling with the Beast in John Gray’s “The New Leviathans” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Is liberalism dead? Has that dewy-eyed, woke, overly optimistic beast of limited eyesight, enlarged heart, and dangerously underdeveloped brain, this Jabberwocky of the geopolitical wood finally been slain? More to the point, can we at last acknowledge that there are no such things as universal values, no inherently reliable truth to language, and that … Read more