An Interview With Sopan Deb on “Keya Das’s Second Act” – Chicago Review of Books

An Interview With Sopan Deb on “Keya Das’s Second Act” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Award-winning journalist Sopan Deb made his fiction debut this July with Keya Das’s Second Act, a novel about a Bengali American family from suburban New Jersey. Shortly after coming out as gay to her family, the teenaged Keya Das dies in a car accident, leaving behind a play she and her girlfriend, Pamela, had … Read more

Swimming to Freedom in “Thrust” – Chicago Review of Books

Swimming to Freedom in “Thrust” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Lidia Yuknavitch knows misfits. Much of her writing concerns people—especially girls and women—on the margins, on the edges of experience, surviving, resilient, and magical, but never quite fitting in. Their trauma and suffering, and their regeneration through the act of storytelling, are reflective of Yuknavitch’s own: “Writing, making stories, drawing and painting and making … Read more

Grappling with the Obvious in Mat Johnson’s “Invisible Things” – Chicago Review of Books

Grappling with the Obvious in Mat Johnson’s “Invisible Things” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] It’s a relief, sometimes, to read science fiction that is a straightforward political allegory. Tolkien’s famous “cordial dislike” for allegory is good guidance for creating believable, durable fantastic worlds, but there’s also a space and a need for works that have their sights set on current issues: less perennial, perhaps, but no less pertinent. … Read more

Finding the Self and Autonomy in Nature in “In Between Places” – Chicago Review of Books

Finding the Self and Autonomy in Nature in “In Between Places” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Lucy Bryan’s debut is the stunning collection of essays, In Between Places. An avid backpacker, Bryan ties together nature writing, the historical context of the places where she has lived and hiked, and the very personal story of Bryan’s divorce and her new love. Essays in the collection have appeared in Quarterly West, Nashville … Read more

Character at Her Limits in “The Most Precious Substance on Earth” – Chicago Review of Books

Character at Her Limits in “The Most Precious Substance on Earth” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In my parents’ house there is a shelf set aside for over a dozen yearbooks, stowed away and rarely seen or even thought about, and Shashi Bhat’s The Most Precious Substance on Earth brought to life that dusty shelf and its contents. The packaging of memory in glimpses. The fleeting impressions of former lives. … Read more

A Container for One’s Truth in “The Wall” – Chicago Review of Books

A Container for One’s Truth in “The Wall” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In her essay The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction, Ursula K. Le Guin suggests that the “Hero story,” the one of conquest and knife-thrusting, is not the only form of storytelling available, even though it has become the dominant one. The alternative concept Le Guin offers is the bottle: “Not just the bottle of … Read more

Visions of Black Beauty in “Memphis” – Chicago Review of Books

Visions of Black Beauty in “Memphis” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Tara M. Stringfellow’s newest novel, Memphis, captures the beauty of Black culture and how beauty is perceived by her characters. The brutality of life strips beauty away so quickly and so permanently that storytellers often pair beauty with trauma as if they are two sides of the same coin. Stringfellow manages to avoid those … Read more

Portraits of Cuba” – Chicago Review of Books

Portraits of Cuba” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In the nineteen journalistic profiles that comprise The Tribe: Portraits of Cuba, Carlos Manuel Álvarez represents cross sections of Cuban life. Translated from Spanish by Frank Wynne and Rahul Berry, Álvarez’s literary portraits depict, among others, the New York Yankees pitcher José Contreras, the dissident poet Rafael Alcides, a migrant couple fleeing through Central … Read more