The rare contemporary novel that is not overhyped — it really is that good. It’s a brilliant and thought-provoking satire, a daring and complex speculative fiction, and also a wonderfully vivid and poignant story. I only distantly remember Huck Finn, so I couldn’t fully appreciate the interplay between the texts, but I relished the smartContinueContinue reading “James, Percival Everett”
Monthly Archives: January 2025
I Don’t Want to be a Mom, Irene Olmo
This is a terrific book — a lucid, clear discussion of the various reasons people have for not wanting — or wanting! — children, but also, a really powerful account of just how much pressure women face to procreate. Olmo really nails the condescension people direct at anyone who confidently declares that they don’t wantContinueContinue reading “I Don’t Want to be a Mom, Irene Olmo”
Porcelain War
When I was in Warsaw last summer, I noticed, perhaps for the first time, a monument smack dab in the middle of city center, across the street from a giant mall. What was so striking to me about it were the various layers of meaning: firstly, that it marked a spot where 102 people hadContinueContinue reading “Porcelain War”
Season of the Swamp, Yuri Herrera, tr. Lisa Dillman
I guess this was my subconscious way of going to New Orleans, since I’m missing MLA this year. This is a strange little novel — it’s a really cool invocation of place (19C NOLA), but not via sensory detail. It’s more like someone arriving to a new place and looking around and noticing all theContinueContinue reading “Season of the Swamp, Yuri Herrera, tr. Lisa Dillman”
Held, Anne Michaels
The first section of this book held me completely in its thrall: it’s stunningly good; narrating the experiences of an injured soldier in the First World War and flashing between past, present, and future with dazzling fluidity. It should be confusing but you’re so utterly in it that it feels completely natural. The prose isContinueContinue reading “Held, Anne Michaels”
Early Light, Osamu Dazai
I’m running out of ND Storybooks, which is a problem, because they’re such a perfect little treat for holidays (like New Year’s Day). This one is especially fun because it’s a collection of three stories that are interestingly different from each other — each with a slightly different tone and worldview, though they seemingly followContinueContinue reading “Early Light, Osamu Dazai”