• Jesmyn Ward’s ‘Sing, Unburied, Sing’: Riding in Cars with Ghosts

    Jesmyn Ward is a poet who writes novels. The lyricism of her prose starkly contrasts the gritty realism of her plots, but that is part of the joy of reading her. Her novels hold a gilded mirror to life’s imperfections. Her characters live in a world where murder can be termed as a “hunting accident” so long as the victim…

  • Margaret Atwood’s ‘The Blind Assassin’: Novels-Within-Novels-Within-Novels

    Written by the renowned Canadian author, Margaret Atwood, at the turn of the millennium, The Blind Assassin won both the Booker and Hammett Prize, despite a lengthy list of harsh criticisms. Atwood is perhaps best known for her 1986 novel, The Handmaid’s Tale. A dystopic nightmare about the loss of a woman’s right to her own body and selfhood, The…

  • Colson Whitehead’s ‘The Underground Railroad’: Reimagining the American Slave Narrative

    Last November, I attended a reading of The Underground Railroad at Ludwig Maximillian University. Throughout this event, I was struck not only by Colson Whitehead’s personal eloquence, intelligence, and charm but also by his dedication to authenticity. During the interview portion, for instance, he described himself as feeling unprepared to do justice to a subject matter as substantial and serious…

  • Kate Chopin’s “Story of an Hour”

    Today, we’re talking about one of Kate Chopin’s shortest of stories and the inspiration for the title of this blog. A masterpiece in precision and irony, Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour” is one of her most popular and widely read works. So, if you’re looking for a quick read—just over a thousand words, I counted—then this is the…