Rawi Hage’s De Niro’s Game (2006)

2020-05-21T16:06:48-04:00

Rawi Hage has said that De Niro's Game began as a short story. A short story that continued to grow. "I finally, out of nowhere, had a novel on my hands and I sent it to a few places and I got a few responses." The scenic construction does remind

Rawi Hage’s De Niro’s Game (2006)2020-05-21T16:06:48-04:00

Rawi Hage’s Cockroach (2008)

2014-03-20T15:54:10-04:00

Some readers will be unsettled by the title alone. (I had early exposure as a young reader to Don Marquis' archy and mehitabel, so it didn't work that way for me.) Most readers will be unsettled by the story. (As activist and artist Banksy has said: “Art should comfort

Rawi Hage’s Cockroach (2008)2014-03-20T15:54:10-04:00

Liza Klaussmann’s Tigers in Red Weather (2012)

2014-07-11T16:26:36-04:00

You cannot know of what an old sailor dreams, but perhaps he, as Wallace Stevens' poem suggests, dreams of tigers in red weather. It's a vivid imagining, but only the old sailor has experienced his dream.* Little, Brown & Company, 2012 In Liza Klaussmann's debut novel, each of

Liza Klaussmann’s Tigers in Red Weather (2012)2014-07-11T16:26:36-04:00

“Fits” Alice Munro

2014-03-20T14:37:55-04:00

It's not something you hear much about anymore: once, people more commonly pitched fits, threw fits, had fits, staged fits. Hissy fits. Crying fits. (Now rants and tantrums.) A fit of rage. A fit of pique. A fit of temper. Blustery and ephemeral. Unpredictable and dramatic. Fits, whether in human nature

“Fits” Alice Munro2014-03-20T14:37:55-04:00

Margaret Atwood Recommends: Doctor Glas

2014-07-11T17:11:01-04:00

Random House, 1991 Hjalmar Söderberg's Doctor Glas (1905) Trans. Paul Britten Austin Intro. Margaret Atwood  Readers are introduced to Doctor Glas via his diary, with his chatter about the weather. From its opening sentences, you'd never guess at the controversy incited by this novel. It's June 12th. There's

Margaret Atwood Recommends: Doctor Glas2014-07-11T17:11:01-04:00
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