Category: Reviews & Criticism

  • “Reality Depends on Perspective”: Claire Polders Reviews Deb Olin Unferth’s Wait Till You See Me Dance

    “Reality Depends on Perspective”: Claire Polders Reviews Deb Olin Unferth’s Wait Till You See Me Dance

    With “Likable,” the opening story of Wait Till You See Me Dance, Unferth throws us into the pitfalls of social anxiety, one of the themes threading her impressive new story collection. In barely two pages she sketches the naked concern of an aging woman on how she is perceived by others. Should the woman resist…

  • “Living in a Lonely World”: Samuel Stolton Reads Leyna Krow’s I’m Fine, but You Appear to Be Sinking

    “Living in a Lonely World”: Samuel Stolton Reads Leyna Krow’s I’m Fine, but You Appear to Be Sinking

    If ever “reading” was to be considered a solitary enterprise, one is ironically sure to be acquainted with a fair few lonesome characters in Leyna Krow’s short story collection, I’m Fine, but You Appear to Be Sinking, published by Featherproof Books. An ominous sense of abandonment abounds throughout the stories, and the reader is immersed…

  • Fiction Review: Tyler Barton Reads Ottessa Moshfegh’s Homesick for Another World

    Fiction Review: Tyler Barton Reads Ottessa Moshfegh’s Homesick for Another World

    The final story in Ottessa Moshfegh’s third book of fiction starts with the sentence, “I come from another place.” If Homesick for Another World contained an opening epigraph, this might be an apt one. To be clear, the collection is not a work of speculative fiction, nor is it sci-fi, fantasy, or even magical realism.…

  • James Ardis Reviews Exits by Daryl Seitchik

    James Ardis Reviews Exits by Daryl Seitchik

    *Ed.’s Note: click images to view larger sizes. When I first heard about Daryl Seitchik’s comic Exits, the story of a woman who works at a mirror store until she achieves (or is cursed with) full invisibility, I felt confident I knew where the story would go. I figured Claire, the now invisible protagonist, would…

  • “I, Too, Am Ruining My Own Life”: Jesse Rice-Evans on Gwen Werner’s I’m Ruining My Own Life

    “I, Too, Am Ruining My Own Life”: Jesse Rice-Evans on Gwen Werner’s I’m Ruining My Own Life

    Gwen Werner gets me: anxieties about gender, sexuality; being a total nihilist but loving my nest anyway; trying to not be an awful straight-passing feminist; surviving, but barely. Werner stumbles through life, but her voice is unwavering: she might hate herself, but she knows how to shape a story, and, maybe most importantly in short-form…

  • Fiction Review: Ray Barker Reads Alexander Boldizar’s The Ugly

    Fiction Review: Ray Barker Reads Alexander Boldizar’s The Ugly

    Even courageous readers have likely never encountered a character with the overwhelming physical mass and intellectual presence of (northern) Siberian oaf, and oversized tribal chief, Muzhduk Ugli the Fourth. Muzhduk is the three-hundred-pound blond-bearded protagonist that propels Alexander Boldizar’s oddly unforgettable debut novel, The Ugly, to its fairytale end. The novel ostensibly details the life…

  • There’s So Much They Haven’t Told You, stories by Michelle Ross, reviewed by Dana Diehl

    There’s So Much They Haven’t Told You, stories by Michelle Ross, reviewed by Dana Diehl

    The stories in Michelle Ross’ debut collection, aptly named There’s So Much They Haven’t Told You, are fueled by grade school science, by snake venom, by fossilization, by velocity, by the kind of magic that’s real. Ross’ characters live in half-formed worlds, their vision limited by their circumstances. In these twenty-three stories, characters stare down…

  • Poetry Review: David Welper Reads Ben Mirov’s A Few Ideas from My Blackbox

    Poetry Review: David Welper Reads Ben Mirov’s A Few Ideas from My Blackbox

    Question: if you’re in a life-or-death situation, what would be the thoughts—no, ideas—going around in your head? Or, as Ben Mirov asks in his latest chapbook, A Few Ideas from My Blackbox, “Can you imagine a whippoorwill?” Mirov’s chapbook presents poetically ideological and existential questions in literal and figurative spaces. Each poem is short (one…

  • Book Review: Melih Levi Reviews Tiana Clark’s Equilibrium

    Book Review: Melih Levi Reviews Tiana Clark’s Equilibrium

    Could it be magic?The white bunny we lift from the hatlike early fog on the road to work.(“Particle Fever”)   To get through. To get through the day, the night. That miserable winter. Grief. All of that. To get through to you. What does it mean to get through? What does it mean, through? Does…