Category: Chirograph

  • Bookishness: Week of April 9, 2012

    Bookishness: Week of April 9, 2012

    What we like to read in bed E-books, apparently. According to a just released Pew study of e-reading, American readers now favour e-books as their preferred method of reading in bed (at 45%, with books just behind at 43%). Books to be devoured While the idea of eating a book after reading it makes me cringe,…

  • Into Thin Air: J.C. Chandor’s Margin Call

    Into Thin Air: J.C. Chandor’s Margin Call

    Reviewed in this essay: Margin Call, written and directed by J.C. Chandor. Starring Zachary Quinto, Jeremy Irons, Paul Bettany, Kevin Spacey, Demi Moore, and Stanley Tucci. Running Time: 107 minutes. Available now on Blu-Ray and DVD. In Michael Lewis’ 1989 memoir Liar’s Poker, he described the idea of “jamming bonds”: when you knew your bank…

  • In Defense of Obsolete Knowledge

    In Defense of Obsolete Knowledge

    On March 13, 2012, the president of Encyclopaedia Britannica, Jorge Cauz, announced that the organization, which published the first edition of the pre-eminent English-language encyclopaedia in 1768, has decided to cease production of printed editions as it shifts all major editorial energy to the maintenance of its online edition. My first thought, I confess, was…

  • The Spirited Letters of Joseph Roth

    The Spirited Letters of Joseph Roth

    Reviewed in this essay: Joseph Roth: A Life in Letters, translated and edited by Michael Hoffman. W. W. Norton & Company, 2012. Some writers do their most interesting work in correspondence; only with the right private audience does their voice reach its full potential. The letters of Kingsley Amis, for instance, are more hilarious, caustic,…

  • Bookishness: Week of April 2, 2012

    Bookishness: Week of April 2, 2012

    A Slow-Books Manifesto “To borrow a cadence from Michael Pollan: Read books. As often as you can. Mostly classics.” “The refuge of stories.” Steve Almond on grad school as an alternative to therapy. Please please Mr. Postman So much of life allows us (expects us, requires us) to be passive. The letter, though, invites a response,…

  • TRB Podcast: Veronica Hollinger on “Technologies of Enchantment in Science Fiction”

    TRB Podcast: Veronica Hollinger on “Technologies of Enchantment in Science Fiction”

    Listen here:[audio:hollinger.mp3] On February 13, the Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto hosted a lecture by Dr. Veronica Hollinger (Cultural Studies, Trent University). The title of Dr. Hollinger’s lecture, “Technologies of Enchantment in Science Fiction,” refers not only to the role played by technology within literary science fiction, but also posits the…

  • Poetic Quanta and the Terrestrial Residue of Gil McElroy

    Poetic Quanta and the Terrestrial Residue of Gil McElroy

    Dull sublunary lovers’ love —Whose soul is sense—cannot admit Of absence, ’cause it doth remove The thing which elemented it. -John Donne The continuous work of Gil McElroy contains poems that are more suggestive of physical matter and processes than some other poems, in the sense they cannot really be defined by any one of…

  • America, From the Margins: A Review of Don DeLillo’s The Angel Esmeralda

    America, From the Margins: A Review of Don DeLillo’s The Angel Esmeralda

    Reviewed in this essay: The Angel Esmeralda: Nine Stories, by Don DeLillo. Simon & Schuster, 2011. The latest from American writer Don DeLillo is a sparse but rewarding short story collection, the first of his career. While it may not offer a radical departure from the major preoccupations of such era-defining novels as White Noise…

  • On Goldstein’s Novels of Ideas: Alan Lightman’s Einstein’s Dreams

    On Goldstein’s Novels of Ideas: Alan Lightman’s Einstein’s Dreams

    In March 2010, shortly after the release of 36 Arguments for the Existence of God, philosopher and novelist Rebecca Newberger Goldstein published her list of the five best “novels of ideas” in the Wall Street Journal. Goldstein’s list gave Michael Da Silva a starting point for a series of reviews. The fifth novel on her…

  • Bookishness: Week of March 26, 2012

    Bookishness: Week of March 26, 2012

    The enchanted e-forest Exploring twitter, where rotating skulls live alongside kittens and bunnies, with Margaret Atwood. “Application opposed” with “likelihood of confusion” Facebook attempts to claim the word book. As commenter uno2tres states: “abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz” and all combinations, permutations, derivatives, and modifications  of “abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz”, including but not limited to modifications such as “ñ” , “ò”, and “ö” are trademarks of…

  • TRB Issue Three Coming Soon!

    TRB Issue Three Coming Soon!

    The third issue of The Toronto Review of Books will launch on April 17th to all the fanfare and cheers its readers, writers, editors, and volunteers can muster at Poetry Jazz Café (224 Augusta) in Kensington Market. Join us, from 8pm ’till late—we’ll be thrilled to see you.  

  • e-Reading! An Interdisciplinary Toronto Review of Books Symposium on March 31 at Massey College

    e-Reading! An Interdisciplinary Toronto Review of Books Symposium on March 31 at Massey College

    Join The Toronto Review of Books at Massey College next Saturday, March 31st for the interdisciplinary symposium on e-Reading we’re hosting in collaboration with the University of Toronto’s program in Book History and Print Culture and the Toronto Centre for the Book. All are welcome to attend what promises to be a fascinating afternoon. The…