A Brain Is Not a Computer: A Review of Linda Boström Knausgård’s Novel October Child

Each year National Mental Health awareness month comes and goes, but for those living with mental health conditions, navigating daily life continues. At age 33, I was diagnosed with bipolar 1. Since then I’ve sought out books about mental illness that speak about the experience of involuntary hospitalization, which allows a state to detain an individual with a mental disorder for 72 hours or longer, sometimes much longer—an experience I know well.

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Parsing Freedom: A Review of Kaitlyn Greenidge’s Libertie

Libertie follows hot on the heels of Greenidge’s critically acclaimed debut We Love You, Charlie Freeman, in which the Freeman family are invited to the Toneybee Institute to participate in a research experiment involving a young chimp. Greenidge’s highly anticipated sophomore novel does not disappoint in delivering her distinctive brand of thematic intensity.

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Witness and Participant: A Review of Carolyn Forché’s In the Lateness of the World

In The Lateness of the World, Carolyn Forché’s much-anticipated new poetry collection—her first in a decade and a half—offers a subtle, seamless, and altogether stunning interplay between the poetic, the personal, and the politic. Forché’s “poetry of witness” lights the reader’s path through brilliant complexities of meaning, often in lean phrases that astonish with their power and demand repeated close readings via multiple lenses.

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