Otherworldly Encounters in “Strange Beasts of China” – Chicago Review of Books

Otherworldly Encounters in “Strange Beasts of China” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Caveat lector. You’ll have a decision to make when you start reading Yan Ge’s Strange Beasts of China. Will you willpower yourself to one story a night and savor each paragraph, immersing deeply in an alternate world? Or will you forego sleep and race through, riding the momentum of breathtaking inventions and repetitions that … Read more

Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell in Dante Alighieri’s “Purgatorio,” Translated by Mary Jo Bang – Chicago Review of Books

Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell in Dante Alighieri’s “Purgatorio,” Translated by Mary Jo Bang – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Reading the poet Mary Jo Bang’s new translation of Dante Alighieri’s Purgatorio, I thought of a widely-circulated photograph from the COVID pandemic. An Italian doctor in a surgical gown and two face masks holds a sign reading, “When this hell ends:/…And then we emerged again to see the stars.” The quote is from the … Read more

Flâneurs and the Found Poetry of the City in “To Walk Alone in the Crowd” – Chicago Review of Books

Flâneurs and the Found Poetry of the City in “To Walk Alone in the Crowd” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] ​​The narrator of Antonio Muñoz Molina’s To Walk Alone in the Crowd is a man with a 20th-century sensibility exiled in the excesses of the 21st. He’s recovering from a terrifying depressive episode, in a state alternating between “the twin poles” of nostalgia and anxiety. And because he is, above all, a passionate reader, … Read more

The Art of Escape in “The Woman from Uruguay” – Chicago Review of Books

The Art of Escape in “The Woman from Uruguay” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the hands of a writer less skilled in nuanced storytelling, The Woman from Uruguay could have been a tired tale of a man in the midst of a mid-life crisis, led astray and ultimately made a fool by his baser instincts. But in his latest novel, celebrated Argentinian writer and poet Pedro Mairal … Read more

In “Prepare Her,” the Mass of Women Lead Lives of Quiet Desperation – Chicago Review of Books

In “Prepare Her,” the Mass of Women Lead Lives of Quiet Desperation – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Henry David Thoreau observed that men often lead lives of quiet desperation, and although he omits women, they often also lead lives of quiet desperation, as is the case for the women under examination in Genevieve Plunkett’s debut story collection, Prepare Her. In this collection, the domestic lives of female protagonists come under scrutiny, … Read more

Racism and Masculinity in “Give My Love to the Savages” – Chicago Review of Books

Racism and Masculinity in “Give My Love to the Savages” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Chris Stuck knows what he’s doing. In Give My Love to the Savages, his debut short story collection, deliberation and intention shine through. These are stories centered around the anguishes of Black men, rendered here as both heroes and antiheroes. The stories are forthright with their unpacking of masculinity, grief, and identity. And at … Read more

New Episode of Your Favorite Book with Dean Jobb – Chicago Review of Books

New Episode of Your Favorite Book with Dean Jobb – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Welcome to another installment of a collaboration between the Chicago Review of Books and the Your Favorite Book podcast. Malavika Praseed, frequent CHIRB contributor and podcast host, seeks to talk to readers and writers about the books that light a fire inside them. What’s your favorite book and why? This week’s guest is Dean … Read more

Humility, Humanity, and Deep Dish Blasphemy in “It Never Ends” – Chicago Review of Books

Humility, Humanity, and Deep Dish Blasphemy in “It Never Ends” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Before creating his world-beating radio program The Best Show, Tom Scharpling wrote punk zines, covered the NBA, produced the TV show Monk, and auditioned (unsuccessfully) for The New Monkees. Every indie musician’s favorite comic, Tom writes and performs with Superchunk drummer Jon Wurster and has directed videos for artists including Kurt Vile, Aimee Mann, … Read more

Renarritivizing Violence Against Women in “The Comfort of Monsters” – Chicago Review of Books

Renarritivizing Violence Against Women in “The Comfort of Monsters” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I was first introduced to Willa C. Richards’s The Comfort of Monsters in a 2018 graduate-level writing workshop when Willa brought in two early chapters for discussion. It was the type of reading experience a reader never forgets. In the excerpt, the narrator Peg remembers going to a bar in Milwaukee’s Walker’s Point neighborhood … Read more

A Simple Thesis in “Seek You” – Chicago Review of Books

A Simple Thesis in “Seek You” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Though the COVID-19 pandemic has understandably dominated most of the conversation around public health in the last year and a half, it has been running alongside—and intertwining with—another crisis: the “loneliness epidemic.” For years leading up to 2020, experts have been warning us about the effects that modern-day loneliness can have on our minds … Read more