Category: Reviews & Criticism

  • “Hear the Chorus Underfoot”: Jesi Buell Reviews Alice Hatcher’s Novel The Wonder That Was Ours

    “Hear the Chorus Underfoot”: Jesi Buell Reviews Alice Hatcher’s Novel The Wonder That Was Ours

     “How hard a thing is life to the lowly,and yet how human and real!”—W. E. B. Du Bois The Wonder That Was Ours begins innocently as a Caribbean cabbie picks up new passengers but quickly maneuvers past increasing racial, psychological, and ideological tensions until it crescendos at an apocalyptic fever pitch. The narrative and topical…

  • House of the Black Spot, a graphic novel by Ben Sears, reviewed by James Ardis

    House of the Black Spot, a graphic novel by Ben Sears, reviewed by James Ardis

    House of the Black Spot is the latest in Ben Sears’s Double+ graphic novel series. This is my first experience with Sears’ work, yet the world he imagines leaves an instant impact. In Bolt City, where much of the book’s early action takes place, there are streets lined with vibrantly-colored buildings and hovering robots capable…

  • Kelsi Brown on Miraculum, a carnival novel by Steph Post

    Kelsi Brown on Miraculum, a carnival novel by Steph Post

    “‘Step right up, gents! Step right up, ladies! That’s right! Prepare to be astounded, confounded and utterly shocked beyond your wildest dreams!’”   The perception of the carnival as a happy place with the central purpose of bringing amusement and joy to the crowd gets waved to the side in this fantastical realist take on…

  • Settlers, a poetry collection by F. Daniel Rzicznek, reviewed by Esteban Rodríguez

    Settlers, a poetry collection by F. Daniel Rzicznek, reviewed by Esteban Rodríguez

    In his latest collection, F. Daniel Rzicznek leads readers through a world ripe with abandonment and haunted by fragments of a past that are as mysterious as they are important, at least within the attempt to make meaning in the face of loss and desolation. Make no mistake, Settlers is full of life: fathers, dogs,…

  • Ashley Garris on This Hasn’t Been a Very Magical Journey So Far, a novel by Homeless

    Ashley Garris on This Hasn’t Been a Very Magical Journey So Far, a novel by Homeless

    What are you supposed to do when Sid, an orange cat wearing a leather jacket, knocks on your door significantly later than he was supposed to? Well, if you’re trying to find your recently deceased lover, then you go on a journey with Sid, naturally. This Hasn’t Been a Very Magical Journey So Far by…

  • Meiko Ko on Gillian Cummings’ The Owl Was a Baker’s Daughter

    Meiko Ko on Gillian Cummings’ The Owl Was a Baker’s Daughter

    Shakespeare’s Ophelia is an evocative figure of suffering, of men’s betrayal of women, as especially expressed within court patriarchy. The famed play finds her crushed by the cruelty and self-interests of her father, her brother, Hamlet, and Hamlet’s mother. She could have fought. She did not. Circumstances and times preventing her, she could only choose…

  • Shelf Life of Happiness, short stories by Virginia Pye, reviewed by Charles Duffie

    Shelf Life of Happiness, short stories by Virginia Pye, reviewed by Charles Duffie

    In “Best Man,” the opening story from Virginia Pye’s new collection, Keith flies to Reno to attend Don’s wedding. Don is Keith’s best friend, as gay as Keith is straight, living with AIDS, and marrying a woman. That last fact confuses Keith, but soon all his expectations are unboxed: Don is near death, the wedding…

  • 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…