Commentary

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.”

Commentary |

on Craft in the Real World by Matthew Salesses

“He makes clear that it is ‘effectively a kind of colonization to assume that we all write for the same audience or that we should do so if we want our fiction to sell.'”

Commentary |

on Crushing It, poems by Jennifer L. Knox

“If postwar American lyric poetry and stand-up share an affinity for abjection, Knox’s poetry performs this embarrassment of the abject in a spectacular way, while grounding her performance in the particulars of what one might be embarrassed about.”

Commentary |

on Sybille Bedford: A Life by Selina Hastings

“A deft skill with summary narrative, tracing her subject’s peregrinations and her many rides on the ‘sexual carousel’ of upper-class European lesbianism. But the real joy is Hastings’ capability to center the reason her subject is notable at all — her writing — and to describe how she wrote.”

Commentary |

on Zorrie, a novel by Laird Hunt

“The meditative, eerie, and beautiful Zorrie is a journey story — but Hunt tinkers with our expectations,  turning it from an adventure tale into an elliptical, more questioning book about why we move in the first place.”

Commentary |

on Come-Hither Honeycomb, poems by Erin Belieu

“Captor and hostage. Debtor and creditor. Logical ironies, sarcasm, playful musings, while difficult sometimes to track, ultimately elucidate the difficulty of self-interrogation and reflection.”

Commentary |

on Live; live; live, a novel by Jonathan Buckley

“Buckley’s protagonists are typically dry functionaries, their lives proceeding along the grooves of an implicit procedurality — urgency is muted, no sense of time dilating or contracting in the midst of emergency.”

Commentary |

on Milk Fed, a novel by Melissa Broder

“Broder is trying to show us that psychic pain is real and can amputate our ability to see things around us and perceive other people’s needs more clearly.”