Reader offer: The Digital Critic

by Review 31

Publisher O/R Books is offering Review 31 readers a discount on pre-orders of The Digital Critic: Literary Culture Online, edited by Houman Barekat, Robert Barry and David Winters. The book, which will be published in December 2017, is a collection of 17 essays exploring the impact of the digital revolution on many aspects of literary life, from criticism to fiction-writing, from translation to book distribution and PR. Contributors include Joanna Walsh, Scott Esposito, Jonathon Sturgeon and Lauren Elkin, as well as several editors from Review 31 and other online journals including Asymptote, 3:AM and Berfrois. [read full essay]

Guilty Men and Wronged Wives

Joshua Ferris, The Dinner Party

reviewed by Josie Mitchell

Joshua Ferris, author of three funny, anxious novels about metropolitan loneliness, has released his first book of short stories, The Dinner Party. The collection features a cast of thwarted, pathological men struggling with the addictions and alienations of modern-day America. The 11 stories, published over a decade (mostly in the New Yorker), are scooped up here into one book. One of the fears for novelists like Ferris must be that their shorter work, massed together, becomes monotonous,... [read more]

'Exquisite juicing movements’

Monique Roffey, The Trust

reviewed by Anna Maconochie

What do readers of ‘the erotic novel’ want? In our screen-heavy times, it is intriguing that this most goal-driven of literally genres is having a moment amidst the plethora of downloadable smut. The erotic scribe seeks not just to tell a tale but to get you, the reader, off – if not literally, then at least between your ears, unlike the romantic or literary fiction writer who happens to drop in a sex scene. In The Tryst, the ambitious and confident Monique Roffey adds yet a third layer... [read more]
 

'The faithful work of drowning'

Ocean Vuong, Night Sky with Exit Wounds

reviewed by Charlie Baylis

Ocean Vuong's Night Sky with Exit Wounds has received a great deal of praise and attention on both sides of the Atlantic. Described by Andrew Macmillan as no less than ‘one of the most important début collections for a generation’ and hailed by the New York Times for its ‘tensile precision reminiscent of Emily Dickinson’, the collection has sold strongly, a rare feat for poetry, unless the author attended a famous stage school or featured on a Beyonce album. What is it that has made... [read more]

'chirrup, chirrup, chirrup'

John Wilkinson, Ghost Nets

reviewed by Jack Belloli

I’ve long got stuck on John Keats’s line, in a letter to John Hamilton Reynolds, about wanting to be ‘a sort of ethereal Pigs, [. . .] turned loose to feed upon spiritual Mast and Acorns’ as he read Reynolds’s poems. It’s one of those moments when an attempt to describe how Romantic poetry should work ends up overreaching itself. I can appreciate the thrust of Keats’s point, inherited from the German philosophy of his time, that beauty is most fully registered when our sensuous... [read more]
 

A Chronicle of Radicalisation

Kamila Shamsie, Home Fire

reviewed by Michael Duffy

Home Fire has already found itself on the Man Booker longlist, an accolade that highlights the immediacy and poignancy of its representation of radicalisation, the Islamic State, and the place of Islam in the British political and media landscape. Until now, Kamila Shamsie’s fiction has largely maintained an historical focus, narrating Pakistan’s history through the experiences of women, children and families impacted by momentous events of South Asian sovereignty such as colonial rule, the... [read more]

Forming the Rant

László Krasznahorkai, The Last Wolf and Herman

reviewed by Leonid Bilmes

Literary criticism really does call for a sub-genre in the history of the novel: the genre of the modern rant. As with much else in modern literature, the dawn of this mode of literary expression of angst already glimmers in Hamlet’s monologues, but the one text that inaugurates the specifically modern rant is Dostoevsky’s Notes from the Underground. If you have read it, you will probably recall its splenetic opening: ‘I am a sick man . . . I am a spiteful man. I am an unattractive man. I... [read more]
 

Cynic, Charlatan, or Genius?

Arthur Rose, Literary Cynics: Borges, Beckett, Coetzee

reviewed by Rafe McGregor

Arthur Rose is a postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of English Studies at Durham University and one of the two general directors of the Journal of Badiou Studies (with Michael J. Kelly of Binghamton University), which is a rebranding of the International Journal of Badiou Studies. The latter made academic news last year when it was revealed as the victim of the Tripodi Hoax. As explained on the 3 Quarks Daily blog in April 2016, Philippe Huneman and Anouk Barberousse (both of the... [read more]

Telling Stories

Heather McDaid & Laura Jones (eds.), Nasty Women: A Collection of Essays + Accounts on What It Is to Be a Woman in the 21st Century

reviewed by Thom Cuell

Conceived in the wake of Donald Trump’s infamous comments about Hillary Clinton, and subsequent election victory, the essay collection Nasty Women was launched via Kickstarter on New Year’s Day 2017, with a target of £6,000. This goal was reached within three days, and after receiving support from the likes of Margaret Atwood on Twitter, the publisher 404 Ink went on to raise a total of £22,156 from over 1,300 supporters. The turnaround time was amazing: the anthology was commissioned in... [read more]
 

Hunger for Connection

Adam O’Riordan, The Burning Ground

reviewed by Paul Johnathan

‘There is no home here,’ reads the epigraph by Christopher Isherwood that sets the scene and tone for The Burning Ground, the prose debut of poet Adam O’Riordan. It’s an appropriate prelude to this impressive range of short stories. O’Riordan’s poetic vision explores the male experience by juxtaposing a dreamy Californian landscape and a dreamlike romanticism with rather purgatorial characters and a blurred sense of narrative endings. This isn’t a typical debut. There is no... [read more]

Targeting the Vulnerable

Vickie Cooper and David Whyte (eds.), The Violence of Austerity

reviewed by Abigail Rhodes

At the turn of the century an obscure home office poster was discovered in Barter Books, a shop in Alnwick, Northumberland, with the motivational slogan ‘Keep Calm and Carry On’. It had been prepared in 1939 for use in case of a coastal invasion of the UK by the Nazis and was designed to steady the national nerves in the face of such a calamitous event. The poster was never used in these circumstances but became a fashionable, ironic, comedy catchphrase after its unearthing in 2000. The... [read more]