The Lingering Pain of Grief in Yiyun Li’s “Wednesday’s Child” – Chicago Review of Books

The Lingering Pain of Grief in Yiyun Li’s “Wednesday’s Child” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “I feel the most ridiculous thing is certainty,” the writer Yiyun Li once told Alexandra Kleeman in a profile for The New York Times. Li’s latest short story collection, Wednesday’s Child, shows once again how strongly she holds this. The collection’s eleven stories, written over the course of fourteen years, cover familiar ground for … Read more

The Mourning Body in “Swim Home to the Vanished” – Chicago Review of Books

The Mourning Body in “Swim Home to the Vanished” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Grief is a powerful emotion. It demands and deserves respect. We may fight it, repress it, or swim against it, but in the end, denying grief only prolongs the pain that must eventually come. For the poet and novelist Brendan Shay Basham, that reckoning transpires in the body. While the mind may try to … Read more

A Conversation with Jennifer Lang – Chicago Review of Books

A Conversation with Jennifer Lang – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Imagine putting your relationship under a microscope and then sharing what you’ve discovered with the world. That is exactly what Jennifer Lang has done in her memoir Places We Left Behind, and we are all the better for it.  When American-born Lang, a secular tourist, falls in love with French-born Philippe, an observant immigrant, … Read more

From Margin to Center in “Wifedom” – Chicago Review of Books

From Margin to Center in “Wifedom” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the summer of 2017, when she was feeling particularly overloaded, Anna Funder returned to the work of George Orwell, a writer she had “always loved.” She hoped that by reading his analyses of “the tyrannies, the ‘smelly little orthodoxies’ of his time” she would be able “to liberate myself” and in particular to … Read more

Kathleen Rooney’s “From Dust to Stardust” – Chicago Review of Books

Kathleen Rooney’s “From Dust to Stardust” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “Checking out Historical Chicago” is a feature series devoted to the work of historical worldbuilding. The world each featured writer builds is Chicago. And yet, each writer brings Chicago to life differently, with different hammers and bricks, brushes and hands. This series approaches Chicago as a city constantly under construction: a story that is, … Read more

Satire and Sorrow in Lars Iyers’ “My Weil” – Chicago Review of Books

Satire and Sorrow in Lars Iyers’ “My Weil” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Ontological evil; the madness of evil or the evil of madness. This is the topic around which Johnny has centered his doctoral degree in Disaster Studies at All Saints University in Manchester, England. Raised in a children’s home, Johnny registers as more psychologically fragile (or maybe just more earnestly human) than the rest of … Read more

Publishing Your Novel Won’t Save You – Chicago Review of Books

Publishing Your Novel Won’t Save You – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Once you see how the publishing sausage is made—how few books make it all the way through the gauntlet, and that at times it seems there is no rhyme or reason to why certain books succeed and others don’t—you can become disillusioned and quit, or become even more persistent in your efforts. The hard … Read more