Review of Eley Williams' “Attrib. And Other Stories”: On Language, Our Difficult Lifeline

Book Review

“‘The plot of this is not and will not be obvious.’ So begins Eley Williams’ debut short story collection Attrib. and Other Stories, out today (Anchor Books, May 18, 2021), a declaration that grows increasingly self-referential as the collection unfurls, each of its sixteen stories a successive petal in the work’s burgeoning eccentricity, sensitivity, and wit.” On the blog, Sarah M. Zhou reviews Eley Williams’ Attrib. and Other Stories (Anchor Books, 2021).

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Review of Viet Thanh Nguyen’s “The Committed”: The Multiplicity of the Colonial Self

Book Review

“The unnamed ‘man of two minds’ from Viet Thanh Nguyen’s Pulitzer Prize-winning The Sympathizer returns in The Committed (Grove Atlantic, 2021), now entangled in the criminal side streets of France. No longer a spy or a sleeper, but most certainly a spook, our two-minded narrator is tormented by contradiction, infinitely dialectical in his ability to sympathize with conflicting perspectives.” On the blog, Jonathan Paul reviews Viet Thanh Nguyen’s The Committed (Grove Atlantic, 2021).

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Review of Rachel Joyce’s “Miss Benson's Beetle”: Embracing the Warmth of Solidarity

Book Review

“Joyce grapples with themes of isolation, disillusionment, and cultural confusion in the post-war era, adding a sinister tinge to a story that seeks to establish itself as something more than just ‘touching.’” On the blog, Simone Gulliver reviews Rachel Joyce’s Miss Benson’s Beetle (Penguin Random House, 2020).

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Flashcards

“I spent a lot of my life being ‘drilled with words,’ a phrase which here means: the treatment methods I received for my dyslexia unintentionally oriented my relationship with language to be an antagonistic one.”

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Guest Userdyslexia, reflection
Childhood Ruined: Filipinx American Representation in Steven Universe

Childhood Ruined

“It is important to acknowledge the untapped potential of Lars’ character with respect to representing the Filipinx community — the Filipinx identity is far too complex to be reduced to an ube cake (that only makes a singular appearance, no less!).”

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Review of Lysley Tenorio’s “The Son of Good Fortune”: A Look at Life as a TNT

Book Review

“Poignant, tender, and surprisingly humorous all at once, The Son of Good Fortune is a coming-of-age story that reflects on the often untold Filipinx immigrant experience shared by both Excel and his mother Maxima.” On the blog, Noreen Ocampo reviews Lysley Tenorio’s The Son of Good Fortune (Ecco, 2020).

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Review of Keana Aguila Labra’s “Natalie”: An Ode of Love and Celebration of Life

Book Review

“Aguila Labra’s candid writing meticulously portrays the extent of the speaker’s layered emotional experience, with the difficulty of moving forward predominating the beginning sections of ‘Natalie.’” On the blog, Noreen Ocampo reviews Keana Aguila Labra’s Natalie (Nightingale & Sparrow Press, 2020).

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