The Legacy of the Witch Hunts and Why Women Are Still on Trial” – Chicago Review of Books

The Legacy of the Witch Hunts and Why Women Are Still on Trial” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In Defense of Witches: The Legacy of the Witch Hunts and Why Women Are Still on Trial, by Mona Chollet, is a revelatory collection of histories and experiences that have been carefully ignored across centuries of time. Even a devoted reader will find it difficult to think of a book besides Chollet’s that does … Read more

Metafiction and Convention in “The Women I Love” – Chicago Review of Books

Metafiction and Convention in “The Women I Love” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] ​​Van Gogh’s self-portraits are among his most famous and beloved works; presidential autobiographies fly off the shelves when they inexorably appear a year out of office. For the novelist, however, no such allowances are made. A common refrain from that amorphous, ominous entity public opinion seems to be that novelists are far too interested … Read more

Suffering and Strength in “The Women of Troy” – Chicago Review of Books

Suffering and Strength in “The Women of Troy” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The literary critic James Wood once wrote dismissively of historical fiction, saying that it is “merely science fiction facing backwards.” We inject the concerns of the present into the past, Wood suggests, the same way that we do when we write about the imaginary future, and this can result in a text that feels … Read more

In “Prepare Her,” the Mass of Women Lead Lives of Quiet Desperation – Chicago Review of Books

In “Prepare Her,” the Mass of Women Lead Lives of Quiet Desperation – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Henry David Thoreau observed that men often lead lives of quiet desperation, and although he omits women, they often also lead lives of quiet desperation, as is the case for the women under examination in Genevieve Plunkett’s debut story collection, Prepare Her. In this collection, the domestic lives of female protagonists come under scrutiny, … Read more

Renarritivizing Violence Against Women in “The Comfort of Monsters” – Chicago Review of Books

Renarritivizing Violence Against Women in “The Comfort of Monsters” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] I was first introduced to Willa C. Richards’s The Comfort of Monsters in a 2018 graduate-level writing workshop when Willa brought in two early chapters for discussion. It was the type of reading experience a reader never forgets. In the excerpt, the narrator Peg remembers going to a bar in Milwaukee’s Walker’s Point neighborhood … Read more

Anguish and Acknowledgment in “Unwell Women” – Chicago Review of Books

Anguish and Acknowledgment in “Unwell Women” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Elinor Cleghorn’s Unwell Women: Misdiagnosis and Myth in a Man-Made World is an intriguing exploration of the history of women’s health, specifically how women are perceived as individuals and members of a larger healthcare system. The theme, across countries and time periods, is centered on disbelief. The female body, long-held in a place of … Read more

Rediscovered Women Writers Get Their Moment – Chicago Review of Books

Rediscovered Women Writers Get Their Moment – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Is there a more back-handed compliment than to be called a “woman before her time”? There’s something self-congratulatory in the appellation, how it’s both dismissive of an artist’s work in the moment while anticipating a better future for them that might never arrive. Yet it’s a description that seems to be trotted back out … Read more

The Indelible Mark of Women in “The Lost Apothecary” – Chicago Review of Books

The Indelible Mark of Women in “The Lost Apothecary” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Releasing a debut novel is always a fraught endeavor, and in a pandemic, it’s even more so. But the luckiest debut novelists see buzz building for their books well in advance of publication. Right now, that buzz belongs to Sarah Penner and her inventive, compelling historical novel, The Lost Apothecary. It’s been named among … Read more

A Love Letter to Adventurous Women in “The Arctic Fury” – Chicago Review of Books

A Love Letter to Adventurous Women in “The Arctic Fury” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Greer Macallister’s thrilling historical fiction novel, The Arctic Fury, is a love letter to adventurous women, unlikely friendships, and finding possibilities in a bleak, unforgiving wilderness. Set in the 1850s, a mysterious, wealthy woman hires guide Virginia Reeve to lead an expedition to find her husband lost in the Arctic North. The novel opens … Read more