Examining the Problem Novel in “Pyre” – Chicago Review of Books

Examining the Problem Novel in “Pyre” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] My knowledge of Tamil is limited to my father’s voice. It is not his first language but it’s the one, to him, forever linked to literature. I recognize the lilt and sounds of the Tamil language but am unable to read it written, or even parse out individual spoken words. It is with gratitude … Read more

Wounds, Throbs, and Cures in “Chilean Poet” – Chicago Review of Books

Wounds, Throbs, and Cures in “Chilean Poet” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Some people live without needing literature. They summer in vacation homes, host parties, marry sweethearts with perfect smiles, bear children who will become not followers but influencers, and pass peacefully in their sleep with smooth faces. The rest of us read books. We chase romance at bonfires and dive bars, trudge through blizzards for … Read more

Rage and Remedy in “We Are Not Wearing Helmets” – Chicago Review of Books

Rage and Remedy in “We Are Not Wearing Helmets” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Poet and curator Cheryl Boyce-Taylor returns with her sixth collection of poems, We Are Not Wearing Helmets, a tribute to the women who have lifted her and an acknowledgment of the grief she still feels after losing her late son Malik “Phife Dawg” Taylor of A Tribe Called Quest. She gets political in this … Read more

Art in the Face of Collapse in “Pure Colour” – Chicago Review of Books

Art in the Face of Collapse in “Pure Colour” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] When we first meet Mira, the protagonist of Sheila Heti’s stunning, elegiac new novel Pure Colour, the universe is a roughly hewn first draft destined for the rubbish bin. Mira has just been accepted to study at the American Academy of American Critics. She works at a lamp store surrounded by bijoux glass. Her … Read more

Perspective is Everything in “Moon Witch, Spider King” – Chicago Review of Books

Perspective is Everything in “Moon Witch, Spider King” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Marlon James’ drive to explore African mythology—beyond boyhood Anansi stories in Jamaica—required a “fact-finding mission to find my own history.” In a New York Times interview, he expresses his desire to create an “electrifying” story: his Dark Star trilogy. Assuming multiple roles—anthropologist, archeologist, historian, skeptic, and scholar of religion—to develop the shapeshifters, vampires, and … Read more

The Last Vestige of an Old Order in “The Nineties” – Chicago Review of Books

The Last Vestige of an Old Order in “The Nineties” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] As I approach middle age, my brain has started to shrivel into the pickled nostalgia that’s the birthright of every generation, and because I attended high school during the ’90s, I’ve relived fantasies of youth by continually playing the music that was popular then, even if I didn’t actually listen to that same music … Read more

What Reality TV Says About Us” – Chicago Review of Books

What Reality TV Says About Us” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Refreshingly, sociologist Danielle J. Lindemann, author of True Story: What Reality TV Says About Us isn’t interested in asking whether or not reality TV is “really real.” This question, she says, misses the point. The genre demonstrates that “all reality is socially constructed.” Unscripted programming plays a role in shaping the narratives we hold … Read more

The Strangeness of Life vs. Fiction in “Be Here to Love Me at the End of the World” – Chicago Review of Books

The Strangeness of Life vs. Fiction in “Be Here to Love Me at the End of the World” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Sasha Fletcher is a poet who has catapulted himself onto the fiction scene with his first novel, Be Here to Love Me at the End of the World. An unpolished description of the text could be the following: an absurdist, historical fiction love story set in the near future. Sam and Eleanor are an … Read more

Mapping Past and Present Pain in Brian Tierney’s “Rise and Float” – Chicago Review of Books

Mapping Past and Present Pain in Brian Tierney’s “Rise and Float” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Selected by Randall Mann as the winner of the 2020-21 Jake Adam York Poetry Prize, Brian Tierney’s debut collection, Rise and Float, is nothing short of exquisite. Laid bare in these pages is a map of holes that reveal pain and death, as the question of whether or not to continue on in the … Read more