Book Review

Any Holy City by Mark Conway

Any Holy City , poems by Mark Conway (Silverfish): Conway’s debut book, Any Holy City, maps a rich and mysterious landscape haunted by ghosts—ghosts of the dead and the living, of addiction, sacrifice, of loss and love. This place, however, is very much alive with a poet fully engaged in the natural and not-so-natural world…

Review: How to Leave Hialeah

“Why can’t you just shut up about being Cuban, your mother says after asking if you’re still causing trouble for yourself,” Jennine Capó Crucet writes in the title story of her sparkling debut collection, How to Leave Hialeah. “No one would even notice if you flat-ironed your hair and stopped talking." Cuba and South Florida—…

Review: The Ticking Is the Bomb

Nick Flynn’s sequel to the PEN prize–winning Another Bullshit Night in Suck City is a seriously absorbing instance of the Poet’s Memoir. (You know that a literary genre has reached maturity when it develops subgenres.) With this book, Flynn arrives where Dante stood as The Divine Comedy began—lost in midlife “alone in a dark wood.”…

Rev: The Geometry of God

Meeting with a young man torn between progressive and fundamentalist ideals, Zahoor, an elderly paleontologist, shows him the cupolas of the Great Mosque in Cordoba. It was built in a period, he argues, when Islam showed a different face to the world, a time when "faith meant devotion to multiple pleasures–mathematics, poetry, music, anatomy, calligraphy……

Père Goriot

Book Description In a grimy boardinghouse in a dismal Parisian neighborhood, Balzac sets the stage for his 1834 study of paternal love, greed, envy, and despair. Pêre Goriot tells the story of a nineteenth-century counterpart to King Lear, a father so blindly devoted to his undeserving daughters that his tragic realization??I loved them too much…