Book Reviews Archive

Human Hours by Catherine Barnett

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Poetry No comments
As Barnett unfolds for readers the hours of a particular human life, she simultaneously asks readers to examine their own hours.

When Rap Spoke Straight to God by Erica Dawson

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Poetry No comments
Readers must view Dawson's book-length poem from an intersectional lens—regarding the impact on the narrative voices of the white gaze, the male gaze, and the gaze of the self—in order to fully experience its nuances.

Other People’s Love Affairs by D. Wystan Owen

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Fiction No comments
D. Wystan Owen’s beautiful debut collection is a book to treasure. The ten quiet stories are linked by place, but they are also linked by Owen’s great fascination with understanding the weight of the past on the present.

The Third Hotel by Laura van den Berg

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Buoyed by van den Berg's sinuous, marvelous sentences, the novel is a deep dive into memory, love, and loss as filtered through film theory, metaphysics, and the humid, sunstroked cityscape of Havana.

The Incendiaries by R. O. Kwon

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The book generates considerable momentum through its short chapters and often gorgeous language, and through the always present search for understanding. It is a difficult book to put down, one whose images and ideas remain long after the read.

The Secret Habit of Sorrow by Victoria Patterson

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Each story is short yet encompassing, and while the plots don't connect, the collection coheres thematically. Nearly all of the protagonists and those characters eddying around them feel this secret habit of sorrow.

From a Low and Quiet Sea by Donal Ryan

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Ryan’s fourth novel clocks in at just under two hundred pages, and for most writers, telling the story of multiple characters in such a small space would be a challenge. But this book contains worlds. The reader is always searching for those connections, the echoes and strands that insist

Nevada Days by Bernardo Atxaga

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The new, harsh landscape has an immediate effect on the narrator. Reno, to him, is a place with no peace where he exists in a state of permanent jet lag.

My Year of Rest and Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh

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In Moshfegh’s no-bullshit approach, female friendship is scrutinized not to find genuine affection but to recognize how different personalities can embolden one’s ability to give into their emotional addictions.

The Promise of Failure by John McNally

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Nonfiction No comments
McNally is a kind companion who mines his own seasons of discouragement to offer others reasons to persist.