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Book Review

Rose Alley

Book Review by Katie McGinnis

Rose Alley, by Jeremy Davies. Counterpath Press, 2009. $15.95, 192 pages.

Jeremy Davies’ debut novel Rose Alley is a conundrum of the delicious sort. Rose Alley defies containment, and Davies seems to have deliberately written an unfilmable (and unsummarizable) …

Incarnadine

Book Review by Anonymous

Incarnadine, by Mary Szybist. Graywolf Press, 2013. $15.00, 80 pages.

“I’m not religious, I’m spiritual”—at long last, the eye-roll inducing mantra is granted explanation and elegance in Mary Szybist’s second collection of poetry. “Incarnadine” is a word whose Latin …

Standing Still in a Concrete Jungle

Book Review by Anonymous

Standing Still in a Concrete Jungle, by Justin Nobel. Zoom Books, 2012. $12.00, 105 pages.

Justin Nobel’s autobiographical psycho-geography of New York is at turns disciplined and whimsical, insightful and playful. Structured around eleven site-specific observations or reflections, the …

All Decent Animals

Book Review by Christopher X. Shade

All Decent Animals, by Oonya Kempadoo. FSG, 2013. $26, 272 pages.

During Carnival in Port of Spain, with loud Mama look a boo-boo tin pan, rum in everyone, close friends throw answers back and forth to the question: Where …

Speech Begins after Death

Book Review by Christopher Schaberg

Speech Begins after Death, by Michel Foucault (in conversation with Claude Bonnefoy). Ed. Philippe Artières. Trans. Robert Bononno. University of Minnesota Press, 2013. $24.95, 96 pages.

In this small, short, and entirely arresting book, the reader gets a brief …

The Listeners

Book Review by Devan Schwartz

The Listeners, by Leni Zumas. Tin House Books, 2012. $15.95, 352 pages.

In Leni Zumas’ debut novel, The Listeners, the narrator Quinn suffers the loss of her older sister—shot in her sleep after they switched places in a shared …

Contents May Have Shifted

Book Review by Kristin Sanders

Contents May Have Shifted, by Pam Houston. Norton, 2012. $25.95, 303 pages.

I have been reading a lot of contemporary literature lately about helpless women. Women trapped in unhappy marriages, women in psych wards, women exploring their sexuality to …

Where the West Ends

Book Review by Anonymous

Where the West Ends, by Michael Totten. CreateSpace, 2012. $19.95, 282 pages.

Where the West Ends is a collection of travel essays by the foreign correspondent and policy analyst Michael Totten, whose journeys here span thirteen countries. At times, …

Murder Ballad

Book Review by Anonymous

Murder Ballad, by Jane Springer. Alice James Books, 2012. $15.95, 80 pages.

Billie Holiday presides over Jane Springer’s Murder Ballad, winner of the Beatrice Hawley Award. It’s not the public radio cliché of the flower-wearing chanteuse that shadows …

What We Ask of Flesh

Book Review by Rebecca Lauren

What We Ask of Flesh, by Remica Bingham. Etruscan Press, 2013. $14.00, 85 pages.

When we think of flesh, we think of the body, yet Remica Bingham asks us to reconsider the singularity of such an initial image. What …

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Latest Book Review

Museum of the Soon to Depart

reviewed by Adedayo Agarau

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(Bloomsbury 2019).

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