Louise Erdrich
Future Home of the Living God
HarperCollins
The first thing that happens at the end of the world is that we don’t know what is happen…
Editors’ Picks
-
-
Anna Badkhen Bright Unbearable Reality: Essays New York Review Books Bright Unbearable Reality is a book of micro and macro scales: piscine, tidal, musical,…
-
Kwon Yeo-sun Lemon Trans. Janet Hong Other Press LEMON BEGINS LIKE many crime dramas: someone’s been murdered and the police are interro…
-
THE LATEST BOOK by environmental writer Richard Heinberg finds him working with familiar material but with a new and insightful twist. In Power (New Society, 2021), Heinberg…
-
IN HER FOREWORD to The Town Slowly Empties (Headpress, 2021), Sasha Dugdale describes this slim hybrid as the author’s “lyrical diary of lock…
-
NICK KARY’S MATERIAL (Chelsea Green, 2020) uses the narrative tools of the psychogeographer to map the flows from human needs to the natural environment as…
-
During quarantine, when not watching the news or reading a novel, I find my daily vision drawn to immediate surroundings: geese touching down in the parking lot where we safely walk (no need to come w…
-
Lauren Camp Took House Tupelo Press I will speak of this wind . . . of the seams of desire. —Lauren Camp, “Remember It Was” The Greek mythological term o…
-
Shimon Adaf Aviva-No Trans. Yael Segalovitz Alice James Books thus I shall not let slip between my hands / a sister into time. – Shimon Adaf I must confess: Shimon Adaf’s…
-
Paolo Cognetti The Wild Boy Trans. Erica Segre & Simon Carnell Washington Square Press / Atria FEELING A BIT overburdened by the demands of civilized life but l…
-
With a two-week driving vacation ahead of her this summer, Managing and Culture Editor Michelle Johnson is already setting aside books for the trip—plus a few to read poolside when she returns.…
-
Camille Laurens Little Dancer Aged Fourteen: The True Story Behind Degas’s Masterpiece Trans. Willard Wood Other Press Ca…
-
Sigrid Nunez The Friend Riverhead Books D o the books we need find us? A few months ago, I purchased a used copy of Sigrid Nunez’s seventh novel, The Friend. The inside jacket pr…
-
Hearth: A Global Conversation on Community, Identity, and PlaceEd. Annick Smith & Susan O’ConnorMilkweed EditionsIn many of the essays and poems in this remarkable new collection, the ide…
-
Hummingbirds Between the PagesChris ArthurOhio State University Press (2018)Chris Arthur’s most recent collection of essays, Hummingbirds Between the Pages, makes a compelling argument on beh…
-
The winter break was one of long reads: Exit West, If Beale Street Could Talk, Manhattan Beach, Little Fires Everywhere. After a busy four months of editing and…
-
The Art of DeathEdwidge DanticatGraywolf Press (2017)It might seem odd to focus on a book called The Art of Death as spring approaches (at least in the Northern Hemisphere), but we all know about…
-
CompassMathias ÉnardTrans. Charlotte MandellNew Directions, 2017 At the very time one should be looking ahead to the excellent works in t…
-
In Other WordsJhumpa LahiriTrans. Ann GoldsteinKnopf, 2016Jhumpa Lahiri’s In Other Words is a vulnerable journey of self-exploration by means of linguistic exile. It’s notably her fi…
-
Browse: The World in BookshopsEd. Henry HitchingsPushkin Press, 2016Don’t mistake Browse for a collection of breezy tributes to writers’ favorite bookshops. The essays in this little…
-
There are three recent books from the University of Oklahoma Press that I know would make great summer reading. My own Mestizos Come Home! Making and Claiming Mexican American Identity…
-
As much as Managing Editor Michelle Johnson loves traveling, she also loves returning home. Her summer reading list reflects a similar course this year.Elif…
-
This summer Web Editor Jen Rickard Blair is planning to read a balance of books that refuel calm and creativity as well as examine human nature and our shared hi…
-
Editor in Chief Daniel Simon picks three books that promise to unsettle, console, and inspire.Anne CarsonFloatRandom HouseI found…
-
With a wealth of fiction, nonfiction, and verse stacking up in his office, Book Review Editor Rob Vollmar has narrowed his reading ambitions for the summer down to these three worthy titles.…