In our newest web publication, George Kovalenko reviews the 2025 English translation of Siegfried Kracauer's "Ginster." Read it here: chicagoreview.org/siegfried-krac…
From print issue 68:2, Max Eliott Heuvels's review of J. H. Prynne's "Poems: 2016-2024" is now on our website. Read it here: chicagoreview.org/review-of-j-h-…
As promised—from print issue 68:2, Jay Ritchie's "Autopoietic Conceptualism: Resisting Left-Wing Irony and Melancholy in the Works of Jordan Abel" is now on our website. Read it here: chicagoreview.org/autopoietic-co…
This week we're republishing two nonfiction pieces from recent issue 68:2 on our website—happy (belated) New Year from us🎉. First up is Judah Rubin's "Matapacos Vive: Protest and its Poetic Afterlives in Chile and Peru, 2019-2023." Read it here: chicagoreview.org/matapacos-vive…
Here, Dominick Knowles (@multiwhirl) pays homage with a close reading of Clover's final published poem, "Poem (Sept 26, 2023)," first published in Protean Magazine, where Knowles edits the poetry section. Read the full in memoriam on our website: chicagoreview.org/nothing-is-ove…
Chicago Review mourns the passing of the great scholar, critic, poet, and activist Joshua Clover (1962-2025). Clover published several pieces with us over the years, first in our special issue on Lisa Robertson (Spring 2006) and for the last time in 60:4/61:1 (2017). ->
Basil Lloyd-Moffett reviews V. Joshua Adams's "Skepticism and Impersonality in Modern Poetry: Literary Experiments with Philosophical Problems" in our newest web publication. Read it here: chicagoreview.org/v-joshua-adams…
Alex Streim reviews "The Book of All Loves" by Augustín Fernández Mallo (trans. Thomas Bunstead) in our newest commentary piece. Read on here: chicagoreview.org/agustin-fernan…
"HAS YET TO ARRIVE" and "SALINITY 蝦人 瞎仁 FLUCTUATION-FLUCTUATION
FLUCTUATION 蝦仁" two poems from issue 68:1 by Agnes Hanying Ong, are now on our website. Read on here: chicagoreview.org/two-poems-19/
From the poetry section of issue 68:1, “U UGLY” and “I Am A Snow Plow” by Izzy Casey are now on our website. Read on here: chicagoreview.org/two-poems-18/