Book Reviews

Review: THE PITTSBURGH ANTHOLOGY Edited by Eric Boyd
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Review: THE PITTSBURGH ANTHOLOGY Edited by Eric Boyd

The Pittsburgh AnthologyEd. Eric BoydBelt Books, September 2015236 pp; $20 Buy paperback “Pittsburgh has always been a scrappy city, characterized by unflapping tenacity, even as outsourcing and the ills of globalization threatened its survival,” writes Kevin Tasker in “Rebirth of the Hollywood Lanes,” one of the final essays in The Pittsburgh Anthology. Edited by Eric…

Angela Carter’s “Unicorn” and the Illusion of Empowerment Through Objectification
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Angela Carter’s “Unicorn” and the Illusion of Empowerment Through Objectification

“Q. What have unicorns and virgins got in common A. They are both fabulous beasts.” In the new collection of Angela Carter’s mostly forgotten, but viscerally affecting poetry, Carter perverts mythological symbols in order to subvert the mythology of femininity. Just as Simone De Beauvoir lamented that “one is not born, but becomes, a woman,” Carter’s…

Review: ROOMS FOR RENT IN THE BURNING CITY by Brandon Courtney
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Review: ROOMS FOR RENT IN THE BURNING CITY by Brandon Courtney

Rooms for Rent in the Burning CityBrandon CourtneySpark Wheel Press, 201574 pp, $12 In the days before Spotify and iTunes, rock bands faced a challenge known as the “sophomore album slump.” A new band typically had had a few years to compose and then hone in performance the songs that made up its first album;…

Armchair Traveling through History: The Orphan Trains in Literature
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Armchair Traveling through History: The Orphan Trains in Literature

Between 1854 and 1929, around 200,000 homeless, abandoned, and orphaned American children were sent by train, mostly from New York City, to new homes, mostly in the Midwestern U.S. Later in the twentieth century and early in the twenty-first, in our contemporary versions of the Orphan Trains, planes from Vietnam and Korea brought escorted children…

Book Review: MEMORY THEATER by Simon Critchley
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Book Review: MEMORY THEATER by Simon Critchley

Memory TheaterSimon CritchleyOther Press, Nov 2015112 pp, $15.95 Buy hardcover | eBook What I remember most from reading Thomas Harris’ Hannibal when it was first published in 1999 was not the graphic violence and strange character detour for which the book would be criticized; it was the concept of the Memory Palace, an internal museum…

Destruction Modes: Sueyeun Juliette Lee’s Solar Maximum
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Destruction Modes: Sueyeun Juliette Lee’s Solar Maximum

Solar Maximum Sueyeun Juliette Lee Futurepoem, Winter 2015 128 pp, $18 “Perhaps we continue in the wake of a disaster we hardly marked,” runs the last sentence of Sueyeun Juliette Lee’s endnotes for Solar Maximum. Or, the last sentence could be the italicized incomplete fragment: “((when the sun disappears” ending the title poem – an…

Review: THIS IS WHY I CAME by Mary Rakow
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Review: THIS IS WHY I CAME by Mary Rakow

This is Why I CameMary RakowCounterpoint, December 15 2015204 pp; $24 Buy | eBook To tell you that Mary Rakow’s lyrical novel This is Why I Came is a recasting of biblical narratives hardly sets the book apart—the Bible, with its knotty metaphors, unequaled cast of complex characters, ebullient wisdom, and dense moral inquiry has,…