Category: Reviews & Criticism

  • “The Page 99 Test”: Tony Trigilio & Inside the Walls of My Own House: The Complete Dark Shadows (of My Childhood), Book 2

    “The Page 99 Test”: Tony Trigilio & Inside the Walls of My Own House: The Complete Dark Shadows (of My Childhood), Book 2

    “Open the book to page ninety-nine and read, and the quality of the whole will be revealed to you.”―Ford Madox Ford Page ninety-nine opens the final section of my new book, Inside the Walls of My Own House: The Complete Dark Shadows (of My Childhood), Book 2. This page is a key pivot point for…

  • “The Page 99 Test”: Laurie Stone & My Life as an Animal

    “The Page 99 Test”: Laurie Stone & My Life as an Animal

    “Open the book to page ninety-nine and read, and the quality of the whole will be revealed to you.”―Ford Madox Ford Damn you, Ford Madox Ford. I wanted to be done with a friend I had turned into a character in My Life as an Animal. Then I read page ninety-nine, and there she was…

  • “The Page 99 Test”: Joe Milazzo & Crepuscle W/ Nellie

    “The Page 99 Test”: Joe Milazzo & Crepuscle W/ Nellie

    “Open the book to page ninety-nine and read, and the quality of the whole will be revealed to you.”―Ford Madox Ford We’re standing outside a pawnshop, probably somewhere in Midtown or even Lower Manhattan. The year is 1955, autumn. We’re in the company of John, a “minor character” who may or may not be a…

  • Poetry Review: Shaun Turner Reads Tasha Cotter’s Girl in the Cave

    Poetry Review: Shaun Turner Reads Tasha Cotter’s Girl in the Cave

    In her “The Glass Essay,” Anne Carson’s speaker “… lives on a moor in the north. / She lives alone. / Spring opens like a blade there” on the moor, and Carson’s speaker explores the relationships between place, time, and all that makes us. In “The Glass Essay,” the speaker’s mother is also a blade…

  • Poetry Review: Nicholas Carlos Fuenzalida Reads Mathias Svalina’s The Wine-Dark Sea

    Poetry Review: Nicholas Carlos Fuenzalida Reads Mathias Svalina’s The Wine-Dark Sea

    Taking its name from one of Homer’s most enigmatic and contentiously debated epithets, The Wine-Dark Sea, Mathias Svalina’s fifth book, is comprised of seventy-six poems, each bearing the collection’s title. The nod to Homer, as well as the opening epigraph by Diogenes, lends itself to drawing a connection with another leading figure of the Greek…

  • Review: Nick Sweeney on Mourner’s Bench by Sanderia Faye

    Review: Nick Sweeney on Mourner’s Bench by Sanderia Faye

    This is not a “Civil Rights Movement” novel. This is a novel in which the Civil Rights Movement occurs around characters. If this was the former, it would be more historical, perhaps grander and more mythical like JFK’s Camelot. The latter, however, allows us to dive into a world and see history as it happens…

  • Graphic Novel Review: Julia Mae Ftacek Reads How to Survive in the North by Luke Healy

    Graphic Novel Review: Julia Mae Ftacek Reads How to Survive in the North by Luke Healy

    Like the frigid plains it’s set in, Luke Healy’s graphic novel How to Survive in the North is quiet and full of introspective beauty, placing its cast of vibrant, believable characters against a looming red sky with nothing but their bodies and misty breaths, speechless in the face of their shared predicament. And the book…

  • Fiction Review: James W. Davidson, Jr. Reads Stephen Dixon’s Late Stories

    Fiction Review: James W. Davidson, Jr. Reads Stephen Dixon’s Late Stories

    In Stephen Dixon’s intricate story cycle Late Stories, author and retired university teacher Phil Seidel exists alone in the Baltimore home where he and his late wife Abby raised their daughters. Though Phil exercises at the YMCA, shops at the local market, and occasionally dines at his favorite restaurants, he struggles to venture any more…

  • Book Review: Jacob Singer on My Life as an Animal by Laurie Stone

    Book Review: Jacob Singer on My Life as an Animal by Laurie Stone

    My Life as an Animal, a collection of interconnected stories, offers a unified voice and perspective, producing the feel of a loosely constructed novel. While the stories focus on a few topics and themes—Laurie’s relationship with Richard, her family and life in New York City, and her pseudo-exile in Arizona—each topic addresses something within the…