News:

The Common Review ceased as a print publication with the Fall/Winter 2011 issue. However, we will be posting a series of ten new articles on this site over the next couple of months, at approximately 1-week intervals. We trust that you will find these articles interesting, provocative, and equal in quality to the high standards set by The Common Review during its ten-year run.

 

 

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    Review

    Culture Wars, Big Questions, and Geological Nanoseconds
    By Apurva Narechania

    In early 2009 the Texas Board of Education met to vote on whether the “strengths and weaknesses” of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution must be taught in the classroom. On the surface, this seems reasonable: assessing the...[more]

    February 17, 2012 | No comments | Share
     

    Article

    An Enlivening Heritage: Reintroducing Robert Coles
    By Jeff Kelly Lowenstein

    To understand Robert Coles’s two latest books, it helps to have seen his writing chair. Comfortable and unassuming, it sits with a blanket draped over it in the study of the three-story house in Concord, Massachusetts, where...[more]

    February 10, 2012 | 5 comment(s) | Share
     

    Review

    A Mixed Grill of Much Study
    By Val Vinokur

    “Besides reading, there was no place,” declares Dostoevsky’s Underground Man. For most of its history, Russia has been a place where books have seemed more real, carried more authority, than the “real” world. And, from Tsar...[more]

    February 03, 2012 | No comments | Share
     

    Article

    Four Reasons to Read Mario Vargas Llosa
    By Efraín Kristal, Ilan Stavans, Robert Boyers, and Scott Sherman

    In awarding the 2010 Nobel Prize in Literature to Mario Vargas Llosa in October, the Swedish Academy cited the Peruvian novelist’s “cartography of structures of power and his trenchant images of the individual’s resistance,...[more]

    January 26, 2012 | No comments | Share
     

    Review

    Revolution Is No Tea Party but It’s Easier in a Salon: Reading the Leaves Afterwards
    By Ian Williams

    In the memorable words of those other ‘60s hangovers, the Grateful Dead, “What a long, strange trip it’s been.” There have been few stranger trips than the intellectual odyssey undertaken by some of the Dead’s contemporaries, as...[more]

    January 19, 2012 | No comments | Share
     

    Review

    The Norton Anthology of Latino Literature Weighs In
    By Kristin Dykstra

    In many of my classes at Illinois State University, I’ve been setting aside time to ask the following questions of my students: How many works by US Latino or Latina writers have you encountered in your classes so far? Who are...[more]

    December 18, 2011 | No comments | Share
     

    Review

    What You Are Thinking About When You Have Nothing in Particular to Think About
    By Jonathan Rée

    Gianni Vattimo’s book-length essay, The Responsibility of the Philosopher, first published in 2000 in Italian, is a kind of apologia for a philosophical life that has always been, to say the least, exposed to controversy....[more]

    December 12, 2011 | No comments | Share
     

    Article

    Surprisingly, I Don't Care Anymore
    By Richard Byrne

    Dubravka Ugrešić is the most prominent writer to emerge from the former Yugoslavia in recent times. Though she has written movingly, in novels and essays, about the wars that ripped apart that country and the painful healing...[more]

    December 01, 2011 | 5 comment(s) | Share
     

    Review

    My Week of Living Neurotically
    By Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin

    Fran Hawthorne opens The Overloaded Liberal with a concise definition of the emergence of what I’d call pocketbook activism: “harnessing everyday life to change something bigger in the world.” She contrasts this with the...[more]

    November 17, 2011 | 2 comment(s) | Share
     

    Editorial

    The Common Review Short Story Prize Winners

    Congratulations to the winners of our annual short story prize! And thanks to judge Gina Frangello for choosing our winners.  Gina Frangello is the author of two critically acclaimed books of fiction, Slut Lullabies...[more]

    May 10, 2011 | 5 comment(s) | Share
     

    Article

    "The Cherry Tree" by Lowell Uda

    The first prize winner in The Common Review's Short Story Prize, judged by Gina Frangello The Cherry Tree by Lowell Uda "The moon," said Oscar, "is made of these petals. We're going to make the moon fat again." He...[more]

    May 09, 2011 | 6 comment(s) | Share
     

    Article

    Coming: The Common Review Online

    With the Fall/Winter issue of The Common Review, after ten years, we will cease print publication and shift all our attention to developing a full-fledged online version of the magazine, to premiere in Fall, 2011. In the coming...[more]

    March 15, 2011 | 6 comment(s) | Share
     

    Bookends

    En Route
    By Rachel Hadas

    A long trip gives us reason to complain. If only it—no. Set aside impatience. Resign yourself to writing on the train. [more]

    January 07, 2011 | No comments | Share
     

    Review

    Here's Mud in Our Eyes
    By Tom McBride

    In literary theory the mimetic fallacy is an error authors make when they depict a condition too literally. An example is the portrayal of cruelty in a way that is repulsive in the eyes of the audience or a portrayal of boredom...[more]

    January 04, 2011 | No comments | Share
     

    Review

    The Future Looks Impossible
    By Michael Lynn

    The summer of 2010 was a tough one on planet Earth. It also should have discomfited climate change skeptics. This past summer, nine nations set all-time-high temperature records. Unprecedented monsoons and flooding left 20...[more]

    January 04, 2011 | 3 comment(s) | Share