See You in the Next Life in “Love Like Water, Love Like Fire” – Chicago Review of Books

See You in the Next Life in “Love Like Water, Love Like Fire” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] “Two deaths you cannot have and one you cannot avoid.” So goes a Russian saying Mikhail Iossel remembers in his excellent new collection Love Like Water, Love Like Fire. Funny thing about Iossel’s stories of Soviet life, though: they are filled with men and women living second lives, drunks who avoided death (to their … Read more

The Fire of Trauma in “The Ancient Hours” – Chicago Review of Books

The Fire of Trauma in “The Ancient Hours” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The first sentence of Michael Bible’s latest novel, The Ancient Hours, is a lie. “We were innocent,” is an immediate provocation that gives the impression of someone in an interrogation room telling authorities a story agreed upon by a group of accomplices.  Bible makes a bold statement beginning with this line, and also by … Read more

Transmutable Knowledge in “The Experimental Fire” – Chicago Review of Books

Transmutable Knowledge in “The Experimental Fire” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Alchemy may no longer be considered a reputable or factual science, but it still shapes our current understanding of chemistry, physics, and biology. In her new book, The Experimental Fire: Inventing English Alchemy, 1300-1700, scholar and historian Jennifer Rampling shows that this influence is worth chronicling, not only for marking how attitudes towards science … Read more