Rumpus Originals

The Best of It

Barbara Berman  ·  March 17th, 2010

Kay Ryan has been compared to Emily Dickinson, and I like to imagine Dickinson and Marianne Moore reading her with sly commiseration. Unlike some poets with recognizable styles, Ryan does not write the same poem again and again, and her sharp eye is both benevolent and unflinching.

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American History X-treme

Caleb Powell  ·  March 16th, 2010

A former neo-Nazi’s memoir describes a violent life in the white supremacist movement and his transformative experiences in prison. …more

Teenagers from Mars

Glenn Lester  ·  March 10th, 2010

Peter Bognanni’s first novel mixes punk rock and the wild creativity of Buckminster Fuller into a tender and believable chronicle of teen sorrow. …more

Postcards from the Edge

Angela Stubbs  ·  March 8th, 2010

Big American Trip addresses our insecurities as artists, lovers, and citizens who lack the ability to understand one another, regardless of which language we speak.” …more

Twenty and Bored and Alive

James Yeh  ·  March 4th, 2010

“This voice is neither howl, yowl, nor whisper, but something more like a quiet monotone, slightly ironic and yet also depressed, lonely, and compellingly vulnerable.” …more

The Cost of Living

Padma Viswanathan  ·  March 1st, 2010

A new volume of stories by Mavis Gallant traces the writer’s development from early stories of bewilderment and disappointment to the sharp, incisive later work of a master. …more

Heart of Glass

Matt McGregor  ·  February 27th, 2010

Ali Shaw’s novel concerns a modern-day Midas, a cold and inhospitable island, and a young woman whose body is inexorably transforming. …more

Mutations of Meaning

Karen Laws  ·  February 25th, 2010

A first novel by playwright Jillian Weise tackles the moral and ethical questions surrounding both medical research and human relationships. …more

The Ancient Book of Hip

Sean Singer  ·  February 24th, 2010

The poems in The Ancient Book of Hip create a precise and evocative description of time and place; they celebrate that space, even as they have a witty undercurrent of critique.

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The Lost Books of the Odyssey

A Wolfe  ·  February 23rd, 2010

Dreams, vignettes, hypotheticals, and poetry lay out alternate versions of Western literature’s founding epic. …more

Why Me?

Christopher Feliciano Arnold  ·  February 22nd, 2010

Heidi W. Durrow’s novel is both the story of a woman learning to negotiate biracial life and that of the lone survivor of a horrible tragedy. …more

Anywhere But L.A.

Vinoad Senguttuvan  ·  February 20th, 2010

In stories that range through history, serendipity, speculation, whimsy, and horror, Daniel Olivas chronicles the lives of characters who have loved—and lost—Los Angeles. …more

Slouching Towards Baltimore

Matthew Pitt  ·  February 18th, 2010

Geoffrey Becker’s second novel races across the country in the company of “spiritual beings having a human experience.” …more

The Rising of the Ashes

Barbara Berman  ·  February 17th, 2010

What Jelloun proves throughout this book is that he has not let language(s) fail him or the people, places and historical moments he memorializes, making dates that are not headlines as important as front page news.

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Vanity Fair

Vanessa Garcia  ·  February 16th, 2010

The essays in For You, For You I Am Trilling These Songs explore the many successes and admirable qualities of their author. …more

The Rumpus Valentine’s Day Review of Drenched

Kate Munning  ·  February 12th, 2010

The characters in this debut collection of short stories are soaked, tossed, drowned, and washed away by love. …more

The Plath Cabinet

Virginia Konchan  ·  February 10th, 2010

Many of the strongest poems in this poetical homage politicize Sylvia [Plath], showing her to be less a victim than a citizen of her time, whom history can misrepresent but not silence.

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What the Girls Call ‘Murder’

Andrew Altschul  ·  February 9th, 2010

A funny thing happened on the way to the “angry grrrl rock revolution which seeks to save the psychic and cultural lives of girls and women everywhere”… …more

California Dreaming

Catherine Brady  ·  February 8th, 2010

Eric Puchner’s first novel exposes the faultlines and frustrations beneath the shining American dream. …more

Outside of Society

Blythe Sheldon  ·  February 4th, 2010

Patti Smith’s memoir of her relationship with Robert Mapplethorpe chronicles two “mutinous spirits” in the chaos of 1970s New York. …more

The World Was Still There

John Madera  ·  February 1st, 2010

John Haskell’s novel takes readers on a metaphysical journey through the mind of a Steve Martin-impersonator impersonator. …more

Crimson Colored Raunchiness and Terror

Sean Singer  ·  January 28th, 2010

Taste of Cherry is a beautiful, carefully crafted, and sensual display of poetry; the verbal, pyrotechnical, unabashed bravery of the poems is their most significant quality.

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Stirring Coffee with a Feather

Brian Beglin  ·  January 27th, 2010

Margo Berdeshevsky’s work straddles the line between fiction and poetry. Her characters grieve, dream, punish themselves, and try to find harmony between who they are and who they might still be. …more

The Country Where No One Ever Dies

Adam Gallari  ·  January 25th, 2010

The Albanian, in Ornela Vorpsi’s comic novel, is someone prone to megalomania, and who has one obsession “dearer to them than death… Fornication.” …more

The Professor

Margaret Eby  ·  January 14th, 2010

The Professor and Other WritingsIn a new book of essays, Terry Castle rips through literary and cultural allusions at breakneck speed, citing obscure folk musicians and cult novelists in the same breath. …more

Usher

Barbara Berman  ·  January 9th, 2010

172_usherB. H. Fairchild fuses mundane with spiritual in resolute ways, as “in the silent prayer for the grace of rain abundant,” a glorious line that would have been less so if the words “rain” and “abundant” were switched …more

Where the God of Love Hangs Out

Jeff OKeefe  ·  January 6th, 2010

Amy Bloom’s characters are glorious, endearing wrecks—vain, horny, bullheaded, and brave. They resemble everyone we’ve ever known intimately. …more

Lie to Me

Rachel Weiner  ·  December 23rd, 2009

I Am Martin EisenstadtThe latest memoir of the 2008 Presidential campaign is a fake book about fake events by a fake political operative. …more

The Bigness of the World

Matt McGregor  ·  December 22nd, 2009

The Bigness of the WorldLori Ostlund masters the sadness of breakups, the empty inevitability of doors closing: “For at each turn, the people we hold close elude us.” …more

“I tried to remember your scent as your own”

Barbara Berman  ·  December 18th, 2009

ohio violenceA collection like Ohio Violence is best consumed in small doses, so that its imaginative density, which is never ponderous, can be absorbed.

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THE RUMPUS BLOG

How Judges Think

When it comes to trying to understand people, Richard Posner is an American Sigmund Freud. …more

1 year ago (0)

To Preserve One Life

A Review of Writing in the Dark, by David Grossman

BY BRIAN SCHWARTZ

In the Hebrew language, I am sure, there are several different ways to say “enemy.” I have little grasp of what these words might be. I imagine that there are milder entries …more

1 year ago (0)

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