My Weird Pandemic Obsession: Learning to Dunk, by Aram Mrjoian
Before this era of isolation, I was in the habit of playing basketball once or twice a week with a group of creative writing friends at Florida State. I am the last pick, not particularly athletic, with basketball skills long stunted by a hesitance to play after my younger brother outgrew me.
My Weird Pandemic Obsession: Civilization III, by Hannah Grieco
The world attempts to work, homeschool their kids, and day-drink responsibly – and yet they still have time for hobbies, it seems.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Referential Body, by Rosie Accola
You can grow up nestled in plastic and still find something beautiful in it. Accola’s work seems to argue that we should try.
My Weird Pandemic Obsession: The Mews of New York City, by Devin Kelly
The word mews is actually a singular noun, and refers to a row of old stables made or converted into apartments, particularly on a side street in a city full of busier streets.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Particularly Dangerous Situation, by Patti White
But White delivers something more powerful: space where we can imagine these characters endlessly wandering and searching.
“…Felt Just like Sunday on Saturday Afternoon” Memories of a Timeless Songwriter in a Timeless Time
I’m driving through the Kern Valley near Bakersfield, California. It’s late March, things are blooming and there’s rushing water below the road and walls of rock framing it. I have that rare feeling of “there’s nowhere else in the universe I’d rather be than right here, right now.”
Barrelhouse Reviews: Come to the X, by Julia Wendell
If Wendell’s new memoir endears the reader to a demanding narrator, it also summons the reader’s own demands. This book is written by a horse girl, but it is not only for horse girls or about them.
My Weird Quarantine Obsession: Dad House, by Jaime Fountaine
But I’m tired, and I barely know what day it is, so let’s keep it short: Our reality is bad. Why not spend some time in an absurd, wholesome alternate universe?
Barrelhouse Reviews: Empty Hearts, by Juli Zeh
In the end, Empty Hearts just isn’t messy enough to compete with our current reality. Which might not be what the author wanted, but still works in its favor during this long, seemingly never-ending, summer of 2020.
Barrelhouse Reviews: That Ex, by Rachelle Taormino
For Toarmino, technology is not just a means to communicate with one another. It embeds itself into what we express to each other.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Dancing at the Pity Party, by Tyler Feder
Feder shows the difficult truth of surviving a loss: that life continues to move, though not in a carefully prescribed direction.
Barrelhouse Presents My Weird Pandemic Obsession: Knitting Lips, by Tara Campbell
At the end of April, I stumbled upon fiber artist Yrúarí’s fanciful work reclaiming old sweaters with audacious red lips sprouting out from everywhere and pointed tongues snaking beyond imagination.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Felon, by Reginald Dwayne Betts
I sit here today, looking at my worn copy of Felon, and feel sad, again. Not for the coffee-stained cover – a sadness intimate to me – but because less than four months ago, things were different.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Twelve, by Andrea Blythe
Twelve is, at its core, a story of women choosing.
Barrelhouse Reviews: That Time of Year, by Marie Ndiaye
What becomes of us, NDiaye seems to ask, when we have no choice but to look below the surface?
We Know This Will All Disappear: An Interview with Melissa Ragsly
We Know This Will All Disappear: An Interview with Melissa Ragsly
Barrelhouse Reviews: Anthropica, by David Hollander
It is by way of the voices of this band of dejected antiheroes that Anthropica poses an alarming and timely question: With all we have, why are we still so unhappy?
Kicking Off the Fall Season: Sian Griffiths and Katherine Hill Talk About Their Football Novels
Kicking Off the Fall Season: Siân Griffiths and Katherine Hill Talk About Their Football Novels
Barrelhouse Reviews: Half, by Sharon Harrigan
The we voice, that stubborn collective, merges the two women and takes the reader through two lives lived as one.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Like a Bird, by Fariha Roisin
Every trauma survivor must become an autodidact of their own pain. By telling Taylia’s whole truth in Like a Bird, rather than flattening her into a more marketable heroine, Róisín locates Taylia’s experience within the body rather than as a response to the catalytic forces of plot.