One book review in The Los Angeles Review

los-angeles-review-fall-2016

Pick up the Fall 2016 issue of The Los Angeles Review, and near the back you’ll find a review I wrote of Bruce Bauman’s fantastic novel, Broken Sleep.

Review of Broken Sleep by Bruce Bauman in The Los Angeles Review by Siel Ju

My favorite piece in this issue was a story called “Kona Kai Village, Part I” by Navid Saedi. It’s about the dark side of Venice — dilapidated drug dens, desperate letters that end up in strangers’ hands, days lost to blackouts. I really hope there’s a Part II coming —

November book reviews: Two girls, 52 men, and other innocents

Brief reviews of books by contemporary authors I read this month — along with photos of what I ate while reading. The list is ordered by the level of my enjoyment:

elena-ferrante-my-brilliant-friend

My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante (in the US, Europa, 2012)

“We thought that if we studied hard we would be able to write books and that the books would make us rich.”
*
My Brilliant Friend really took me back to girlhood — those small moments when the world seems full of wonder and possibility. This novel tells the story of a young girl growing up in a tiny, gritty town in Italy who has a best friend she adores — with all the jealousies and mimicry and adulation and small betrayals these girly friendships entail. The tiny town is so full of drama — both quiet ones of the mind and dramatic ones of the relationships, tangled up in neighborhood animosities and allegiances, long-held cultural codes of honor…. This novel ends on a bit of a cliffhanger too so I can’t wait to read the next.

louise-wareham-leonard-52-men

52 Men by Louise Wareham Leonard (Red Hen, 2015)

“I find a list of pros and cons about me. Pro: Great sex. A good person. Con: Needy, both emotionally and financially.”
*
52 Men is a thinly veiled memoir written in tiny, flash pieces, each one about a guy with whom the narrator had a relationship — some brief, some longer, some intimate, some cruel. The 52 men glimpsed through this book all are so unique — there’s one guy that sounds curiously like Jonathan Franzen, another who jousts with the narrator so she’ll remember him, several who die young…. The book’s like an ode to ex lovers but also an ode to the fragmentary memories of them. After the flash pieces, this book ends with a longer short story about a girl who has a sexual relationship with her older step brother — at first as a young teen who’s being molested by him, later as a woman, consensually. This story goes to all the uncomfortable, in-between places around consent, desire, history, power. Highly recommended.

dana-spiotta-innocents-and-others

Innocents and Others by Dana Spiotta (Scribner, 2016)

“That’s the thing about films. They don’t change. You change. The immutability of the film (or a book or a painting or a piece of music) is something to measure yourself against.”
*
Plot wise, Dana Spiotta’s novel is about a childhood friendship between two girls that gets strained — but never breaks — through their separate lives as artist-filmmakers. On another level, the novel is about an obsessive love for film, the pursuit of an artistic life, the constructed reality of stories (especially true stories) and a lot more. Innocents and Others really plays with the novel form — There are movie synopses, film dialogues, and even long form internet zine essays, complete with reader comments. Lovers of avant garde films will especially enjoy Spiotta’s novel; it’s a read that’ll make you want to reread and rewatch every book and film you’ve ever loved.

meredith-alling-sing-the-song

Sing the Song by Meredith Alling (Future Tense, 2016)

“I felt that I had done something wrong, ruined something or hurt someone or killed someone.”
*
Meredith Alling’s short story collection captures that strange, unexplained sense of foreboding and anxiety — the sense you’ve done something terrible or some bad thing is just going to happen…. It’s a slim, pocket sized volume you can take out in a day! And if you were at the launch reading at Skylight Books earlier this month, you heard Meredith and me talk about the book and writing — Thanks to everyone who came.

tessa-hadley-sunstroke

Sunstroke by Tessa Hadley (Picador, 2007)

“They only began writing a year ago: but it has taken hold of them both with a ferocity and a destructive importance.”
*
Tessa Hadley’s stories are about women and the quiet yet significant moments that catalyze life-changing decisions. My favorite in the collection is “The Surrogate,” about a girl with a crush on her college lecturer — who meets and starts an affair with a guy who looks like her crush. I didn’t love all the stories, but there were places in many that really made me FEEL.

jay-mcinerney-brightness-falls

Brightness Falls by Jay McInerney (Knopf, 1992)

“According to the graffiti downtown, the whole capitalist system is going to collapse pretty soon and be replaced by an anarchist Utopia.”
*
Brightness Falls stars a NYC power couple of sorts, Russell who’s managed to orchestrate a hostile takeover of the publishing house where he used to be an employee, and Corrine who’s in finance but is now falling into a strange depression complicated by anorexic tendencies. Their friends are mostly writers and agents and publishers — so there are lots of little meta moments about writing in this novel. I got irritated a bit by the characters’ self-absorption, but enjoyed the deadpan humor and vivid descriptions of NYC.

tessa-hadley-clever-girl

Clever Girl by Tessa Hadley (Harper, 2014)

“I didn’t think about anything, I was transparent and alive, washed through with the present moment.”
*
Clever Girl is punctuated with sudden moments of realization and self discovery that remind me to live more purposefully and viscerally. That said, the novel was totally different from what I expected — The clever girl of the book, born in the 60s, discovers she can be book smart, if she wants to be — but then becomes a teen mom after having sex twice with her hot gay boyfriend — then becomes a domestic worker, basically, to make ends meet. I admired the many twists and turns of the protagonist’s life — her lovers, shifts in economic status, etc — a rich and varied experience despite its seeming quietness on the outside — but I think I’m done with domestic novels for a while.

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Cat’s Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut (Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1963)

“Do writers have a right to strike? That would be like the police or the firemen walking out.”
*
Cat’s Cradle is a dark farce — and in retrospect I wonder if a novel about a human-made apocalypse was the best book to read when already freaked out about the prospect of a Trump presidency. The plot follows a curious guy who decides to write about what people did on the day Hiroshima was bombed, and so goes about the world conducting random, rambling interviews. There’s a midget, a strange religion, and a lot of humor —

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Pomegranate Eater by Amaranth Borsuk (Kore Press, 2016)

“If the garden’s gone out of me, / then I’ll go to the garden.”
*
Lush language, precise wordplay, rich flavors and fragrances — if you love those things, pick up these poems by my grad school friend. Her language is so luscious — It makes me want to spend the day with flowers and fruit.

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The Five Acts of Diego Leon by Alex Espinoza (Random House, 2013)

“Who would be left to remember them once they faded away into obscurity, into nothingness, like the countless before them and all of those to come?”
*
This novel follows Diego through his tumultuous life — starting with a peasant childhood in a tiny Mexican village during the Mexican revolution, then to the city where he lives with his rich grandparents who groom him to better suit his changed lifestyle, then to Los Angeles — after abandoning his fiancée and grandparents — to try to make it as a movie star in the 20s and 30s. I found many of the characters rather flat, but admired the ambition of the sweeping plot.

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October book reviews: Shirley Jackson and other spooky reads

Brief reviews of books by contemporary authors I read this month — along with photos of what I ate while reading. The list is ordered by the level of my enjoyment:

shirley-jackson-we-have-always-lived-in-the-castle

We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson (Viking, 1962)

“Nothing was orderly, nothing was planned; it was not like any other day.”
*
Two sisters live with their invalid uncle in an isolated mansion, reviled by their neighbors because of a mysterious poisoning that killed off all the sisters’ other family members six years ago. This novel takes a fascinating look at the intense gossip and meanness of small towns. I loved the vengeful anger and quiet violence in little girls, the comforting pull of solitude. Highly recommended!

shirley-jackson-the-haunting-of-hill-house

The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson (Viking, 1959)

“I am like a small creature swallowed whole by a monster … and the monster feels my tiny movements inside.”
*
Four “researchers” of supernatural phenomena have arrived at Hill House to study hauntings — and one of them Nell, starts really cracking up. My favorite part of this novel was not being able to tell whether the scary happenings were ghosts in the house or the figments of Nell’s imagination. Highly recommended Halloween reading.

amie-barrodale-you-are-having-a-good-time

You Are Having a Good Time by Amie Barrodale (FSG, 2016)

“The thing about a dark truth is it is indistinguishable from doubt.”
*
I’ve loved Amie Barrodale’s stories for a long time so I was glad this collection of her work finally came out earlier this year. Amie’s stories are mostly of slightly strange, uncomfortable love affairs and the murky, intense feelings they bring up — an odd drunken encounter with a musician that turns into a bizarre years-long email friendship, a novelist whose work your married lover recommended suddenly showing up at your yoga retreat. It really captures the discomfiting, unsettled, messy aspects of modern love.

han-kang-the-vegetarian

“It’s your body, you can treat it however you please. The only area where you’re free to do just as you like.”
*
The Vegetarian shows interesting connections between women’s rights and eating disorders — a young girl physically abused by her father later becomes anorexic, gaining control over the one part of life where she can exert some agency. I recently read — in Glamour of all places — that South Korea’s female president hasn’t done much for women’s rights; the country ranks 115 of 145 countries for equality according to the World Economic Forum — a stat as disturbing as this novel. A fascinating and disturbing book that delves into real sociopolitical concerns.

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The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead (Doubleday, 2016)

“But we have all been branded even if you can’t see it, inside if not without….”
*
Reading The Underground Railroad was an unexpected exercise in gratitude for me — for all the rights and privileges and comforts I simply take for granted. This novel follows a woman called Cora who escapes from her life as a slave to make a perilous journey to freedom. There’s really painful torture, unimaginable hardships, as well as remarkable resilience and hope. Those emotions feel real, but Colsin Whitehead’s added an imaginative twist: an actual secret railroad network that transports slavery escapees. Beyond the illuminating look at slavery and its legacy in the US, this novel made poignant to me the inevitability of change and upheaval in life and the fact of life’s ephemerality.

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Knives, Forks, Scissors, Flames by Stefan Kiesbye (Panhandler Books, 2016)

“What had the children really done with the body?”
*
New out this month, modern gothic novel is set in a tiny German town. On the outside, everyone’s down to earth and sweet. But underneath the town’s placid veneer roils a strange myth that leads to beatings, murders, and even a Cask of Amontillado-style live burial. Benno, the protagonist, has gotten strangely obsessed with a local murder — while his wife’s getting really religious after going off her meds. Trouble ensues. The book’s full of disturbing images: dead crows, horse placenta hung from trees, wounded dogs. Read it if you like creepy German stories! Earlier: Five Firsts: Stefan Kiesbye on finding the right indie press for your book.

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The Uncanny Reader: Stories from the Shadows edited by Marjorie Sandor (St. Martin’s, 2015)

“Then, at dawn, I would hear the meat being sawed and hacked.”
*
Halloween month seemed a good time to take on The Uncanny Reader, a 500+ page anthology of spooky stories, from Poe to Aimee Bender. I enjoyed rereading stories I love (Kafka’ “The Stoker,” Shirley Jackson’s “Paranoia”) and discovering new writers like Felisberto Hernandez. If you have plans to teach a spooky literature class, this one would make a good textbook.
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September book reviews: Little Nothing, The Lonely City, and 8 more

Jonathan Safran Foer Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Brief reviews of books by contemporary authors I read this month — along with photos of what I ate while reading. The list is ordered by the level of my enjoyment:

Jonathan Safran Foer Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer (Houghton Mifflin, 2005)

“So many people enter and leave your life! Hundreds of thousands of people! You have to keep the door open so they can come in! But it also means you have to let them go!”
*
Extremely Loud follows Oskar, a 9-year-old who lost his father on 9/11. The boy wanders around NYC on a mission to find a lock for a mysterious key his father left behind. In the process, he meets a lot if varied people and hears their stories — which gives the novela bit of a Humans of New York feel. I loved the precocious (aspie?) protagonist — The close loving relationships he has with his mom and granny (and had with his father) actually made me jealously long for a childhood like his. One question remains: Should I watch the movie?

Cari Luna The Revolution of Every Day

The Revolution of Every Day by Cari Luna (Tin House, 2013)

“People aren’t so different. Times haven’t changed so much. Young is young. Poor is poor.”
*
This novel centers around four squatters living in the lower east side during Giuliani’s reign in the 90s — the politically-driven, modern-hippie kind of squatters trying to reclaim the city for the people by rehabbing abandoned apartment buildings and living in them free rent. There’s a love triangle — the girl of one couple gets pregnant by the guy of another couple — and there’s the struggle against the government that suddenly seeks to evict the squatters. I didn’t even know this kind of subculture ever existed so it was fascinating to read about.

Marisa Silver LIttle Nothing

Little Nothing by Marisa Silver (Blue Rider Press, 2016)

“People risk death for the chance to be swept away from everything they once were.”
*
Marisa Silver’s latest novel is like a twisted fairy tale of a girl born a dwarf — to grow and stretch and transform, metamorphosing those around her too. What I loved most about this novel were the ideas of transformation and reinvention of the self. This happens in a supernatural level to the protagonist of the book, but the other characters too take on new personas, living multiple lives in the shifts and tumbles of their tumultuous lives. A lively and entertaining read.

Jami Attenberg Middlesteins

The Middlesteins by Jami Attenberg (Grand Central Publishing, 2013)

“We ate and ate, and we looked at no one but ourselves until we were done.”
*
Jami Attenberg’s novel has at its center Edie, a woman who just can’t stop eating — and her family who doesn’t know what to do with the situation. Edie’s appetite for crappy food triggers everything from futile exercise walks around the track to crying and gnashing of teeth to divorce proceedings — yet the book is really about how a family lives and loves and cares and adapts through it all. The descriptions of all the fatty sugary junk food Edie constantly ingests created for me a simultaneous desire and disgust — Pick it up if you love touching Jewish family dramas!

Half World Scott OConnor

Half World by Scott O’Connor (Simon & Schuster, 2014).

“This is another place entirely. The rules are different. The rules are pretty much the opposite of the rules where you’re from.”
*
Scott O’Connor’s literary thriller takes as its inspiration MKULTRA, the decades-long CIA experiments on unsuspecting Americans to study the effects of LSD and other drugs — as well as methods of interrogation and coercion. Experimentees get lured in and drugged up by prostitutes hired by government agents. Though based on historical events, O’Connor’s story is very much fiction — It investigates the emotional legacy of this CIA program on both the experimenters and the experimenteees.

Benjamin Nugent Good Kids

Good Kids by Benjamin Nugent (Scribner, 2013)

How teenagers dated in the 90s: “No one had email. To keep in touch with a girl who lived two hours away, you had to talk to her, while attempting to avoid your mother, on a beige phone whose base was nailed to the kitchen wall.”
*
Benjamin Nugent’s novel is often hilarious with its spot on descriptions of the awkwardness of growing up. The novel’s about a boy and a girl who see their parents hook up with each other — an affair that ends up breaking up two families. The kids make a pact to never cheat when they grow up — then meet again decades later when both engaged to other people. Overall, an entertaining read.

Sloane Crosley Clasp

The Clasp by Sloane Crosley (Picador, 2016)

“If Los Angeles, with its youthful obsessions, made life feel like death, then Paris made death feel like life.”
*
The Clasp tells the story of a love triangle between three college friends who come back together in their early thirties. There’s unrequited longing, foiled young ambitions, and a romp through France in search of a necklace. I enjoyed the same goofy-wry humor I recognized from Sloane’s two earlier nonfiction books. All in all a light, mildly entertaining read.

Olivia Laing Lonely City
The Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being Alone by Olivia Laing (Picador, 2016)

“I wonder now: is it fear of contact that is the real malaise of our age…”
*
The Lonely City was a thought provoking read that combines Olivia’s own experience with intense loneliness after moving to NYC with philosophical and scientific loneliness research as well as an investigation of loneliness in the lives and work of major artists: Hopper, Warhol, Wojnarowicz, etc. My one quibble with this book is that few women are discussed, and their inclusion seems brief and ancillary — i.e. Valerie Solanas, who seems to be included less for her work than because, you know, she shot Warhol. The book is wide ranging, touching on everything from the AIDS crisis to isolating technologies.

Shawna Kenney I was a teenage dominatrix

I was a Teenage Dominatrix by Shawna Kenney (Last Gasp, 2001)

“None of these men turned me on in a sexual way. But I enjoyed what I did to them.”
*
I picked up Shawna’s book after meeting her at a Vermin reading. This memoir of tying up, beating up, and ordering around men is a fast and furious read. An entertaining book you can whip through in a day.

Adam Haslett You are not a stranger here

You Are Not a Stranger Here by Adam Haslett (Anchor, 2003)

“He wasn’t the most articulate boy I ever met. Only the one whose pain seemed to me most beautiful.”
*
Adam Haslett’s short story collection is an introspective, somewhat painful read, its main themes being sexual confusion, self-hatred, and mental illness. The story that most moved me was about a newly orphaned young gay boy — who has a crush on the class bully and provokes his physical violence for a sense of connection.
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A Story in an anthology — Nothing to Declare

Nothing to Declare: A Guide to the Flash Sequence.What is a flash sequence? Imagine a series of flash fiction pieces that connect and build on each other — though really, you could also imagine a string of prose poems too, or a sequence of tiny creative non fiction pieces, or a regular short story broken up into little sections —

Whatever your definition, I recommend that you pick up a new anthology — Nothing to Declare: A Guide to the Flash Sequence. New from White Pine Press, this handsome anthology imagines and reimagines tiny prose pieces and their connections and disjunctions.

Plus — one of my pieces is in the anthology! The story, “The Locust of Desire,” was originally published in ZYZZYVA.

And don’t miss all the other wonderful work. There are too many great pieces to mention them all, but here are lines from a few to whet your appetite:

>> Nin Andrews: “As if snow were falling inside each one of us, and no one would make it stop.”

>> Jim Ruland: “We’re going to need Cuban cigars and Italian espresso. Definitely champagne. Possibly lube.”

>> Jenn Koiter: “There was always a good Ken and a bad Ken. Always a bad Ken. The bad Ken is necessary.”

>> Bob Thurber: “She had a wide mouth overcrowded with perfectly straight teeth and a tongue like an angry snake.”

Thank you to Robert Alexander, Eric Braun, and Debra Marquart, editors of the anthology.

Pick up Nothing to Declare at Perseus — and come to our flash sequence panel at AWP! More about that soon —

My novel-in-stories Cake Time to be published by Red Hen Press

redhenpressI’m excited and honored to announce my novel-in-stories Cake Time won the Red Hen Fiction Manuscript Award!

The book will come out in spring 2017 if all goes according to plan.

Thank you to everyone who read, critiqued, and listened to the stories in this work the last few years — including Peter Steinberg, Edan Lepucki, Paul Mandelbaum, Chris Corning, Travis Koplow, Tanya Knox, Shilpa Argawal, Katherine Motoike, and Carolyn Peters for your valuable feedback and Lauren Eggert-Crowe, David Rocklin, and Zoë Ruiz for giving me opportunities to share pieces of Cake Time at readings.

I’m so grateful to have you all in my life! Looking forward to working with everyone at Red Hen Press! And thank you in advance to the future readers who will pick up Cake Time —