Reviews | September 01, 2010
Political Stories: The Individual in Contemporary Fiction
Nathan Oates
Featuring reviews of The Emperor’s Children (Claire Messud), A Disorder Peculiar to the Country (Ken Kalfus), Half of a Yellow Sun (Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie), Delirium (Laura Restrepo), and Last Evenings on Earth (Roberto Bolaño).
This full review is not currently available online.
If you are a student, faculty member, or staff member at an institution whose library subscribes to Project Muse, you can read this piece and the full archives of the Missouri Review for free. Check this list to see if your library is a Project Muse subscriber.
Want to read more?
Subscribe TodaySEE THE ISSUE
SUGGESTED CONTENT

Features
May 16 2022
Death & Co: The Contemporary Elegy and Poetry of Mourning in a Season of Grief
Death & Co.: The Contemporary Elegy and the Poetry of Mourning in a Season of Grief Andrew Mulvania Obit by Victoria Chang. Copper Canyon press, 2020, 120 pp., $17… read more

Features
Dec 19 2021
New and Recent Southern Writing
New and Recent Southern WritingBy Samuel Pickering Hieroglyphics by Jill McCorkle. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2020. 312 pp., $26.95 (hardcover). Kudzu Telegraph by John Lane. Hub City Press, 2008.… read more

Reviews
Aug 18 2021
Intersectionality and Identity: Four Recent Women’s Memoirs
Four Memoirs Lisa Katz Memorial Drive: A Daughter’s Memoir by Natasha Trethewey. Ecco Press, 2020, 224 pp., $16.99 (paper). Terroir: Love, Out of Place by Natasha Sajé. Trinity University Press, 2020, 207… read more