Fiction Archive

Beyond War: Jorge Argueta’s Poetic Memoir and Moving Beyond Displacement

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Fiction No comments
As with other non-fictional accounts and ruminations on the Salvadoran civil war, Argueta is not afraid to look the violence and trauma of the war in the eye with Flesh Wounds: A Poetic Memoir.

Review: PACHINKO by Min Jin Lee

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Fiction No comments
Pachinko is as much a story about money and prejudice as it about colonialism, war and globalization. Lee explores how politics effect the family unit, but more profoundly and perhaps perniciously, individuals’ sense of identity and self-worth that underpin their decisions.

Review: AFTER THE DAM by Amy Hassinger

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Fiction No comments
But although Dam contains intriguing traces of family saga and love story, there is nothing formulaic about this layered novel, an often lyrical elegy to the natural world that raises environmental and feminist questions about boundaries of property and self, the reconciliation of love and principles, and the limits

Laurence Sterne’s Beating Hearts

Author: | Categories: Fiction No comments
Though it’s less travel writing and more personal memoir, Laurence Sterne’s A SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY THROUGH FRANCE AND ITALY contains one of the most authentic, challenging descriptions of why one might journey from their home in the first place.

Victory is Hers! Three Contest-Winning Chapbooks by Women

This month, I read three award-winning chapbooks—which happen all to have been written by women.

Exploring personal politics in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

Author: | Categories: Fiction, Reading No comments
The sinister Jean Brodie continues to bewitch: decades after the publication of the novel that bears her name, the myth of her humanism persists; she has long been shorthand for a strain of idealism and independent thought that she never represented in the first place. The Prime of Miss

The Push and Pull of the Small Town in The Annie Year

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Fiction No comments
So what's inside the fortified small town of The Annie Year? The intimacy of a man "unbuttoning his pants to make room for the prime rib to move through his system" at a diner booth.

Review: A FIELD GUIDE TO MURDER AND FLY FISHING by Tim Weed

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Fiction No comments
Much of the collection explores the way men navigate their early adult life, the infatuations, the friendships, the sense of belonging and not belonging. Protagonists try to discover who they really are. In the travel stories especially they seem to seek something elusive, irretrievably lost.

Monsters and Men: Empathy in Victor LaValle’s Ballad of Black Tom

Author: | Categories: Fiction, Reading No comments
What forces turn someone who is, for the most part, fundamentally good into something possibly evil? This question lies at the heart of much horror. In his novella The Ballad of Black Tom, reimagining characters from the weird fiction universe of HP Lovecraft, Victor LaValle answers that question.

Review: THE SUMMER SHE WAS UNDER WATER by Jen Michalski

Author: | Categories: Book Reviews, Fiction No comments
Sam Pinski is drowning. Sometimes, quite literally, but at least metaphorically, “she feels submerged in herself.” Sam seems to struggle to remain herself in a situation where everyone wants her to be their version of Sam Pinski, which is a lot of work on a family vacation.