Review

Zigzags – Kamala Puligandla

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Zigzags is a nod to the persistence of queer joy, a radical thing in and of itself.

Scorpionfish – Natalie Bakopoulos

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SCORPIONFISH invites us to hold Bakopoulos’s stare as she peels the layers off Greek society through her characters, but never because of them.

A History of My Brief Body – Billy-Ray Belcourt

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From a native queer experience, Belcourt extends what it means to live in a state, to surpass the body’s defined frame, and to practice emoting as transcendence.

Catherine the Great and the Small – Olja Knežević

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Knežević’s relentless chronicling of the ravages of heterosexuality and women’s centering of men invites us to read the novel as a quiet act of queer subversion in a hostile Eastern European climate.

Holeplay – Dan Schapiro

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“Rather like the eponymous sex act, Holeplay is arch, surprising, and spirited.”

Reverse Cowgirl – McKenzie Wark

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For Wark, the realization of being trans begins with a need to not exist, which, in fact, masks a need to exist but otherwise.

The Superrationals – Stephanie LaCava

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It is a novel about everything leading up to the shake-up, to the precise moment of becoming changed, of becoming unmoored.

The Lion and the Nightingale: A Journey Through Modern Turkey – Kaya Genç

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Kaya Genç expresses his experiences through a literary art of political storytelling. The primary critical outcome of THE LION AND THE NIGHTINGALE is the essential need for freedom.

Marshlands – Andre Gide

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Andre Gide invites the reader’s doubt into the ability of the novelist (both himself and his narrator) to control the meaning of his novel.

Mutations – Gary J. Shipley and Devin Horan

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For Shipley, it’s not a matter of opening our eyes, but of realizing that our body is made of many holes.