Announcing the 2020 CHIRBy Awards Shortlist – Chicago Review of Books

Announcing the 2020 CHIRBy Awards Shortlist – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] For the fifth year in a row, the Chicago Review of Books is thrilled to present the CHIRBy Awards to recognize the best fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and short essays published by Chicago-based writers. Below are the finalists in each category for 2020, along with a list of this year’s judges. Congratulations to all of these incredible writers! … Read more

Copies and Originals in “A Lover’s Discourse” – Chicago Review of Books

Copies and Originals in “A Lover’s Discourse” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Can people in love ever really understand one another? That is the question at the center of Xiaolu Guo’s latest novel, A Lover’s Discourse. The titular lover is an unnamed woman from southern China, newly arrived in London to complete a Ph.D. program. She develops a relationship with a German-Austrialian landscape architect, also nameless … Read more

Immortality and Remembrance in “The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue” – Chicago Review of Books

Immortality and Remembrance in “The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I’m tempted to say the modern idea of genre is a joke, except that it’s not funny. A sincerely curious, skilled, and committed writer can basically write whatever she wants, genre be damned. Yet certain genres are still elevated and others dismissed; the New York Times “By the Book” feature still regularly asks writers … Read more

Journeys of Self-Discovery in “Bad Tourist” – Chicago Review of Books

Journeys of Self-Discovery in “Bad Tourist” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Suzanne Roberts’ most recent memoir, Bad Tourist, will come as a delightful surprise to readers as she merges all of her writing strengths: a travel writer’s adventures, a memoirist’s insight, and a poet’s ear for language. Roberts, an accomplished travel writer, was named “The Next Great Travel Writer” by National Geographic Traveler magazine, and her previous book Almost Somewhere; Twenty-Eight Days on … Read more

Confession and Truth in “The Beguiling” – Chicago Review of Books

Confession and Truth in “The Beguiling” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “We think we remember the past and imagine the future. What if in reality it’s the other way around?” So ruminates Lucy, the narrator in Vancouver-based writer Zsuzsi Gartner’s much-anticipated first novel The Beguiling, a seductive work that thoroughly upends comfortable notions of narrative linearity and offers up—in the end—a bewildering twist à la … Read more

A Bridge Between Now and Then in “Burning Roses” – Chicago Review of Books

A Bridge Between Now and Then in “Burning Roses” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In Burning Roses, S. L. Huang treats a fairy tale as merely the prologue to the rest of a life. We meet Little Red Riding Hood, Rosa, as an older woman already looking back on her life. The famous encounter with the wolf at her grandmother’s house is long behind her—far from the guiltless … Read more

Words Transcend Walls in “Unknown Language” – Chicago Review of Books

Words Transcend Walls in “Unknown Language” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It’s easy to become caught up in the conventions of realist literary fiction as representative of fiction itself. After all, it’s a reign that has stretched from Balzac to the present day, and the modern strain of American cinematic fiction only reinforces this understanding. But the expanse of work situated in and against realism … Read more

To Be Excited and Confused in “This Isn’t Happening” – Chicago Review of Books

To Be Excited and Confused in “This Isn’t Happening” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In his new book, This Isn’t Happening: Radiohead’s “Kid A” and the Beginning of the 21st Century, a story centered on the Radiohead album Kid A, music critic Steven Hyden—without meaning to—asks the “Where were you when…” question regarding the album’s release: “I know I bought Kid A the day it came out, as … Read more

Sharing the Spotlight in “Celeste Holm Syndrome” – Chicago Review of Books

Sharing the Spotlight in “Celeste Holm Syndrome” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Inhospitable attitudes towards women in a gendered-Hollywood; a melancholic Oscar Levant; the allure of cinema in black and white— these are just a few of the thought-provoking aspects in Chicago essayist David Lazar’s new book Celeste Holm Syndrome: On Character Actors from the Golden Age of Hollywood. A writer of three previous books of … Read more

Knocking Poetry Off Its Pedestal in “The Math Campers” – Chicago Review of Books

Knocking Poetry Off Its Pedestal in “The Math Campers” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] An extraordinary, often mesmerizing engagement with the nature of identity and other existential trappings, The Math Campers, Dan Chiasson’s new collection of poetry, is a meta-kaleidoscope of literature and literary influence. A geometric swirl of the many faces of the author’s family and friends (particularly his teenage sons), it is colored and blended by … Read more