Dark Satellites – Clemens Meyer
Meyer’s revue of misfits, dreamers, guards, clerks, and cleaners are not at pains to identify with the reality they don’t feel invited to participate in — something their wild whims and delusions show us on every page.
The Inland Sea – Madeleine Watts
The Inland Sea demonstrates both what realist fiction can offer, as we try harder to grapple with climate crisis, and what it can’t.
I did not read Lauren Oyler’s debut, FAKE ACCOUNTS, for fun, and I won’t say that’s what it turned into, because that would be something adjacent to a lie. I read it for the discourse.
DARKCUTTER is the room where someone eats and is eaten. Where the death-surplus is hidden. Softness in all corners.
“Rather like the eponymous sex act, Holeplay is arch, surprising, and spirited.”
The Theory of Flight – Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu
When we want to base our shared reality with each other on facts, we also must allow, acknowledge, and cherish the existence of magic.
By narrating natural destruction in a neutral tone, Fauna models one way that climate-fiction can serve environmentalism.
CHRONOLOGY is a polyvocal text, a poetics of archive. The act of reading feels akin to debriefing with a friend. The impulse to help pull it together collectively.
My Autobiography of Carson McCullers – Jenn Shapland
MY AUTOBIOGRAPHY cracks the normative bounds of literary scholarship and shows us what kind of knowledge production is possible when the researcher drops the veneer of “scholarly objectivity” and makes herself fully present in the research process.
Whiteout Conditions – Tariq Shah
WHITEOUT CONDITIONS is a book concerned with toxic masculinity’s erasure of the self; it’s walls and moats.