Listening to Earth Before It’s Too Late, in “Earth’s Wild Music” – Chicago Review of Books

Listening to Earth Before It’s Too Late, in “Earth’s Wild Music” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The climate crisis is so rapidly laying waste to our world that it can be depressing to even attempt to comprehend it. We’re in the midst of a mass extinction period brought upon by human greed and soulless expansion. Billions of years of unique evolution have been ripped out from under us by a … Read more

Announcing the Your Favorite Book Podcast w/first guest Dantiel Moniz – Chicago Review of Books

Announcing the Your Favorite Book Podcast w/first guest Dantiel Moniz – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] We are excited to announce a collaboration between the Chicago Review of Books and the Your Favorite Book podcast. Malavika Praseed, frequent CHIRB contributor and podcast host, asks readers and writers one of the hardest questions there is: what’s your favorite book, and why? Joining us this week is Dantiel Moniz, author of the … Read more

A Review of “Cowboy Graves” – Chicago Review of Books

A Review of “Cowboy Graves” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It’s an unexpected delight to be able to review previously-unseen work by the late Roberto Bolaño 18 years after his death. Bolaño—the Chilean poet-novelist perhaps most known for his books The Savage Detectives and the already-posthumously published 2666, both translated into English by Natasha Wimmer—left an abundant back catalog of poetry and prose after … Read more

Portraits of the Poet in Cortney Lamar Charleston’s “Doppelgangbanger” – Chicago Review of Books

Portraits of the Poet in Cortney Lamar Charleston’s “Doppelgangbanger” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It’s been five years since Cortney Lamar Charleston’s debut, and Doppelgangbanger is more than worth the wait: it’s a kaleidoscope of a collection effortlessly combining cultural signposts with philosophical ruminations about identity, place and self-determination.  Charleston explores the ways that spirit and body can be restricted, harmed, and too often obliterated in our society … Read more

“The Delivery” is a Meta-Fictional Puppet Show with Little to Say – Chicago Review of Books

“The Delivery” is a Meta-Fictional Puppet Show with Little to Say – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In an interview for The Believer, graphic artist turned novelist Peter Mendelsund elaborated his own approach to literature by using a surprising comparison to another art: puppetry. The audience of a puppet show is observing two stories simultaneously, “the diegetic material that the puppets are performing, and the actions the puppeteer is performing.” In … Read more

Facing Divides in “The Kindest Lie” – Chicago Review of Books

Facing Divides in “The Kindest Lie” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In Nancy Johnson’s debut novel, The Kindest Lie, a story of desire and identity unfolds around a young, Yale-educated Black chemical engineer named Ruth. Her story, told with attention and sincerity, is not a simple narrative of homecoming. Rather, Ruth, who returns to her Indiana hometown in the midst of an economic depression, comes … Read more

Everyone’s a Critic in “We Play Ourselves” – Chicago Review of Books

Everyone’s a Critic in “We Play Ourselves” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In 2019, after the release of her widely-lauded album “Norman Fucking Rockwell!,” Lana Del Rey got an unexpected bad review. Actually, it wasn’t a bad review at all: it was a thoughtful, insightful deep-dive that contained a few harsh sentences. Nethertheless, Del Rey sicced her Twitter followers on the reviewer, NPR’s Ann Powers, who … Read more

The Question of Conditioning in “The Echo Wife” – Chicago Review of Books

The Question of Conditioning in “The Echo Wife” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Centuries of religious and philosophical debate have centered on the question of whether we have free will or not, with modern neuroscience and psychology framed around the conflict between nurturing influences and natural biological predisposition. The debate sits at the center of Sarah Gailey’s The Echo Wife, a fast-paced, page-turning science fiction thriller delving … Read more

Living in the Little-Space-Between in “No One is Talking About This” – Chicago Review of Books

Living in the Little-Space-Between in “No One is Talking About This” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In Patricia Lockwood’s debut novel, No One is Talking About This, there is a line after the birth of her sister’s child which highlights the balancing act attempted in this book: “It was a marvel how cleanly and completely this lifted her out of the stream of regular life.” Lockwood’s exquisite writing aims to … Read more

The Open Space of Uncertainty in “Rabbit Island” – Chicago Review of Books

The Open Space of Uncertainty in “Rabbit Island” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “For me, ghosts are never the spirits of strangers. They are the people I love most dearly,” confesses the narrator of one of the stories in Elvira Navarro’s collection Rabbit Island. Translated from the Spanish by Christina MacSweeney, these stories often cross the line between delusion and reality, constructs that in Navarro’s hands prove … Read more