Satire and Superfluity in “The Swells” – Chicago Review of Books

Satire and Superfluity in “The Swells” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Among the most ancient and revered forms, which the amorphous siren known as prose may assume, is that of satire, used for millennia to critique, to side-eye and expose, to lay bare the ills of society in narrative or verse. From The Frogs of Aristophanes to Voltaire’s Candide, from James Joyce to Larry David, … Read more

Leading Dante from Shadow into City in “Dante” – Chicago Review of Books

Leading Dante from Shadow into City in “Dante” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] There is an inarguable ephemerality about Dante Alighieri, the author of the Divine Comedy (in Italian, Commedia—the “Divine” was a publisher’s later addition). C.S. Lewis put it well in Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature (1966): “There is a curious feeling that [the Commedia] is writing itself, or at most, that the tiny figure … Read more

Crime Reading Pays in Thrills and Chills – Chicago Review of Books

Crime Reading Pays in Thrills and Chills – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Personally, I’ve already made a plan to forget 2021 ever happened—except when it comes to mystery and thriller reading. In that realm, it’s been a banner year. Of course, I haven’t read everything published, so some crime fiction which has already seen huge success in sales or will soon dominate the awards programs next … Read more

Poetry Collections for Midwinter Nights – Chicago Review of Books

Poetry Collections for Midwinter Nights – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In Persian culture, on the winter solstice, we have a variety of rituals to mark the longest night of the year, one of which is to read poetry. Perhaps it’s no surprise that poetry books are some of my favorites to review, given that cultural DNA. Concurrently, at this time of year in the … Read more

7 Works of Criticism You May Have Missed in 2021 – Chicago Review of Books

7 Works of Criticism You May Have Missed in 2021 – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] If there’s one thing that was certain about this year, it’s that nothing was certain. And yet, the impulse to make sense of our world and its persistent forms continued. Texts that critically surveyed our world—presented in varied genres and approaches—drew us in to consider—with hope, curiosity, dismay, and startling surprise—all that abounds. From … Read more

An Interview with Joe Moshenska – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Joe Moshenska – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Oxford Professor of English Literature Joe Moshenska has done something arguably long overdue in Milton studies. Approaching the Olympian of English letters from a mix of new historical and reader-response positions, Moshenska buries himself deeply into an imagined psyche of the poet and polemicist, propagandist and Latinist, John Milton while also digging down into … Read more

Congrats to the Winners of the 2021 CHIRBy Awards! – Chicago Review of Books

Congrats to the Winners of the 2021 CHIRBy Awards! – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] On December 9, 2021, we celebrated the 2021 CHIRBy Awards, co-presented by StoryStudio Chicago. Now in its sixth year, the CHIRBy Awards is a celebration of the Chicago literary community that honors the best Chicago-focused fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and short essays. Congratulations to this year’s winners and to our incredible finalists! (You can read … Read more

Exploring a Man’s World in “Sea State” – Chicago Review of Books

Exploring a Man’s World in “Sea State” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Tabitha Lasley’s new memoir is built upon a flawed premise. When she explains her plan to travel to Aberdeen and talk with offshore workers to discover “what men are like with no women around,” her editor points out “you’ll be around.” One of the men Lasley interviews responds to the same explanation of the … Read more