Commentary

Commentary |

“Poets Recommend” — Part II

In the second of several installments of this annual feature, we comment on collections by Sam Cha, Elizabeth Lindsey Rogers and Julia Story

Commentary |

on Antiquities, a novel by Cynthia Ozick

“This 94-year-old Jewish writer has been delighting and provoking her followers for decades, yet I had a hunch there was something missing from the general consensus about her work.”

Commentary |

on Subdivision, a novel by J. Robert Lennon

“You may call this novel a weird thriller, and also a mystery — not a whodunit? but a whoisit? and a wherearewe? and a whathappened?

Commentary |

“Poets Recommend” — Part I

In the first of several installments of this annual feature, we comment on recent collections by Khaled Mattawa, Rachel Long, and Kimiko Hahn

Commentary |

on Bina: A Novel in Warnings, a novel by Anakana Schofield

“Aside from disclosing her discomforts, Bina presents to us an unchanging, unimprovable, unfair human condition. She says, “All over this country, there are people waking up day by day beside people they are disappointed to discover aren’t dead. I don’t care. I’m going to say it.”

 

Commentary |

on In Memory of Memory by Maria Stepanova, translated from the Russian by Sasha Dugdale

“Pairing the dead with the living, In Memory of Memory traces a conspicuous matrilineal line, starting with the narrator’s great-grandmother Sarra Ginzburg, ‘a tribe of strong, individual women standing like milestones spanning the century … a staircase leading steadily toward me, consisting entirely of women.’”

Commentary |

on The Earliest Witnesses, poems by G.C. Waldrep

“Waldrep does not let the sorrows and pain that both attend and define this book — the sicknesses, the surgeries, the omnipresence of war, the loneliness of the ‘tourist’ — have the final say … The Earliest Witnesses chooses clarity — which, in this case, means faith.”