Reviews

The Sisters K – Maureen Sun

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Sun’s first novel is very much its own book, but it invites comparison to Fyodor’s 1880 family-drama-cum-spiritual-murder-mystery, The Brothers Karamazov, so boldly that I think I’ll go ahead and compare them.

Who’s Afraid of Gender? – Judith Butler

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Like a patient teacher, Butler guides readers through lazy interpretations of science, the bad arguments, and the way leftist language is . . . misused by the right. . . . Those with dog-eared copies of [their] previous . . . books will find this one an easier read.

Alien Daughters Walk into the Sun – Jackie Wang

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When Wang writes about wanting to “pollute white space with [her] Brown body,” or that “the task is to blow up language,” she means it.

The Garden of Seven Twilights – Miquel de Palol

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The tales and tellers of Palol’s novel compose a meticulous alignment of points and lines, a rigorous intellectual structure resembling the mysterious sculpture in the center of the titular Garden.

Closures: Heterosexuality and the American Sitcom – Grace Lavery

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Lavery, as a queer theorist, resists and problematizes the sitcom’s implicit assumption of the automatic goodness of marriage and family ties.

Blue Notes – Anne Cathrine Bomann

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Blue Notes is no quiet meditation on grief: it’s a well-paced and highly readable medical thriller.

If Only – Vigdis Hjorth

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Hjorth reworks that old aphorism: unhappy stories are all alike. It’s the ones that eke out a kind of happiness that set themselves apart.

Playboy – Constance Debré

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The Buddha learned to extinguish desire. For [Debré’s] narrator, desire appears as liberation, what the rigid world of shitless boredom kept from her.

The Singularity – Balsam Karam

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Karam has written a surprising work of horror, embedded in two motherhood plots that briefly connect in an unnamed harbor town half-recovered from a violent conflict.

Salt – Adriana Riva

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Capitalist modernity renders mothers and daughters as autonomy-desiring “units”; SALT reveals the ache of this separation.