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  • Design , Lit , Nonfiction

Review: Celebrating Well-Made Books—The Book by Design: The Remarkable Story of the World’s Greatest Invention, edited by P.J.M. Marks and Stephen Parkin

For more than 18 centuries, paper was made with rags—old clothes, sails, and ropes—the same way it had first been fashioned in China. But, by the 19th century, the process of […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • February 17, 2024
    • Fiction , Lit , Reviews

    Review: Searching for Meaning in the Absurd World of Rajkamal Chaudhary’s Traces of Boots on Tongue and Other Stories

    The late Indian writer Rajkamal Chaudhary (1929–1967) came to prominence in the first two decades of independent India in the 1950s and ’60s, producing a prolific number of works in […]

  • Elizabeth Niarchos Neukirch
  • December 27, 2023
    • Lit , Nonfiction , Suburbs and exurbs

    Review: An Artist/Photographer Analyzes the Wanderlust of Stray Shopping Carts

    The Stray Shopping Carts of Eastern North America: A Guide to Field Identification By Julian Montague Second edition, 2023, University of Chicago Press Julian Montague published his first edition of The […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • December 27, 2023
    • Children's books , Fiction , Lit , Poetry

    Review: Mother Goose for English Majors, The Lamb Cycle: What the Great English Poets Would Have Written about Mary and Her Lamb, by David R. Ewbank, with illustrations by Kate Feiffer

    If Shakespeare, instead of Mother Goose, had written “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” perhaps he would have penned a sonnet to take the young girl to task for abandoning “Thy […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • December 14, 2023
    • Children's books , Fiction , Lit

    Review: Wonder and Joy and Questions, The Happy Prince & Other Tales, by Oscar Wilde

    It’s something of a surprise to be reminded that Oscar Wilde—the author of The Picture of Dorian Gray and the subject of a scandalous 1895 trial over consensual homosexual acts—wrote […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • August 24, 2023
    • Art & Museums , Lit , Nonfiction , Poetry

    Review: The Epic Question Mark of Western Lit, Homer: The Very Idea, by James I. Porter

    Nobody knows anything about Homer except what’s in the Iliad and the Odyssey, and, even there, it gets dicey, as James I. Porter details in his challenging and provocative Homer: […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • May 8, 2023
    • Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: Private Arts, The People’s Porn: A History of Handmade Pornography in America, by Lisa Z Sigel

    The People’s Porn: A History of Handmade Pornography in America By Lisa Z Sigel Reaktion Books Masturbation is the only sex act that’s both universal and forbidden. Universal in that […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • April 10, 2021
    • Lit , Music , Nonfiction

    Review: How Soul Got Its Soul, Move On Up: Chicago Soul Music and Black Cultural Power, by Aaron Cohen

    Move on Up: Chicago Soul Music and Black Cultural Power By Aaron Cohen University of Chicago Press One of the pleasures of reading Aaron Cohen’s 2019 Move On Up: Chicago […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • March 23, 2021
    • Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: A Pride Parade on Paper, Queer Legacies, by John D’Emilio

    Queer Legacies: Stories from Chicago’s LGBTQ Archives John D’Emilio University of Chicago Press Reviewed by Carr Harkrader Who doesn’t love a parade? It wouldn’t be completely wrong to describe Queer […]

  • Carr Harkrader
  • March 18, 2021
    • Design , Lit , Nonfiction , Photography

    Book Review: Push Butt, Receive Bacon, Hand Dryers, by Samuel Ryde

    Hand Dryers By Samuel Ryde Unicorn Publishing Group Distributed by the University of Chicago Press Books In the appropriately senseless year of 2020, Hand Dryers, by Samuel Ryde, was published. […]

  • Dan Kelly
  • January 18, 2021
    • Lit , Nonfiction

    Review: Lovable or Sinister, Robots Rule Industry, Technology and Culture in New History

    The American Robot: A Cultural HistoryBy Dustin A. AbnetThe University of Chicago Press Robots are endlessly fascinating—as all-purpose helpers, industrial workers, personal slaves, and even companions. Ian McEwan’s 2019 novel, […]

  • Nancy S Bishop
  • June 7, 2020
    • Lit , Reviews , Uncategorized

    Book Review: Fighting Racism with a Teacup, Roots of the Black Chicago Renaissance, edited by Richard A. Courage and Christopher Robert Reed

    Roots of the Black Chicago Renaissance: New Negro Writers, Artists and Intellectuals 1893–1930 Edited by Richard A. Courage and Christopher Robert Reed University of Illinois Press, 296 pages, $28 In […]

  • Patrick T. Reardon
  • May 5, 2020
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