See You in the Morning – Mairead Case
This is not the mode of the stereotypical teenage diary . . . this is the mode of someone hoping that by taking in everything, everything will be revealed.
The best pieces from our blog section in 2015.
The best interviews from the past year.
We bind discussions of newness in literature to the categories we’re supposedly abandoning.
Never Goodnight – Coco Moodysson
Moodysson so accurately nails the conflicting tones of preteen anxiety and exuberance that even the sweetly childish games the girls play may be read as personal and somewhat embarrassing.
The Man Who Spoke Snakish – Andrus Kivirähk
Deeply anti-religious, the novel questions society’s ability to believe one set of mystical explanations while rejecting behaviors as primitive that have directly enabled their survival for generations.
Sean Stewart (Babylon Falling)
As a little kid all my real life heroes were outlaws, self-styled and otherwise.
I love to imagine a future in which a young trans writer can embrace this book as talismanic and important because it reflects something beautiful and singular.
The Xenotext: Book 1 – Christian Bök
The Xenotext feels like nothing so much as high-tech genetic graffiti: “Christian wuz here” in microbial verse.
Eyes: Novellas and Stories – William H. Gass
Taken together, these stories offer a sample of the methodologies and preoccupations that have defined Gass’s fiction, and the book could serve as a primer on the virtuosity of his language.
