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THE LITERARY REVIEW
translated from Portuguese by Alexis Levitin . The North Sea, green and grey, surrounded the island of Vig, and spume swept its dark rocks. On this early afternoon, there was a constant coming and going of marine birds, the surge slowly grew, clouds pushed by the south wind thickened, and Hans could see that a storm was gathering. ABOUT - THE LITERARY REVIEW The Literary Review (TLR) publishes the best new fiction, poetry, and prose from a broad community of international writers and translators, both emerging and established, whose commonality is literary quality and an urgency of voice and artistic conviction. Our editorial standard is to read with an open, discerning mind, and to publish carefully and vigorously. SUBMIT - THE LITERARY REVIEW Subscriptions support every aspect of our work. TLR comes out twice a year. If you aren’t already a subscriber, you can buy a print subscription here for $25 ($5 off newsstand), or an electronic subscription here for $10. You can also subscribe through submittable when you submit. Your new subscription will start with the Fall 2019Issue
HAWKS DO NOT SHARE
Hawks Do Not Share. Vol.63 Issue 03. November 10, 2020. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Minna Zallman Proctor. Editor’s Letter. Inevitably, the road to clarity lies in allowing everything to get much more complicated. In the meantime, and along the way, the battle REVIEW: HAMNET BY MAGGIE O'FARRELL Review: Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell. “Every life has its kernel, its hub, its epicenter, from which everything flows out, to which everything returns. This moment is the absent mother’s.”. Thus remarks the narrator in the opening pages of Irish author Maggie O’Farrell’s breathtaking new novel Hamnet, whose title belies itssubject.
A REVIEW OF THE HUNDRED WELLS OF SALAGA BY AYESHA HARRUNA (New York: Other Press, 2019) When asked about the inspirations for her characters, author of The Hundred Wells of Salaga, Ayesha Harruna Attah, shares that her “goal was to write fully rounded peoplebecause even the kindest people are capable of cruelty, and people tagged as evil can do the kindest acts.”This seems to be the heart of her novel; in her goal to bring an authentic voice WHY NOBODY READS WILLIAM BRONK First, it’s hard. Take the opening line from the opening poem of Bronk’s 1993 collection, The Mild Day.. “It’s like going to Africa to live.” What? What’s like that? THE SINGAPORE GRIP BY J.G. FARRELL The Singapore Grip is the final installment of J.G. Farrell’s “Empire Trilogy,” which chronicles the spectacle of British colonialism over the course of two centuries, from Ireland to India to Southeast Asia. It is also one of the only Anglo-American works of fiction set primarily in the city in which I grew up. I discovered it over a decade ago on the shelves of a secondhand bookstore DAVID MILLS, AUTHOR AT THE LITERARY REVIEW Of Senegambia and seven, she should have been of the not-to be-taken, the not-high price, for a not-prime boy’s a girl of the unsuitable labor (birth not work)—and that years away. A REVIEW OF A RIVER OF STARS BY VANESSA HUA Hua is an amazing writer, her prose tight and packed solid with emotion. She deftly handles several characters’ points-of-view, giving the book a well-rounded feel that never allows any character to become the enemy. These are people with difficult histories and tragic stories trying to eek out an existence in a tough world.THE LITERARY REVIEW
translated from Portuguese by Alexis Levitin . The North Sea, green and grey, surrounded the island of Vig, and spume swept its dark rocks. On this early afternoon, there was a constant coming and going of marine birds, the surge slowly grew, clouds pushed by the south wind thickened, and Hans could see that a storm was gathering. ABOUT - THE LITERARY REVIEW The Literary Review (TLR) publishes the best new fiction, poetry, and prose from a broad community of international writers and translators, both emerging and established, whose commonality is literary quality and an urgency of voice and artistic conviction. Our editorial standard is to read with an open, discerning mind, and to publish carefully and vigorously. SUBMIT - THE LITERARY REVIEW Subscriptions support every aspect of our work. TLR comes out twice a year. If you aren’t already a subscriber, you can buy a print subscription here for $25 ($5 off newsstand), or an electronic subscription here for $10. You can also subscribe through submittable when you submit. Your new subscription will start with the Fall 2019Issue
HAWKS DO NOT SHARE
Hawks Do Not Share. Vol.63 Issue 03. November 10, 2020. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Minna Zallman Proctor. Editor’s Letter. Inevitably, the road to clarity lies in allowing everything to get much more complicated. In the meantime, and along the way, the battle REVIEW: HAMNET BY MAGGIE O'FARRELL Review: Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell. “Every life has its kernel, its hub, its epicenter, from which everything flows out, to which everything returns. This moment is the absent mother’s.”. Thus remarks the narrator in the opening pages of Irish author Maggie O’Farrell’s breathtaking new novel Hamnet, whose title belies itssubject.
A REVIEW OF THE HUNDRED WELLS OF SALAGA BY AYESHA HARRUNA (New York: Other Press, 2019) When asked about the inspirations for her characters, author of The Hundred Wells of Salaga, Ayesha Harruna Attah, shares that her “goal was to write fully rounded peoplebecause even the kindest people are capable of cruelty, and people tagged as evil can do the kindest acts.”This seems to be the heart of her novel; in her goal to bring an authentic voice WHY NOBODY READS WILLIAM BRONK First, it’s hard. Take the opening line from the opening poem of Bronk’s 1993 collection, The Mild Day.. “It’s like going to Africa to live.” What? What’s like that? THE SINGAPORE GRIP BY J.G. FARRELL The Singapore Grip is the final installment of J.G. Farrell’s “Empire Trilogy,” which chronicles the spectacle of British colonialism over the course of two centuries, from Ireland to India to Southeast Asia. It is also one of the only Anglo-American works of fiction set primarily in the city in which I grew up. I discovered it over a decade ago on the shelves of a secondhand bookstore DAVID MILLS, AUTHOR AT THE LITERARY REVIEW Of Senegambia and seven, she should have been of the not-to be-taken, the not-high price, for a not-prime boy’s a girl of the unsuitable labor (birth not work)—and that years away. A REVIEW OF A RIVER OF STARS BY VANESSA HUA Hua is an amazing writer, her prose tight and packed solid with emotion. She deftly handles several characters’ points-of-view, giving the book a well-rounded feel that never allows any character to become the enemy. These are people with difficult histories and tragic stories trying to eek out an existence in a tough world. ALL POSTS - THE LITERARY REVIEW Review: Nemerov’s Door by Robert Wrigley. April 19, 2021. Francesca Moroney. (North Adams, MA: Tupelo Press, 2021) I was first introduced to the brilliance of Robert Wrigley’s work through his poem “Ode to My Boots,” from Anatomy of Melancholy and Other ABOUT - THE LITERARY REVIEW The Literary Review (TLR) publishes the best new fiction, poetry, and prose from a broad community of international writers and translators, both emerging and established, whose commonality is literary quality and an urgency of voice and artistic conviction. Our editorial standard is to read with an open, discerning mind, and to publish carefully and vigorously. SUBMIT - THE LITERARY REVIEW Subscriptions support every aspect of our work. TLR comes out twice a year. If you aren’t already a subscriber, you can buy a print subscription here for $25 ($5 off newsstand), or an electronic subscription here for $10. You can also subscribe through submittable when you submit. Your new subscription will start with the Fall 2019Issue
CATHEDRAL BY RAYMOND CARVER February 3, 2021. Jillian Weise. This poem imagines the exchange on audiotapes from “the wife” to “the blind man”. in the story “Cathedral” by Raymond Carver. The story is typically taught and. discussed as if the blind man’s relationship with the wife was entirely platonic and. noble, even though the original story suggests REVIEW: THE HARE BY MELANIE FINN Review: The Hare by Melanie Finn. I have read the book to beat this year. Melanie Finn’s latest novel, The Hare, follows Rosie Monroe, an art school student living on her own in New York City in the 1980s, as she navigates her relationship with Bennett Kinney, a man twenty years her senior. Bennett is a scam artist and that special type of THE WORST TEAM MONEY COULD BUY THE WORST TEAM MONEY COULD BUY Features dreadful tales of hapless efforts, vexed ambitions, and impossible odds. Prosthetic legs, hot wings, spontaneous combustion, doppelgängers, spam, incest, the economy, aphorisms, ESPN, and an albatross. New poetry by James Richardson, Benjamin Paloff, Eamonn Grennan. New work from Lina Meruane, M. Eileen Cronin, R.A. Allen, and Lawrence-Minh Bui"DO YOU LOVE ME?"
Rebecca Givens Rolland (“Honey Alone Would Do It”) is a writer, educator, photographer, and consultant. She is a speech-language pathologist and learning specialist with a focus on early childhood. She won the 2011 Dana Award in Short Fiction and has fiction publishedor
A REVIEW OF THE EMIGRANTS BY W.G. SEBALD And so he lives alone, painting in a dark studio as if hiding from the guilt and loneliness of his survival and exile. The prose throughout The Emigrants is stunningly rhythmical, containing long flowing descriptive sentences punctuated by shorter more precise ones. However, the strength of this novel is in its pervasive theme ofmemory.
A REVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE BY LARRY TREMBLAY A Review of The Orange Grove by Larry Tremblay. A mother gives her child life. She cradles him, loves him, feeds him and nurtures him. The death of that child is a mother’s worst fear. She will do anything, deceive anyone, including her husband, to keep him alive. As a mother, I know this to be true. A REVIEW OF RESERVOIR 13 BY JON MCGREGOR A Review of Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor. On New Year’s Eve in an unnamed English village near Manchester, a visiting teenager named Becky disappears. The entire village assembles to look for her. Police and investigators swarm the village, the search goes on in earnest for months, and the case remains open for years. She is never found.HAWKS DO NOT SHARE
Hawks Do Not Share. Vol.63 Issue 03. November 10, 2020. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Minna Zallman Proctor. Editor’s Letter. Inevitably, the road to clarity lies in allowing everything to get much more complicated. In the meantime, and along the way, the battle"DO YOU LOVE ME?"
Rebecca Givens Rolland (“Honey Alone Would Do It”) is a writer, educator, photographer, and consultant. She is a speech-language pathologist and learning specialist with a focus on early childhood. She won the 2011 Dana Award in Short Fiction and has fiction publishedor
WHY NOBODY READS WILLIAM BRONK First, it’s hard. Take the opening line from the opening poem of Bronk’s 1993 collection, The Mild Day.. “It’s like going to Africa to live.” What? What’s like that?ON CHILDHOOD
1. My daughter has slid down in the bath. so that just the island of her face. breaks the surface—. and when she holds in her breath. her body suspends. touching nothing. I say can you hear me. and she nodsfrom her distance.
DAVID MILLS, AUTHOR AT THE LITERARY REVIEW Of Senegambia and seven, she should have been of the not-to be-taken, the not-high price, for a not-prime boy’s a girl of the unsuitable labor (birth not work)—and that years away. A REVIEW OF THE HUNDRED WELLS OF SALAGA BY AYESHA HARRUNA (New York: Other Press, 2019) When asked about the inspirations for her characters, author of The Hundred Wells of Salaga, Ayesha Harruna Attah, shares that her “goal was to write fully rounded peoplebecause even the kindest people are capable of cruelty, and people tagged as evil can do the kindest acts.”This seems to be the heart of her novel; in her goal to bring an authentic voice THE SINGAPORE GRIP BY J.G. FARRELL The Singapore Grip is the final installment of J.G. Farrell’s “Empire Trilogy,” which chronicles the spectacle of British colonialism over the course of two centuries, from Ireland to India to Southeast Asia. It is also one of the only Anglo-American works of fiction set primarily in the city in which I grew up. I discovered it over a decade ago on the shelves of a secondhand bookstore REVIEW: GOLDEN GATE JUMPERS SOCIETY BY ROSS WILCOX Golden Gate Jumper Survivors Society by Ross Wilcox provides a bit of levity while simultaneously paralleling today’s sense of unease. He presents us with a collection that invites us into worlds where the surface is familiar, yet uncanny. With just a hint of Kurt Vonnegut, Wilcox’s debut short story collection is a welcome, and perhaps A REVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE BY LARRY TREMBLAY A Review of The Orange Grove by Larry Tremblay. A mother gives her child life. She cradles him, loves him, feeds him and nurtures him. The death of that child is a mother’s worst fear. She will do anything, deceive anyone, including her husband, to keep him alive. As a mother, I know this to be true. A REVIEW OF JAPANESE GIRL AT THE SIEGE OF CHANGCHUN BY Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I Survived China’s Wartime Atrocity. Translated from the Chinese by Michael Brase. (Berkely, CA: Stone Bridge Press, 2016) There is an old Chinese curse that says “May you live in interesting times.” ContinuedHAWKS DO NOT SHARE
Hawks Do Not Share. Vol.63 Issue 03. November 10, 2020. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Minna Zallman Proctor. Editor’s Letter. Inevitably, the road to clarity lies in allowing everything to get much more complicated. In the meantime, and along the way, the battle"DO YOU LOVE ME?"
Rebecca Givens Rolland (“Honey Alone Would Do It”) is a writer, educator, photographer, and consultant. She is a speech-language pathologist and learning specialist with a focus on early childhood. She won the 2011 Dana Award in Short Fiction and has fiction publishedor
WHY NOBODY READS WILLIAM BRONK First, it’s hard. Take the opening line from the opening poem of Bronk’s 1993 collection, The Mild Day.. “It’s like going to Africa to live.” What? What’s like that?ON CHILDHOOD
1. My daughter has slid down in the bath. so that just the island of her face. breaks the surface—. and when she holds in her breath. her body suspends. touching nothing. I say can you hear me. and she nodsfrom her distance.
DAVID MILLS, AUTHOR AT THE LITERARY REVIEW Of Senegambia and seven, she should have been of the not-to be-taken, the not-high price, for a not-prime boy’s a girl of the unsuitable labor (birth not work)—and that years away. A REVIEW OF THE HUNDRED WELLS OF SALAGA BY AYESHA HARRUNA (New York: Other Press, 2019) When asked about the inspirations for her characters, author of The Hundred Wells of Salaga, Ayesha Harruna Attah, shares that her “goal was to write fully rounded peoplebecause even the kindest people are capable of cruelty, and people tagged as evil can do the kindest acts.”This seems to be the heart of her novel; in her goal to bring an authentic voice THE SINGAPORE GRIP BY J.G. FARRELL The Singapore Grip is the final installment of J.G. Farrell’s “Empire Trilogy,” which chronicles the spectacle of British colonialism over the course of two centuries, from Ireland to India to Southeast Asia. It is also one of the only Anglo-American works of fiction set primarily in the city in which I grew up. I discovered it over a decade ago on the shelves of a secondhand bookstore REVIEW: GOLDEN GATE JUMPERS SOCIETY BY ROSS WILCOX Golden Gate Jumper Survivors Society by Ross Wilcox provides a bit of levity while simultaneously paralleling today’s sense of unease. He presents us with a collection that invites us into worlds where the surface is familiar, yet uncanny. With just a hint of Kurt Vonnegut, Wilcox’s debut short story collection is a welcome, and perhaps A REVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE BY LARRY TREMBLAY A Review of The Orange Grove by Larry Tremblay. A mother gives her child life. She cradles him, loves him, feeds him and nurtures him. The death of that child is a mother’s worst fear. She will do anything, deceive anyone, including her husband, to keep him alive. As a mother, I know this to be true. A REVIEW OF JAPANESE GIRL AT THE SIEGE OF CHANGCHUN BY Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I Survived China’s Wartime Atrocity. Translated from the Chinese by Michael Brase. (Berkely, CA: Stone Bridge Press, 2016) There is an old Chinese curse that says “May you live in interesting times.” ContinuedTHE LITERARY REVIEW
translated from Portuguese by Alexis Levitin . The North Sea, green and grey, surrounded the island of Vig, and spume swept its dark rocks. On this early afternoon, there was a constant coming and going of marine birds, the surge slowly grew, clouds pushed by the south wind thickened, and Hans could see that a storm was gathering. REVIEW: GOLDEN GATE JUMPERS SOCIETY BY ROSS WILCOX Golden Gate Jumper Survivors Society by Ross Wilcox provides a bit of levity while simultaneously paralleling today’s sense of unease. He presents us with a collection that invites us into worlds where the surface is familiar, yet uncanny. With just a hint of Kurt Vonnegut, Wilcox’s debut short story collection is a welcome, and perhaps A REVIEW OF DEAF REPUBLIC BY ILYA KAMINSKY our great country of money, we (forgive us) lived happily during the war. A poem from Ilya Kaminsky’s Deaf Republic that demands our attention. The prelude poem for a book, for a wartime lyric narrative in poems, in two searing acts. A novel in poems. A one-of-a-kind bookunlike anything I
MANIFEST DESTINY
Manifest Destiny: by which we mean politics, ideology, the world, and heading off into the horizon to conquer. With literature. Bring on the rogue fiction, the expansionist poetry, Latin American bards, identity issues, culture bludgeons; bring on God, men, and guns. And then the clarion call of bugles fades. REVIEW: THE HARE BY MELANIE FINN Review: The Hare by Melanie Finn. I have read the book to beat this year. Melanie Finn’s latest novel, The Hare, follows Rosie Monroe, an art school student living on her own in New York City in the 1980s, as she navigates her relationship with Bennett Kinney, a man twenty years her senior. Bennett is a scam artist and that special type of A REVIEW OF JAPANESE GIRL AT THE SIEGE OF CHANGCHUN BY Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I Survived China’s Wartime Atrocity. Translated from the Chinese by Michael Brase. (Berkely, CA: Stone Bridge Press, 2016) There is an old Chinese curse that says “May you live in interesting times.” Continued A REVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE BY LARRY TREMBLAY A Review of The Orange Grove by Larry Tremblay. A mother gives her child life. She cradles him, loves him, feeds him and nurtures him. The death of that child is a mother’s worst fear. She will do anything, deceive anyone, including her husband, to keep him alive. As a mother, I know this to be true. A REVIEW OF KINTU BY JENNIFER NANSUBUGA MAKUMBI (Oakland, CA: Transit Books, 2017) It may be that Kintu, the debut novel from Ugandan novelist Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, will stand as Uganda’s national narrative, in much the same way Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart has for Nigeria. Literary history will tell. Indeed, its epic scope and Makumbi’s stated objective of following in Achebe’s footsteps to impart to Ugandans their own A REVIEW OF RESERVOIR 13 BY JON MCGREGOR A Review of Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor. On New Year’s Eve in an unnamed English village near Manchester, a visiting teenager named Becky disappears. The entire village assembles to look for her. Police and investigators swarm the village, the search goes on in earnest for months, and the case remains open for years. She is never found. A REVIEW OF ACTS OF INFIDELITY BY LENA ANDERSSON A Review of Acts of Infidelity by Lena Andersson. Acts of Infidelity is a novel about two very specific characters, the things they say to each other, and the complications that ensue. It is also a philosophical meditation on the concept of “the mistress” or other woman. The narrator posits that, within the male psyche, “themistress as
HAWKS DO NOT SHARE
Hawks Do Not Share. Vol.63 Issue 03. November 10, 2020. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Minna Zallman Proctor. Editor’s Letter. Inevitably, the road to clarity lies in allowing everything to get much more complicated. In the meantime, and along the way, the battle"DO YOU LOVE ME?"
Rebecca Givens Rolland (“Honey Alone Would Do It”) is a writer, educator, photographer, and consultant. She is a speech-language pathologist and learning specialist with a focus on early childhood. She won the 2011 Dana Award in Short Fiction and has fiction publishedor
WHY NOBODY READS WILLIAM BRONK First, it’s hard. Take the opening line from the opening poem of Bronk’s 1993 collection, The Mild Day.. “It’s like going to Africa to live.” What? What’s like that?ON CHILDHOOD
1. My daughter has slid down in the bath. so that just the island of her face. breaks the surface—. and when she holds in her breath. her body suspends. touching nothing. I say can you hear me. and she nodsfrom her distance.
DAVID MILLS, AUTHOR AT THE LITERARY REVIEW Of Senegambia and seven, she should have been of the not-to be-taken, the not-high price, for a not-prime boy’s a girl of the unsuitable labor (birth not work)—and that years away. A REVIEW OF THE HUNDRED WELLS OF SALAGA BY AYESHA HARRUNA (New York: Other Press, 2019) When asked about the inspirations for her characters, author of The Hundred Wells of Salaga, Ayesha Harruna Attah, shares that her “goal was to write fully rounded peoplebecause even the kindest people are capable of cruelty, and people tagged as evil can do the kindest acts.”This seems to be the heart of her novel; in her goal to bring an authentic voice THE SINGAPORE GRIP BY J.G. FARRELL The Singapore Grip is the final installment of J.G. Farrell’s “Empire Trilogy,” which chronicles the spectacle of British colonialism over the course of two centuries, from Ireland to India to Southeast Asia. It is also one of the only Anglo-American works of fiction set primarily in the city in which I grew up. I discovered it over a decade ago on the shelves of a secondhand bookstore REVIEW: GOLDEN GATE JUMPERS SOCIETY BY ROSS WILCOX Golden Gate Jumper Survivors Society by Ross Wilcox provides a bit of levity while simultaneously paralleling today’s sense of unease. He presents us with a collection that invites us into worlds where the surface is familiar, yet uncanny. With just a hint of Kurt Vonnegut, Wilcox’s debut short story collection is a welcome, and perhaps A REVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE BY LARRY TREMBLAY A Review of The Orange Grove by Larry Tremblay. A mother gives her child life. She cradles him, loves him, feeds him and nurtures him. The death of that child is a mother’s worst fear. She will do anything, deceive anyone, including her husband, to keep him alive. As a mother, I know this to be true. A REVIEW OF JAPANESE GIRL AT THE SIEGE OF CHANGCHUN BY Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I Survived China’s Wartime Atrocity. Translated from the Chinese by Michael Brase. (Berkely, CA: Stone Bridge Press, 2016) There is an old Chinese curse that says “May you live in interesting times.” ContinuedHAWKS DO NOT SHARE
Hawks Do Not Share. Vol.63 Issue 03. November 10, 2020. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Minna Zallman Proctor. Editor’s Letter. Inevitably, the road to clarity lies in allowing everything to get much more complicated. In the meantime, and along the way, the battle"DO YOU LOVE ME?"
Rebecca Givens Rolland (“Honey Alone Would Do It”) is a writer, educator, photographer, and consultant. She is a speech-language pathologist and learning specialist with a focus on early childhood. She won the 2011 Dana Award in Short Fiction and has fiction publishedor
WHY NOBODY READS WILLIAM BRONK First, it’s hard. Take the opening line from the opening poem of Bronk’s 1993 collection, The Mild Day.. “It’s like going to Africa to live.” What? What’s like that?ON CHILDHOOD
1. My daughter has slid down in the bath. so that just the island of her face. breaks the surface—. and when she holds in her breath. her body suspends. touching nothing. I say can you hear me. and she nodsfrom her distance.
DAVID MILLS, AUTHOR AT THE LITERARY REVIEW Of Senegambia and seven, she should have been of the not-to be-taken, the not-high price, for a not-prime boy’s a girl of the unsuitable labor (birth not work)—and that years away. A REVIEW OF THE HUNDRED WELLS OF SALAGA BY AYESHA HARRUNA (New York: Other Press, 2019) When asked about the inspirations for her characters, author of The Hundred Wells of Salaga, Ayesha Harruna Attah, shares that her “goal was to write fully rounded peoplebecause even the kindest people are capable of cruelty, and people tagged as evil can do the kindest acts.”This seems to be the heart of her novel; in her goal to bring an authentic voice THE SINGAPORE GRIP BY J.G. FARRELL The Singapore Grip is the final installment of J.G. Farrell’s “Empire Trilogy,” which chronicles the spectacle of British colonialism over the course of two centuries, from Ireland to India to Southeast Asia. It is also one of the only Anglo-American works of fiction set primarily in the city in which I grew up. I discovered it over a decade ago on the shelves of a secondhand bookstore REVIEW: GOLDEN GATE JUMPERS SOCIETY BY ROSS WILCOX Golden Gate Jumper Survivors Society by Ross Wilcox provides a bit of levity while simultaneously paralleling today’s sense of unease. He presents us with a collection that invites us into worlds where the surface is familiar, yet uncanny. With just a hint of Kurt Vonnegut, Wilcox’s debut short story collection is a welcome, and perhaps A REVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE BY LARRY TREMBLAY A Review of The Orange Grove by Larry Tremblay. A mother gives her child life. She cradles him, loves him, feeds him and nurtures him. The death of that child is a mother’s worst fear. She will do anything, deceive anyone, including her husband, to keep him alive. As a mother, I know this to be true. A REVIEW OF JAPANESE GIRL AT THE SIEGE OF CHANGCHUN BY Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I Survived China’s Wartime Atrocity. Translated from the Chinese by Michael Brase. (Berkely, CA: Stone Bridge Press, 2016) There is an old Chinese curse that says “May you live in interesting times.” ContinuedTHE LITERARY REVIEW
translated from Portuguese by Alexis Levitin . The North Sea, green and grey, surrounded the island of Vig, and spume swept its dark rocks. On this early afternoon, there was a constant coming and going of marine birds, the surge slowly grew, clouds pushed by the south wind thickened, and Hans could see that a storm was gathering. REVIEW: GOLDEN GATE JUMPERS SOCIETY BY ROSS WILCOX Golden Gate Jumper Survivors Society by Ross Wilcox provides a bit of levity while simultaneously paralleling today’s sense of unease. He presents us with a collection that invites us into worlds where the surface is familiar, yet uncanny. With just a hint of Kurt Vonnegut, Wilcox’s debut short story collection is a welcome, and perhaps A REVIEW OF DEAF REPUBLIC BY ILYA KAMINSKY our great country of money, we (forgive us) lived happily during the war. A poem from Ilya Kaminsky’s Deaf Republic that demands our attention. The prelude poem for a book, for a wartime lyric narrative in poems, in two searing acts. A novel in poems. A one-of-a-kind bookunlike anything I
MANIFEST DESTINY
Manifest Destiny: by which we mean politics, ideology, the world, and heading off into the horizon to conquer. With literature. Bring on the rogue fiction, the expansionist poetry, Latin American bards, identity issues, culture bludgeons; bring on God, men, and guns. And then the clarion call of bugles fades. REVIEW: THE HARE BY MELANIE FINN Review: The Hare by Melanie Finn. I have read the book to beat this year. Melanie Finn’s latest novel, The Hare, follows Rosie Monroe, an art school student living on her own in New York City in the 1980s, as she navigates her relationship with Bennett Kinney, a man twenty years her senior. Bennett is a scam artist and that special type of A REVIEW OF JAPANESE GIRL AT THE SIEGE OF CHANGCHUN BY Japanese Girl at the Siege of Changchun: How I Survived China’s Wartime Atrocity. Translated from the Chinese by Michael Brase. (Berkely, CA: Stone Bridge Press, 2016) There is an old Chinese curse that says “May you live in interesting times.” Continued A REVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE BY LARRY TREMBLAY A Review of The Orange Grove by Larry Tremblay. A mother gives her child life. She cradles him, loves him, feeds him and nurtures him. The death of that child is a mother’s worst fear. She will do anything, deceive anyone, including her husband, to keep him alive. As a mother, I know this to be true. A REVIEW OF KINTU BY JENNIFER NANSUBUGA MAKUMBI (Oakland, CA: Transit Books, 2017) It may be that Kintu, the debut novel from Ugandan novelist Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, will stand as Uganda’s national narrative, in much the same way Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart has for Nigeria. Literary history will tell. Indeed, its epic scope and Makumbi’s stated objective of following in Achebe’s footsteps to impart to Ugandans their own A REVIEW OF RESERVOIR 13 BY JON MCGREGOR A Review of Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor. On New Year’s Eve in an unnamed English village near Manchester, a visiting teenager named Becky disappears. The entire village assembles to look for her. Police and investigators swarm the village, the search goes on in earnest for months, and the case remains open for years. She is never found. A REVIEW OF ACTS OF INFIDELITY BY LENA ANDERSSON A Review of Acts of Infidelity by Lena Andersson. Acts of Infidelity is a novel about two very specific characters, the things they say to each other, and the complications that ensue. It is also a philosophical meditation on the concept of “the mistress” or other woman. The narrator posits that, within the male psyche, “themistress as
THE LITERARY REVIEW
translated from Portuguese by Alexis Levitin . The North Sea, green and grey, surrounded the island of Vig, and spume swept its dark rocks. On this early afternoon, there was a constant coming and going of marine birds, the surge slowly grew, clouds pushed by the south wind thickened, and Hans could see that a storm was gathering.HAWKS DO NOT SHARE
Hawks Do Not Share. Vol.63 Issue 03. November 10, 2020. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Minna Zallman Proctor. Editor’s Letter. Inevitably, the road to clarity lies in allowing everything to get much more complicated. In the meantime, and along the way, the battle REVIEW: HAMNET BY MAGGIE O'FARRELL Review: Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell. “Every life has its kernel, its hub, its epicenter, from which everything flows out, to which everything returns. This moment is the absent mother’s.”. Thus remarks the narrator in the opening pages of Irish author Maggie O’Farrell’s breathtaking new novel Hamnet, whose title belies itssubject.
DAVID MILLS, AUTHOR AT THE LITERARY REVIEW Of Senegambia and seven, she should have been of the not-to be-taken, the not-high price, for a not-prime boy’s a girl of the unsuitable labor (birth not work)—and that years away.ON CHILDHOOD
1. My daughter has slid down in the bath. so that just the island of her face. breaks the surface—. and when she holds in her breath. her body suspends. touching nothing. I say can you hear me. and she nodsfrom her distance.
"DO YOU LOVE ME?"
Rebecca Givens Rolland (“Honey Alone Would Do It”) is a writer, educator, photographer, and consultant. She is a speech-language pathologist and learning specialist with a focus on early childhood. She won the 2011 Dana Award in Short Fiction and has fiction publishedor
THE SINGAPORE GRIP BY J.G. FARRELL The Singapore Grip is the final installment of J.G. Farrell’s “Empire Trilogy,” which chronicles the spectacle of British colonialism over the course of two centuries, from Ireland to India to Southeast Asia. It is also one of the only Anglo-American works of fiction set primarily in the city in which I grew up. I discovered it over a decade ago on the shelves of a secondhand bookstore A REVIEW OF THE HUNDRED WELLS OF SALAGA BY AYESHA HARRUNA (New York: Other Press, 2019) When asked about the inspirations for her characters, author of The Hundred Wells of Salaga, Ayesha Harruna Attah, shares that her “goal was to write fully rounded peoplebecause even the kindest people are capable of cruelty, and people tagged as evil can do the kindest acts.”This seems to be the heart of her novel; in her goal to bring an authentic voice CHICK-A-CHEE ||| POSTCOLONIAL TEXT Chick-A-Chee ||| Postcolonial Text. July 19, 2017. Souvankham Thammavongsa. Above us, there lived together four single young men in a two-bedroom apartment. One of them, the one who didn’t have a job, sat by the window all day and smoked. He’d see me and my brother coming home from school and when we reached the landing just below his A REVIEW OF RESERVOIR 13 BY JON MCGREGOR A Review of Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor. On New Year’s Eve in an unnamed English village near Manchester, a visiting teenager named Becky disappears. The entire village assembles to look for her. Police and investigators swarm the village, the search goes on in earnest for months, and the case remains open for years. She is never found.THE LITERARY REVIEW
translated from Portuguese by Alexis Levitin . The North Sea, green and grey, surrounded the island of Vig, and spume swept its dark rocks. On this early afternoon, there was a constant coming and going of marine birds, the surge slowly grew, clouds pushed by the south wind thickened, and Hans could see that a storm was gathering.HAWKS DO NOT SHARE
Hawks Do Not Share. Vol.63 Issue 03. November 10, 2020. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Minna Zallman Proctor. Editor’s Letter. Inevitably, the road to clarity lies in allowing everything to get much more complicated. In the meantime, and along the way, the battle REVIEW: HAMNET BY MAGGIE O'FARRELL Review: Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell. “Every life has its kernel, its hub, its epicenter, from which everything flows out, to which everything returns. This moment is the absent mother’s.”. Thus remarks the narrator in the opening pages of Irish author Maggie O’Farrell’s breathtaking new novel Hamnet, whose title belies itssubject.
DAVID MILLS, AUTHOR AT THE LITERARY REVIEW Of Senegambia and seven, she should have been of the not-to be-taken, the not-high price, for a not-prime boy’s a girl of the unsuitable labor (birth not work)—and that years away.ON CHILDHOOD
1. My daughter has slid down in the bath. so that just the island of her face. breaks the surface—. and when she holds in her breath. her body suspends. touching nothing. I say can you hear me. and she nodsfrom her distance.
"DO YOU LOVE ME?"
Rebecca Givens Rolland (“Honey Alone Would Do It”) is a writer, educator, photographer, and consultant. She is a speech-language pathologist and learning specialist with a focus on early childhood. She won the 2011 Dana Award in Short Fiction and has fiction publishedor
THE SINGAPORE GRIP BY J.G. FARRELL The Singapore Grip is the final installment of J.G. Farrell’s “Empire Trilogy,” which chronicles the spectacle of British colonialism over the course of two centuries, from Ireland to India to Southeast Asia. It is also one of the only Anglo-American works of fiction set primarily in the city in which I grew up. I discovered it over a decade ago on the shelves of a secondhand bookstore A REVIEW OF THE HUNDRED WELLS OF SALAGA BY AYESHA HARRUNA (New York: Other Press, 2019) When asked about the inspirations for her characters, author of The Hundred Wells of Salaga, Ayesha Harruna Attah, shares that her “goal was to write fully rounded peoplebecause even the kindest people are capable of cruelty, and people tagged as evil can do the kindest acts.”This seems to be the heart of her novel; in her goal to bring an authentic voice CHICK-A-CHEE ||| POSTCOLONIAL TEXT Chick-A-Chee ||| Postcolonial Text. July 19, 2017. Souvankham Thammavongsa. Above us, there lived together four single young men in a two-bedroom apartment. One of them, the one who didn’t have a job, sat by the window all day and smoked. He’d see me and my brother coming home from school and when we reached the landing just below his A REVIEW OF RESERVOIR 13 BY JON MCGREGOR A Review of Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor. On New Year’s Eve in an unnamed English village near Manchester, a visiting teenager named Becky disappears. The entire village assembles to look for her. Police and investigators swarm the village, the search goes on in earnest for months, and the case remains open for years. She is never found. ARCHIVE - THE LITERARY REVIEW Loss Control. Where chaos slings its blunt effects. Vol.55 Issue 04buy this issue.
ABOUT - THE LITERARY REVIEW The Literary Review (TLR) publishes the best new fiction, poetry, and prose from a broad community of international writers and translators, both emerging and established, whose commonality is literary quality and an urgency of voice and artistic conviction. Our editorial standard is to read with an open, discerning mind, and to publish carefully and vigorously. SUBMIT - THE LITERARY REVIEW Subscriptions support every aspect of our work. TLR comes out twice a year. If you aren’t already a subscriber, you can buy a print subscription here for $25 ($5 off newsstand), or an electronic subscription here for $10. You can also subscribe through submittable when you submit. Your new subscription will start with the Fall 2019Issue
"DO YOU LOVE ME?"
Rebecca Givens Rolland (“Honey Alone Would Do It”) is a writer, educator, photographer, and consultant. She is a speech-language pathologist and learning specialist with a focus on early childhood. She won the 2011 Dana Award in Short Fiction and has fiction publishedor
THE DENISON HOMESTEAD Caring is a disease passed on My grandpa stood here and my dad imagined him doing so, and I am here to pay my respects to the love my dad had for him Buy a tee shirt Continued WHY NOBODY READS WILLIAM BRONK First, it’s hard. Take the opening line from the opening poem of Bronk’s 1993 collection, The Mild Day.. “It’s like going to Africa to live.” What? What’s like that? THE WORST TEAM MONEY COULD BUY THE WORST TEAM MONEY COULD BUY Features dreadful tales of hapless efforts, vexed ambitions, and impossible odds. Prosthetic legs, hot wings, spontaneous combustion, doppelgängers, spam, incest, the economy, aphorisms, ESPN, and an albatross. New poetry by James Richardson, Benjamin Paloff, Eamonn Grennan. New work from Lina Meruane, M. Eileen Cronin, R.A. Allen, and Lawrence-Minh Bui A REVIEW OF A RIVER OF STARS BY VANESSA HUA Hua is an amazing writer, her prose tight and packed solid with emotion. She deftly handles several characters’ points-of-view, giving the book a well-rounded feel that never allows any character to become the enemy. These are people with difficult histories and tragic stories trying to eek out an existence in a tough world. A REVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE BY LARRY TREMBLAY A Review of The Orange Grove by Larry Tremblay. A mother gives her child life. She cradles him, loves him, feeds him and nurtures him. The death of that child is a mother’s worst fear. She will do anything, deceive anyone, including her husband, to keep him alive. As a mother, I know this to be true. PRICKLY PEAR & FISTICUFFS ||| MILKWEED EDITIONS My older brother says he doesn’t consider himself Latino anymore and I understand what he means, but I stare at the weird fruit in my hand and wonder what it is to lose a spiny layer. He’s explaining howwhite Continued
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POETRY
EAT SHIT, HORSEFACE
November 23, 2020
Sara Emanuel Viloria _TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH BY DAVID BRUNSON_ When I think of freedom I think of Isla, my mare, And I think of a photo of my grandmother, Gorgeous at seventeen. She remembers, in those days, When a man told her to _eat shit, horseface_. And I think of freedom, like beauty, Ready to burn— incinerated, Attacked with full force. _Eat shit, horseface_ means Being a patient woman, Given to drifting through time. Like the women of my family I do not want to understand time. Mama knits, like Penelope, Waiting her only purpose. My religious sister measures time by experience. My grandmother has an eternity of sadness in her chest. Isla, my horse, has not allowed anyone to ride her for years, Nobody will place an hourglass on her forehead’s handsome diamond. Pacing for one, two, seven hours With humanity’s time tattooed between her furrowed brows— This is to live dying.Taming beauty,
Her existence reduced to grazing, contemplating the horizon, Without thinking of herself With a saddle on her back, Arching beneath the weight of a man’s body, With an arm twisting her neck, And a stranger’s shadow making her shadow grow. Freedom is a golem that, on a whim, Transcribes the words placed in its mouth. _Eat shit, horseface_ is To accept being the target for other people’s shit, To be my grandmother, my mother, And to be me, and my cousins, And Isla, who belongs to herself,Not to me.
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Venezuelan poet SARA EMANUEL VILORIA researches and practices both two-dimensional conceptual illustration and watercolor, as well as digital illustration. Viloria incorporates fine art themes into her narrative and poetry—a distinct characteristic of her work—in which she writes to “heal” the wounded canvas. Her poetry has been anthologized in the _Antologia_ _del II Festival Internacional de Santiago, _and published in the plaquette _Incendiario _by the Chilean-Venezuelan journal and press _Los Poetas del Cinco_. DAVID BRUNSON is a fourth-year poetry and translation MFA candidate at the University of Arkansas. His poems and translations have appeared in or are forthcoming from _Manoa: A Pacific Journal of International Writing_, _Nashville Review_, _Copper Nickel_, and_ Los Poetas del 5_. He is the editor and anthologist of a Spanish-language anthology of Venezuelan migrant poets in Chile, forthcoming from _Libros del Amanecer_ in Santiago, Chile. Read more, Sara Emanuel Viloria in this issue of TLR: Patria omuerte—¡
Vinceremos!
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