• Tottenville Blog

    • Fire and Forget: Short Stories from the Long War Fire and Forget

      22 May 2013

      Reviewed by Jeff Price

      In the new gripping and important anthology with a foreword by Colum McCann, short stories about the Iraq and Afghanistan wars hauntingly unfold and reveal truths about our deepest fears and desires.

    • Bennett Sims’ ‘A Questionable Shape’ A Questionable Shape

      20 May 2013

      Reviewed by David Burr Gerrard

      A Questionable Shape is ostensibly about zombies, but Sims is much less interested in chase scenes and infection countdowns than in using undeath to explore memory, home, family, love, and the question what makes a person a person rather than a zombie?

    • Santiago Roncagliolo’s ‘Hi, This is Conchita’ Hi, This is Conchita

      16 May 2013

      Reviewed by Nicole Casamento

      Hi, This is Conchitaoffers an encompassing view of the ways we become detached from intimacy and the painful, misguided ways in which we attempt to retrieve it.

    • Interview: Claire Messud Claire Messud

      13 May 2013

      Interviewed by David Burr Gerrard

      Esteemed writer and academic, Claire Messud, discusses her new novel The Woman Upstairs,its controversial reception, and our entangled forms of media.

    • Fiona Maazel’s ‘Woke Up Lonely’ images

      3 May 2013

      Reviewed by Valerie Stivers

      At the center of Maazel’s zany novel is Thurlow Dan, a self-help guru who has recently made an ill-advised trip to North Korea, and who is being spied on by the U.S. Government.

    • Interview: Jessica Soffer Jessica Soffer

      19 Apr 2013

      Interviewed by Liz Moore

      In Jessica Soffer’s debut novel Tomorrow There Will Be Apricots,two women adrift in New York—an Iraqi Jewish widow and the latchkey daughter of a chef—find each other and a new kind of family through their shared love of cooking.

    • Nicole Stellon O’Donnell’s ‘Steam Laundry’ Steam Laundry

      3 Apr 2013

      Reviewed by Rebecca Kuensting

      Nicole Stellon O’Donnell’s debut collection is a novel in poems, resurrecting an old frontier story in creative and bizarre ways.

    • Interview: Kristopher Jansma KrisJansma-139

      22 Mar 2013

      Interviewed by Ryan Skrabalak

      Kristopher Jansma’s much anticipated debut novel, The Unchangeable Spots of Leopards,presents a narrator who always wanted to be a writer. Now, if only he can be reliable, too.

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Tottenville Review

A new review of books focused on debuts, translations, and all works that would otherwise go undetected. It is a collaborative of authors, translators, and reviewers bound by one purpose: to contribute to the dialogue of literature.

Posts Tagged ‘Anton Chekov’

Tottenville 20: Notable Opening Lines

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Continue reading "Tottenville 20: Notable Opening Lines"…

Amy Hempel, Anton Chekov, At the Gates of the Animal Kingdom, Dispatches, Don DeLillo, Donal Antrim, Gabriel García Márquez, Graham Greene, I'm Not Stiller, In the Animal Shelter, Issue 4, Jack Dawson, Joan Didion, John E. Woods, Lauren Slater, Leonard Michaels, Leonard Michaels The Collected Stories, Lying, Max Frisch, Memory, Michael Herr, Mrs. Dalloway, Murderers, My Life, Natasha Wimmer, One Hundred Years of Solitude, Opening Lines, Play It As It Lays, Remainder, Roberto Bolaño, Saul Bellow, Speak, The Adventures of Augie March, The End of the Affair, The Hundred Brothers, The Loser, The Magic Mountain, The Razor's Edge, The Savage Detectives, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Thomas Bernhard, Thomas Mann, Tom McCarthy, Underworld, Virginia Woolf, Vladimir Nabokov, W. Somerset Maugham, Zora Neale Hurston