A Container for One’s Truth in “The Wall” – Chicago Review of Books

A Container for One’s Truth in “The Wall” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In her essay The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction, Ursula K. Le Guin suggests that the “Hero story,” the one of conquest and knife-thrusting, is not the only form of storytelling available, even though it has become the dominant one. The alternative concept Le Guin offers is the bottle: “Not just the bottle of … Read more

Visions of Black Beauty in “Memphis” – Chicago Review of Books

Visions of Black Beauty in “Memphis” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Tara M. Stringfellow’s newest novel, Memphis, captures the beauty of Black culture and how beauty is perceived by her characters. The brutality of life strips beauty away so quickly and so permanently that storytellers often pair beauty with trauma as if they are two sides of the same coin. Stringfellow manages to avoid those … Read more

Portraits of Cuba” – Chicago Review of Books

Portraits of Cuba” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the nineteen journalistic profiles that comprise The Tribe: Portraits of Cuba, Carlos Manuel Álvarez represents cross sections of Cuban life. Translated from Spanish by Frank Wynne and Rahul Berry, Álvarez’s literary portraits depict, among others, the New York Yankees pitcher José Contreras, the dissident poet Rafael Alcides, a migrant couple fleeing through Central … Read more

Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land” – Chicago Review of Books

Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] With striking, poetic prose, Taylor Brorby’s Boys and Oil: Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land reveals a hidden life in the wide open spaces of the Midwest. The complexities of queerness in places where it can be lonely at best and dangerous at worst, and Brorby’s quest to find a space where he … Read more

The Depraved Village of “Lapvona” – Chicago Review of Books

The Depraved Village of “Lapvona” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Ottessa Moshfegh’s fourth novel, Lapvona, is a gruesome experiment in historical fiction. There’s grisly death, cannibalism, rape, mysticism, deception, revenge, hints at pedophilia, and very little love. The characters bleakly reflect the worst in humanity, and grotesque antics dot almost every page—facts that compete with great storytelling and end up creating few opportunities for … Read more

Conscious Sexuality in “Ghost Lover” – Chicago Review of Books

Conscious Sexuality in “Ghost Lover” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Lisa Taddeo has fostered a reputation for understanding women’s sexual prowess. In Taddeo’s breakout nonfiction book Three Women, she embedded herself in the lives of three disparate people to explore how their sexual experiences impacted them and their ongoing relationship with sex. The protagonist of her debut novel Animal has endured sexual trauma. Her … Read more

Frank O’Hara, My Father, and Me”? – Chicago Review of Books

Frank O’Hara, My Father, and Me”? – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Let’s start with the word “interesting.” Are only “interesting” lives worthy of memoir? If so, the criteria have certainly changed over time, as private lives and identities compete with public achievements. Interesting is a highly subjective term, too, one almost impossible to dispute since it’s in the mouth of the proclaimer. It’s a word … Read more

The Anxieties of Autofiction in “The Novelist” – Chicago Review of Books

The Anxieties of Autofiction in “The Novelist” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The unnamed narrator of Jordan Castro’s The Novelist is not Jordan Castro. Castro, the author, wants this to be clear. So clear, in fact, that there is a famous writer named Jordan Castro within the novel. The unnamed narrator admires Jordan Castro—he’s everything the narrator wants to be as a writer, and he envies … Read more

“Broken Icarus,” “The Devil in the White City,” and the World’s Fair Nonfiction Novel – Chicago Review of Books

“Broken Icarus,” “The Devil in the White City,” and the World’s Fair Nonfiction Novel – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] When the United States rejoined the Bureau of International Expositions in 2017, in support of a since-failed bid to bring a World’s Fair to Minneapolis in 2023, responses ranged from disbelief to indifference. No U.S. city has hosted a major fair since the Louisiana World Exposition of 1984, which publicly declared bankruptcy at mid-run.  … Read more

A True Story of Black Creeks in “We Refuse to Forget” – Chicago Review of Books

A True Story of Black Creeks in “We Refuse to Forget” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In 1830, President Andrew Jackson, a former Army general with the nickname “Indian Killer,” signed into law one of the most cruel pieces of legislation ever aimed at an Indigenous people, the “Indian Removal Act.” Over sixty thousand Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Seminole, and Creek were forced to flee their lands, centuries-old dwelling places now … Read more