Ideot, Kasper Bajon

This really needs to be translated into English, because it’s such an interesting entrant into the Frankenstein discourse. The first part is a speculative argument that Claire Clairmont, stepsister of Mary Shelley, was the real author of Frankenstein. This will ruffle feathers — and it’s hard not to bristle at Bajon’s portrayal of Mary asContinueContinue reading “Ideot, Kasper Bajon”

Bone Language, Jamaica Baldwin

I may be accused of bias, because Jamaica Baldwin is my colleague, but look, it’s not my fault that I have brilliant colleagues. This is a deeply personal book of poetry, not by being at all prurient or sensationalistic, but by pressing — gently, but insistently — on spots that are tender, difficult. But inContinueContinue reading “Bone Language, Jamaica Baldwin”

The Longshot, Katie Kitamura

I have very little interest in watching actual fights, but boy do I love reading about them. The recounting of a boxing match is akin to an act of ekphrasis, translating something into words that is fundamentally non-linguistic. The physicality of it, the bodily knowledge, but also the peculiar intimacy between the two fighters —ContinueContinue reading “The Longshot, Katie Kitamura”

Beautyland, Marie-Helene Bertino

A friend of mine said to me recently that she had just finished this book and was dying to talk to someone about it. Pretty irresistible, especially when she added that it is quite short. I bought it immediately. It’s the story of an alien who, while passing as human, records her observations of lifeContinueContinue reading “Beautyland, Marie-Helene Bertino”

Palestine, Joe Sacco (a year later)

Obviously, I knew that it would be very different to teach this book in September 2024 than it was in September 2023. But I didn’t exactly know how. What I hadn’t fully understood, a year ago, was how utterly foreign the Israel-Palestine conflicts was to my students. Most of them knew that there was someContinueContinue reading “Palestine, Joe Sacco (a year later)”