Category: Book Reviews
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Imagine a Death
Imagine a death for which no one is left to grieve, and only the birds are left to tell the story. This is the death of a city which, under ecological and environmental pressures, can no longer sustain the human life that created it. If we could look into the mind of this city as…
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The New Adventures of Helen: Magical Tales
I used to think fairy tales were only for kids — classics adapted by Disney, fantastical stuff used to lull children to sleep. But I’ve been reading fairy tales all wrong. They’re not just simple stories with a “happily ever after.” Operating in the safe space of “once upon a time,” they give us a…
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I Will Die In a Foreign Land
There’s a joke that people who study Eastern Europe like to tell. An old man in a small town is talking to a foreign dignitary about his life: “I was born in Galicia, went to school in Poland, worked in the Soviet Union, and am retired in Ukraine.” The dignitary marvels at how well-traveled the…
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These Bones
In folklore, a Barghest is a huge dog with sharp teeth and claws; its appearance portends death. A different but no less frightening Barghest haunts Kayla Chenault’s These Bones. In this keen, smart, and unsettling debut novel, the residents of a besieged Black community known as the Bramble Patch seize moments of joy and redemption…
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Deadheading & Other Stories
Deadheading, the practice of pruning dead flower heads in order to preserve the plant, provides Beth Gilstrap with a rich metaphor around which to organize her new story collection. The twenty-two stories in Deadheading & Other Stories, which won the 2019 Red Hen Press Women’s Prose Prize, range widely in content, tone, and voice. But…
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Geography of an Adultery
Novels about affairs have become so commonplace that it takes a fresh perspective to set one apart. Agnès Riva’s debut novel, Geography of an Adultery, translated from French by John Cullen, does just that. By documenting an affair according to the places the couple meets, the novel offers a wholly original exploration of how real…
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Siege of Comedians
In Siege of Comedians, Susan Daitch’s fifth novel, a trio of unlikely sleuths slips down a series of dark chutes through time and space in search of vanished others. Wildly sensitive to the detritus of human existence, they all land in the same subterranean warren of evidence, sniffing out connections that they traced by means…
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Rain Revolutions
As a go-to metaphor across genres and media, cleansing rain is instantly understandable: drenched by it, a world and its characters are made fresh and born anew. But what about a dark, filthy rain? The kind that occludes windows and darkens the street? That sticks to you like film? That churns up filth as it…
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Ring
When Gwen’s mother realizes her daughter is in love, she gives her a family heirloom — a ring that has been passed down from mothers to their daughters for centuries. She tells Gwen that the ring lets her choose three things to change about her beloved. Like all blessings, this may also be a curse.…
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Elena Knows
Elena doesn’t know anything anymore, she will come to think; for now, she is all certitude. Elena knows her daughter Rita has been found hanged in the church belfry, and she knows it can’t have been suicide, in spite of what everyone else thinks, because her daughter never went near a church when it was…
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Imminence
Imagine a darkened theatre and an ordinary stage set with the minimum of furniture needed to reflect the spaces of an apartment: a bed, a table. There is a woman on the bed, a baby beside her. Very soon, a man walks in. Behind them all, not hidden in the wings of the stage but…
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The House of Rust
However, Aisha is a bit different than everyone else. She abhors social conventions and niceties, the restrictive gender roles she is expected to follow, and the path set out for her, represented by the kind market boy Hassan who, as her grandmother astutely notes, likes her. To Aisha, this pronouncement is as “grave as though…