Category: Book Reviews
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Bear Down, Bear North
The photo showed a grizzly on its hind legs, leaning on one of those half-sized school buses, paw inside a window, lips pulled back above those amazing teeth. The article explained that the starving bear had come upon the bus while it idled on the street of a small Alaskan town. The bear shook the…
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The Princess, the King and the Anarchist
The day she became queen, there were lots of flowers, lots of noise[s], lots of blood and lots of dead bodies, but she wasn’t particularly surprised. These opening lines of a delightful and amusing first novel by Swiss playwright Robert Pagani set the intimate tone for the story, told essentially by the three main characters…
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the stinging fly: issue 18
the stinging fly is an Irish journal of fiction, poetry and critical reviews. As expected, much of the writing gathered here has a distinctly Irish flair—that incredible storytelling, that graceful movement through words and ideas. It is not exclusively Irish, however, neither by theme or by writer. This is a journal that fits easily on…
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I Am a Very Productive Entrepreneur
I am a Very Productive Entrepreneur is a book of “absurdist” (Svalina’s word) business plans. But to call these plans “absurdist” seems to self-deprecate or to shy away from the very real, intense attention to sadness that many of these businesses attempt to alleviate. I started this one business that retrofit memories to include pilot…
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The Complete Works of Marvin K. Mooney
Christopher Higgs’ novel, The Complete Works of Marvin K. Mooney, is the experimental literature fan’s experimental novel. A novel about the fictional writer, Marvin K. Mooney, as much as it is an overview of the history and nature of experimental writing, Mooney is constructed from essays, reviews, letters, short fiction, creative non-fiction by Mooney (and…
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So You Know It’s Me
Last week I attended the annual Revere Beach Sand Sculpting Festival, where masterpieces of sand and glue towered above spectators, rivaling the beauty and intricacies of a more permanent medium like stone. As I stood there admiring art whose destruction predates creation, I came to the slow realization that I was looking at a visual…
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Death Wishing
Many years ago, I was obsessed with a show called Sliders. It starred Jerry O’Connell (before he went all Stamos on us) as Quinn Mallory, a genius graduate student who discovered a way to travel between parallel worlds. What tethered me to my television each week was not the pedestrian dialogue or questionable visual effects,…
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The Indefinite State of Imaginary Morals
The stories in Rae Bryant’s collection The Indefinite State of Imaginary Morals possess a certainty of voice and spirit that contradicts the volatile, undefined nature of the title. Bryant’s language is as lyrical as her subject matter is corporal. Her protagonists are largely (but not entirely) women who are struggling to relate to a man,…
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From the Darkness Right Under Our Feet
The eight stories in Patrick Michael Finn’s collection, From the Darkness Right Under Our Feet, are so thematically and stylistically cohesive they create a story collection that reads very much like a novel. These are not linked stories, not in the traditional sense; they do not share characters or even strict time periods. But they…
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The Vanishing Point of Desire
I’m nervous to talk about Vi Khi Nao’s The Vanishing Point of Desire. I feel self-conscious, like I need to protect my ideas from your derision, like I need to couch my reading experience through “I” in the event that I am totally, uselessly, wrong about everything you are about to read. Maybe this is…
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Katzenjammered
Child narrators can be some of the most interesting narrators in fiction, in the sense that they are able to reflect and refract adult situations without completely understanding what is really going on. They have both a developing awareness, which makes them pay close attention to difficult situations, and an emergent morality, which means they…
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The Girl with Brown Fur
In the opening story of Stacey Levine’s The Girl With Brown Fur, a family is moving to Uppsala. It’s a real word and a real place, yet it’s one that sounds strange and slightly fantastic to an Anglophone ear. Suspending her readers between the familiar and the foreign is what Levine does best, and each…