It’s funny, I read this like a month ago when I was feeling busy and overwhelmed and wanted a fun page-turner and then I only got more busy and overwhelmed, such that back then seems easy, because lately I barely get to read more than a few pages, or a poem or two, and itContinueContinue reading “Mapping the Edge, Sarah Dunant”
Author Archives: Kasia Bartoszynska
Austerlitz, W. G. Sebald
I first read this in my final year of college in a German literature course with Katja Garloff, where it completely blew my mind, and then again during my first semester of graduate school in a course with Eric Santner specifically about Sebald. I’ve been wanting to revisit it (this delightful essay by Lauren OylerContinueContinue reading “Austerlitz, W. G. Sebald”
RuRu, Joanna Rudniańska
Back in January, I set myself the goal of reading 6 Polish books this year, and halfway through the year, I was at…zero. Oooops. I was introduced to this collection by Antonia Lloyd-Jones in a (really excellent) translation workshop where we collectively worked on translating one of the stories, and maybe for that reason IContinueContinue reading “RuRu, Joanna Rudniańska”
The Baudelaire Fractal, Lisa Robertson
The premise of this novel is that a young woman wakes up to find that she has written Baudelaire’s complete works. But it’s not a gimmicky postmodern sort of book — more like a beautiful, meandering meditation on being a woman artist. I loved it.
Ponyo
My soon-to-be-6-year-old child generally refuses to watch movies, preferring various youtube videos (of people unboxing toys, or playing with toys, or computer-generated animations of balls rolling down ramps, or very amateurish films with weird little plots — all kinds of things. I understand this is A Thing with this generation, but it is so deeplyContinueContinue reading “Ponyo”
We Hereby Refuse, Abe, Nimura, Ishikawa, Sasaki
The thought crossed my mind, as I was reading this, that it’s sort of funny how you can basically get me to read a history textbook if it includes loads of illustrations. This is obviously an oversimplification, but it’s true that graphic novels (or rather, graphic narratives) are increasingly being recognized as an effective wayContinueContinue reading “We Hereby Refuse, Abe, Nimura, Ishikawa, Sasaki”
LA Woman, Eve Babitz
I picked this up because we were going to spend a few days in LA (I love reading books that are connected to the places I travel to), and read it on the plane with great pleasure. The voice won me over immediately, from the fantastic opening line — “One summer morning while I wasContinueContinue reading “LA Woman, Eve Babitz”
Dear Science and Other Stories, Katherine McKittrick
I’ve been reading this slowly for over a year now — read a chapter, think on it, go back and re-read, think some more. Then I was working on an essay and realized that parts of the book were echoing in my head, and so I started trying to think with it, and found myselfContinueContinue reading “Dear Science and Other Stories, Katherine McKittrick”
New People, Danzy Senna
I was looking for an absorbing and fun book to celebrate the end of the semester, so I tore right through this. It’s an odd novel, one that’s weaving together three major strands through the story of one character, a graduate student who is on the verge of getting married and also trying to finishContinueContinue reading “New People, Danzy Senna”
The Moment of Tenderness, Madeleine L’Engle
I loved the Wrinkle in Time books when I was a kid, and then as a teenager, I was thrilled to discover that L’Engle had also written books for young adults, and I happily devoured those as well. So when I saw this short story collection in the new books display of my college’s library,ContinueContinue reading “The Moment of Tenderness, Madeleine L’Engle”