Category: Reviews & Criticism

  • Museum of Stones, a novel by Lynn Lurie, reviewed by Christina Ghent

    Museum of Stones, a novel by Lynn Lurie, reviewed by Christina Ghent

    In the novel Museum of Stones, we follow an unnamed narrator through the journey of what motherhood is really like. And in her third work, Lynn Lurie masterfully depicts this chaotic, frightening, loving, and sometimes neurotic life of being a mother to an extraordinary son. Through the unnamed narrator, Lurie brings us into the mind…

  • Mouth Trap, a prose poetry collection by Rebbecca Brown, reviewed by Gabriel Welsch

    Mouth Trap, a prose poetry collection by Rebbecca Brown, reviewed by Gabriel Welsch

    Rebbecca Brown’s collection of prose poems is the second book from a writer whose debut was the novel They Become Her. A novelist working in prose poetry risks the damning-with-faint-praise descriptor of someone whose poetry reads like that of a prose stylist’s. Tarring these poems with that brush would be very hard to do. The…

  • Casey Smith Reviews Claiming a Body, a debut fiction collection by Amanda Marbais

    Casey Smith Reviews Claiming a Body, a debut fiction collection by Amanda Marbais

    Amanda Marbais’ most recent collection, Claiming a Body, is comprised of eleven short stories, each of which masterfully balances dark humor and human tragedy to create narratives that are buzzing with tension. Whether she is writing about shady drug deals, white collar crime, or the accidental death of a cat named Sparkles, the plots of…

  • Zuri Etoshia Anderson on Dollhouse Masquerade, a poetry collection by Samuel E. Cole

    Zuri Etoshia Anderson on Dollhouse Masquerade, a poetry collection by Samuel E. Cole

    I contemplated about how to open up my review about Dollhouse Masquerade, a collection of poetry by Samuel E. Cole. “Man, what witty or strong hook can I think up to have people read this book?” I thought to myself for at least an hour. But then I realized: I can’t describe it as one…

  • The Book of the Last Word, a novel by Jesi Bender, reviewed by Patrick Parks

    The Book of the Last Word, a novel by Jesi Bender, reviewed by Patrick Parks

    In the prologue to Jesi Bender’s intense and beautifully crafted first novel, The Book of the Last Word, we hear from that most omniscient of narrators, who tells us, “In the beginning, there was nothing but me. In the end, it will be the same.” This paraphrasing from Genesis is a tip-off that behind the…

  • Hannah Jackson Reviews Wendy J. Fox’s latest novel If the Ice Had Held

    Hannah Jackson Reviews Wendy J. Fox’s latest novel If the Ice Had Held

    In Wendy J. Fox’s If the Ice Had Held, Melanie faces a setback when the software company she works for begins downsizing. At the same time, she is also trying to overcome her impulse to sleep with married men, reflecting on her childhood and realizing where her avoidance of commitment stems from. While the novel…

  • Temper CA, a novella by Paul Skenazy, reviewed by Hayley Neiling

    Temper CA, a novella by Paul Skenazy, reviewed by Hayley Neiling

    With the death of her grandfather, Joy Temper returns to the small mining town of Temper, CA. Temper is the town where she spent her childhood in the 1970s, and it is the town that her family founded during the days of the California gold rush and has gained local fame for doing so. In…

  • Survival House, a story collection by Wendell Mayo, reviewed by Eric Aldrich

    Survival House, a story collection by Wendell Mayo, reviewed by Eric Aldrich

    Survival House, a new collection of short fiction by Wendell Mayo, invites readers to experience the ironic fetishization of the Cold War in America. The collection blends compelling characters with borderline absurd imaginings of the Nuclear Age ethos. Mutually assured destruction hovers in the background as atomic diction is repurposed into dad jokes with a…

  • Not Everyone Is Special, Josh Denslow’s debut fiction collection, reviewed by Michael A. Ferro

    Not Everyone Is Special, Josh Denslow’s debut fiction collection, reviewed by Michael A. Ferro

    If there’s one resounding message to be found in Josh Denslow’s debut collection of stories, Not Everyone Is Special, it’s just that: Not everyone is special, but enough people are and Denslow has created a world filled with winners, losers, and everyone in-between—each with their own engrossing stories and each told with the care and…