HORN! REVIEWS: The Mueller Report
My favorite part is the language memorialized…
...moreBecome a Rumpus Member
Join NOW!My favorite part is the language memorialized…
...moreEven at its most earthbound, I’d rather spend my time in Evenson’s world…
...moreHow romantic!
...moreOur feelings and thoughts fight it out offstage and our ego tells a story to justify the result.
...more…she’s human, she’s unwell, she’s us.
...more…and the word for dream is root.
...moreWhy can’t men leave well enough alone?
...moreThe Rumpus editorial staff selects our favorite pieces from 2018!
...moreThe same factors that made us burn witches cause us to fall for fake news…
...moreThey demand to be read aloud, the vocabulary seductively textured, tactile, like fan-vaulted chanterelles.
...more…a beard divides parents from son in this time capsule of the 50s avant-garde…
...more…his was the darkest timeline, but he’d live it all over again.
...moreAs relevant now as it was in 1971, this book pulls the thread of the mouse…
...moreThe future depicted is socially grim, suggesting some things never change…
...moreIt’s a masterpiece of structure, connecting our epoch inevitably to the next through artifacts and accounts…
...moreLike tinned meat years after the war, there’s something sweetly off about these stories…
...moreIn a perfectly blameless Work of Fact, Mr. Lemuel Gulliver gets his perspective flipped…
...moreThis hybrid manifesto/spell book/toolkit applies the most utopian ideas of Octavia Butler to organizing…
...moreIf capitalism and communism had a baby, that baby would be decanted, not born.
...moreHORN! Reviews shares a beautifully illustrated review of The Barbarous Century by Leah Umansky.
...more…in the bittersweet end, even ghosts have a hard time of it.
...moreMailhot applies the storytelling tradition to her own rather improbable life…
...moreWhat’s needed (still) is less theory, more reform; less knowledge, more poetry; less Foucault, more Whitman.
...moreThe pure pleasure of this book is being our heroine Vero’s head…
...moreThe leitmotif is people working more for less, and to what end?
...moreSounds come from just outside—and then just outside that.
...moreWar takes and takes, and what’s left untouched is locked up in the past, reachable only by memory.
...moreWhile he doesn’t offer all the answers we want, he reminds us that we don’t see things as they are, which is key to anything.
...moreWhat makes outdoorsy Cajuns tolerate oil companies poisoning their land? The short answer: white identity politics.
...more[B]ut you’d never guess how funny Maria’s ruin could be.
...more