An Interview with Deborah Shapiro about Consolation – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Deborah Shapiro about Consolation – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Chicago-based novelist Deborah Shapiro’s third novel Consolation came  out October 18, with an event The Seminary Co-op on November 1st. Her first novel, The Sun in Your Eyes, was published by William Morrow in 2016, and her second, The Summer Demands, by Catapult in 2019. However, she decided to create her own imprint, B-side … Read more

An Interview with Kristine Langley Mahler – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Kristine Langley Mahler – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] For years, I’ve read Kristine Langley Mahler’s essays and have come to expect inventive structures, sentences that are taut and on-target, and a meticulous attention to detail. These signatures are no doubt present in her debut essay collection, Curing Season: Artifacts, which explores and catalogs four years of the author’s adolescence spent in suburban … Read more

Sisterhood Beyond Womanhood in “When We Were Sisters” – Chicago Review of Books

Sisterhood Beyond Womanhood in “When We Were Sisters” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] When Fatimah Asghar pictures her father alive, she imagines him ordering a pizza. “At the pizza shop he eyes pepperoni. . . . he orders a slice with no sauce,” a young Asghar observes. Asghar, a Chicago-based poet, writer, and artist, is the child of two Pakistani-Muslim refugees, both of whom died by the … Read more

Your Favorite Book with Ethan Chatagnier – Chicago Review of Books

Your Favorite Book with Ethan Chatagnier – 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? Our guest this week is … Read more

An Interview with Sara Lippmann on “Lech” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Sara Lippmann on “Lech” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] When we select a book from the shelf and open its pristine pages, we might believe the process of producing that book was smooth, even dreamy. We might imagine the author sat down, and the words arrived to her perfectly formed, the characters coherent, the plot sure-footed. Sara Lippmann would likely disagree with you. … Read more

Christine Sneed’s Novel in Memos, “Please Be Advised” – Chicago Review of Books

Christine Sneed’s Novel in Memos, “Please Be Advised” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] They say that time is money and that fiction is time. Does that mean that money is fiction as well? What measures a good book about work? With Halloween upon us, can one imagine a greater work of horror than the collected emails of a corporate fraud artist like Enron’s “Kenny Boy” Lay? Christine … Read more

An Interview with Elizabeth McCracken on “The Hero of This Story” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Elizabeth McCracken on “The Hero of This Story” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Short story author and novelist Elizabeth McCracken has just published a book, The Hero of This Story, in which the main character is Natalie Jacobson McCracken, educator, writer, and former editor-in-chief of Boston University alumni magazine, Bostonia. Elizabeth herself is the narrator of this novel. And, also, the daughter of Natalie. In the novel. … Read more

Defining and Creating Home in “Home Bound” – Chicago Review of Books

Defining and Creating Home in “Home Bound” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Vanessa A. Bee’s debut memoir opens with a passport replacement appointment at the French consulate in Washington, D.C. “Where are you from?” the consulate guard asks Bee. Home Bound: An Uprooted Daughter’s Reflections on Belonging, a meditative and captivating examination of the layers that make up a home, is Bee’s answer to this question. … Read more

An Interview with Courtney Denelle – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview with Courtney Denelle – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It’s Not Nothing is the kind of novel that you can’t help but to savor. Every sentence, every turn of phrase is liable to catch you off guard—knock you off center—crack you up or kill you. In it, protagonist Rosemary Candwell shuffles in and out of bars, hourly jobs, and institutions, trying to grasp … Read more