• Tottenville Blog

    • A Talk with Amy Brill about-amy-200x300

      18 Jun 2013

      Interviewed by Amy Kandathill

      Amy Brill’s debut novel The Movement of Starsis a story of uncommon depth and precision. Inspired by the life of the mid-19th century scientist Maria Mitchell, Brill weaves an astral tale of a young astronomer’s diligent search for the next comet amidst the complex hypocrisy of race relations thirty years before America celebrated its centennial.

    • Tao Lin’s ‘Taipei’ Taipei

      13 Jun 2013

      Reviewed by Pat Finn

      Taipei follows Paul, a Brooklyn-based twentysomething writer resembling Lin who drifts in and out of parties, relationships, and various chemically induced states of consciousness.

    • A Talk with Katherine Angel photo by Stacy Yates

      6 Jun 2013

      Interviewed by Meredith Turits

      In Unmastered: A Book on Desire, Most Difficult to Tell, Katherine Angel opens up. This month marks the Stateside publication of the U.K. scholar’s poetic rumination on gender, sexuality, and, of course, desire.

    • Curtis White’s ‘The Science Delusion’ The Science Delusion

      5 Jun 2013

      Reviewed by Pat Finn

      The Science Delusion is essentially an artist’s polemic, not only against the New Atheists but against the ideology they recommend as an alternative to religion.

    • 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.

  • Blog
  • Essays
  • Interviews
  • Issues
  • Reviews
  • About
  • Contact
  • Contributors
  • Search

  • Join the Collaborative

    RSS   Facebook   Twitter
  • Blogroll

    • 5 Chapters
    • Bookworm (KCRW)
    • Electric Literature
    • FSG Work-in-Progress
    • Full Stop
    • Guernica
    • HTML Giant
    • NPR Books: You Must Read This
    • Omnivore @ Bookforum
    • The Common
    • The Millions
    • The New Yorker Book Bench
    • The Paris Review

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 ‘The Razor’s Edge’

Tottenville 20: Notable Opening Lines

stamp4

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