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If you’re reading this, chances are that you read BookPage as devotedly as I do, and you know that you won’t find a negative book review in these pages. That’s BookPage’s core philosophy: genuine recommendations only, no pans. If a book is not worth your time, BookPage doesn’t review it. The only downside to this is that BookPage readers miss out on the fundamental pleasure of an absolutely vicious review—the takedown, the hatchet job. For that, we recommend Andrea Long Chu.

Chu is a Pulitzer Prize-winning essayist and critic for New York magazine whose first book, a 112-page work on gender and desire titled Females, was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in Transgender Nonfiction in 2019. Her second book, Authority, includes 22 previously published essays, plus two new pieces, “Criticism in a Crisis” and “Authority.” The book features a quad of n+1 essays, including “On Liking Women” (Chu’s iconic 2018 essay that discusses her gender transition alongside a vast analysis of feminist philosophy over the years, which is now taught in many gender studies programs), as well as spectacularly edible pieces on Yellowstone, The Last of Us, Myra Breckinridge, Curtis Sittenfeld’s weird Hillary Clinton novel, Zadie Smith’s entire literary career and more.

If it’s possible to sum up the satisfaction of reading a Chu review, it’s that her evaluation of a piece of media—be it a single book, an author’s oeuvre, a television show or a webcomic—is so profoundly well-informed that it feels encyclopedic, which is what makes her angle-grinder critiques so valid. Even if you’re a fan of Andrew Lloyd Webber, Chu’s evisceration of The Phantom of the Opera is defined primarily by her clear devotion to musicals. (“The music in Phantom rarely served a dramatic end—rather, it strutted around the stage like it owned the place,” she writes.)

Read our starred review of ‘Authority’ by Andrea Long Chu. 

“I think that there needs to be a good reason to be that negative, probably more than just the face pleasur,” Chu tells BookPage. “When I’m writing these negative reviews, I’m not going in, first of all, trying to make them negative. I’m going in with high expectations that are dashed. And I am really trying to understand what the person is doing. I think in the best cases, I am really trying to understand what this person’s whole deal is and see them in their wholeness. . . . I think some of [the reviews] reflect the agony of recognizing someone and coming by the negativity kind of honestly.”

Considering the intensity of Chu’s work, it feels necessary to ask, what does it feel like to talk about—be interviewed about—a book like this? When you write this brutally, you’re inevitably inviting someone else to be brutal to you.

“This is the first interview that I’m doing in this press cycle, so you’re really just handing me an on-ramp to this whole experience,” she says. “I’m excited and nervous. There’s a breadth of things that I could be asked about. [When] you collect a bunch of essays together, it’s a little tricky to anticipate what someone might want to talk about, so I do feel a kind of need to, you know, square my shoulders a little bit.”

But other than that initial inclination to square up and gird loins, it’s apparent she’s not intimidated by what could come her way during the book’s promotion. That steadfastness is reflected within Authority as well, as all the essays included are printed exactly as they were originally published, regardless of whether she agrees with them now. In a few rare cases, she includes a short note to address any leftover thoughts. Her review of Bret Easton Ellis’ book White—“a deeply needless book, whose existence one assumes we could have all been spared if Ellis’s millennial boyfriend had simply shown the famous man how to use the mute feature on Twitter”—ends with her reinstating the hilarious original ending that an editor purged prior to its 2019 publication. “On Liking Women” includes a note in which Chu reflects on how the essay came about, how it was received and how “reading it today, I am irritated by the obscurity of the antagonists and the amateurish tone,” she writes, “that kind of bloggy ‘voiceyness’ was dated even then—and I am amused by how little I understood about myself, including my own gender.” (Chu’s follow-up to that essay, “The Right of Anybody to Change Their Sex,” is not in Authority—it came out too late to be included.)

“If there is a criticism of [Authority], I probably also have it, or at least there is a good chance that I do.”

To resist updating your old work shows a tremendous amount of restraint, especially when an essay is five or six years old, as many of these are. But to do so would be anachronistic to Chu. She describes each piece as being like an “artifact,” and gathered together they become an exhibition of her work to date. Each essay includes the year of publication, which Chu considers to be one of the most important elements of the book: “[This] tends to be the way that I think about an author—especially one with a breadth of work, someone like Zadie Smith,” she says. “Understanding a writer through a progression of their work is something that I am doing a lot in my day-to-day, so to get to do it a little bit for myself is actually quite pleasing. It also is a way of saying, happily, while I need to be responsible for everything that appears in the book, I don’t have to necessarily defend it, and that is a nice feeling, being able to distinguish those two functions from each other. It is actually very freeing in that way. If there is a criticism of [Authority], I probably also have it, or at least there is a good chance that I do.”

One of the collection’s two original essays, “Criticism in a Crisis,” includes some of those self-critiques. Chu has been seen as one of the trailblazers in pop culture criticism’s shift away from the concept of “art for art’s sake,” with more readers expecting their movie and book criticism to include politics, rather than shy away from it. But “Criticism in a Crisis” is ruthless toward critics who bemoan a “self-aggrandizing existential crisis” in the profession, who worry that “the health of the republic turns on one person’s review of the latest film or novel.” Rather, Chu writes, “The more relevant changes to the profession are the material ones—the decline of print, the merging of the publishing houses, the evaporation of staff writing positions, the pressure to churn out ad-supported content.”

Indeed, Chu argues that in order to have excellent criticism, you must pay writers more. (I think you can expect that any number of book reviewers will soon have the essay wallpapering their offices.) Chu attributes much of her success to having consistent work, which allows her and her editor to push her work to the next level. “I’ll do some exploratory reading on a topic,” she says, “and then my editor and I will get together and try to be like, what is the bad question that is being asked about this—or like, either wrong or insufficient or misleading? In cases of more established authors, there can be a very obvious answer to that question.”

“I really like those moments in reading where you’re reminded that someone actually wrote this.”

To an invested reader of literary fiction, Chu’s evaluations of novelists are always her best work. She writes about Smith, Maggie Nelson, Ottessa Moshfegh and others consummately, consumingly—and at the precise moment in their careers when you’d be tempted to shruggingly accept that the author is just going to do what they’re going to do, and either you like it or you don’t. That’s when Chu steps in and pushes back, because someone has got to talk about how much Hanya Yanagihara tortures her poor gay characters, or how much Moshfegh writes about poop.

“The ‘takedown’ quality of it is, in a way, a kind of byproduct of a desire to really try and see what’s going on with an author,” Chu says. “That, to me, is where it can be the most valuable, rather than just attacking for the sake of attacking. Not that I am completely against such a thing. But I’d like to think it’s in service of, I don’t know, a very aggressive form of friendship. . . . The moment when you start to notice, as you read through someone’s oeuvre, words that they use too much, or a metaphor that is the same between two different [works]—Rachel Cusk loves to describe things as glittering, for instance. It’s a very important part of [her work] and often a very key moment. I could write a couple hundred words about the meaning of the word glittering in Rachel Cusk’s work. . . . I really like those moments in reading where you’re reminded that someone actually wrote this.”

Authority reveals that to be critical is not necessarily about gathering all the information you possibly can in order to poke holes in a piece of art, but more about organizing the knowledge you’re tending and then applying it to the media you’re consuming. Why do you love what you love, and why do you devote yourself to your own personal temples of entertainment? Chu asks a lot of her subjects, but she asks just as much of herself, and the result is the finest criticism of our time.

Photo of Andrea Long Chu by Beowulf Sheehan.

 

 

 

The Pulitzer Prize-winning critic thinks of her blistering critiques as an “aggressive form of friendship.”
Review by

No book exists in a vacuum, and perhaps no one reviews a book (or TV show, or argument) within the larger context of its creator’s conduct and their entire body of work than Andrea Long Chu, New York magazine critic and winner of the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. Her second book, Authorityafter her short but well-received work on gender and desire, Females—collects some of her best reviews of books and TV shows, four iconic essays previously published in n+1 (including “On Liking Women,” now considered queer literary canon) and two new pieces, “Criticism in a Crisis” and “Authority.”

Desire, freedom, authority—these are a few of the concepts that Chu returns to again and again as she evaluates Yellowjackets and Yellowstone, as she provides a book-by-book breakdown of Ottessa Moshfegh’s devotion to excrement, as she weaves together her own relationship with gender as a trans woman with rundowns of feminist milestones throughout history. Chu is provocative, disruptive and very funny, and her criticism is as blistering as it is well-informed. One of the many joys of her work is the questions it raises, from the unexpected (for example, if The Last of Us is such a good show, why was it ever a video game to begin with?) to the painfully obvious yet never before posed (such as, did Zadie Smith give in to the critics?).

Read our interview with Andrea Long Chu, author of ‘Authority.’

The two new essays, “Criticism in a Crisis” and “Authority,” tie the collection together. “Criticism in a Crisis” is an entertaining look through generations of critics wringing their hands over their own profession, and culminates with the perfect insistence that, in order to have a healthy critical community, you must pay writers more. “Authority,” meanwhile, is an example of just how deep Chu can go down a rabbit hole—in this case, the entire history of the concept of authority, who has it, where it comes from and so on. It’s an exhaustive journey back centuries to the Roman Republic, but if you’re caught up in the world of reviewing, be it in a publication or on Goodreads, you’ve probably spent some time wondering about what gives you the “right” to evaluate someone else’s work. Start with “Authority” to figure out how you’ve been ordained, and proceed accordingly.

Within these essays, we see Chu’s brain at work and at play, over many years and across various forms of media. Authority is what it looks like to take nothing for granted, even the books you love and the movies you don’t understand why you love, and to continually ask the hard questions. You could easily focus on the joy of viciousness in these reviews (who doesn’t love a good takedown?), but better yet is to focus on how worthwhile it is to place our favorite things within a larger context.

Provocative, disruptive and very funny, Authority collects the work of Pulitzer Prize winning-critic Andrea Long Chu.
Model Home by Rivers Solomon book jacket

Model Home

Read if your Halloween plans are: A horror movie marathon, specifically A24 horror movies

Ezri Maxwell doesn’t know whether their childhood home had ghosts, exactly, but they do know that it was haunted and determined to maim, traumatize and scare them and their Black family into leaving their mostly white Dallas suburb. Desperate to distance themselves from a childhood of constant dread, Ezri and their sisters fled the former model home as soon as they were old enough. Their parents, however, stayed where they were—right until the day they died under mysterious circumstances. At its core, Rivers Solomon’s Model Home is a study of the interior landscape of someone trying to make sense of their life in the wake of extreme tragedy. Ezri’s head is cluttered with the detritus of trauma, from their mother’s ambivalence toward them as a child to the repercussions of living with mental health issues for years, (“a host of diagnoses—which change with whatever clinician I see”). A disturbing tale that explores self-doubt, family drama and childhood trauma, Model Home is a powerful and gut-wrenching addition to the haunted house pantheon.

—Laura Hubbard

Djinnology by Seema Yasminis book jacket

Djinnology 

Read if your Halloween plans are: Exploring potentially haunted places—abandoned strip malls, creaky old houses, creepy caves … you get the idea.

If you’re in the mood for some spine-tingling stories, cozy up to Djinnology: An Illuminated Compendium of Spirits and Stories From the Muslim World, a fictitious (or is it?) compendium that is both fascinating and creepy, and made all the more so by Pulitzer Prize-winner Fahmida Azim’s striking illustrations. Seema Yasmin, a journalist, professor and physician, has created a fictional narrator named Dr. N, a taxonomist and ontologist who has traveled the world to investigate the sometimes benevolent, sometimes malevolent djinn. Djinn, Dr. N writes, have been “haunting humanity since pre-Islamic times.” He submits the fruits of his research to his academic committee to explain his long and unexplained absence from class, in this volume of stories from around the world that capture the long history and great variety of djinn. Many of these stories are related to human events, such as one concerning a ghostlike horseman who allegedly appeared in Cairo’s Tahrir Square at the height of the Arab Spring. Another terrifying tale of more dubious origins takes place in London, when a woman delivering her husband’s specimen to an IVF clinic spots what she thinks is an abandoned baby in the middle of the road. She stops, of course, but things do not go as she expects. Djinnology is beautifully designed, with maps, English and Arabic inscriptions and more, gamely selling a high-octane, between-two-worlds vibe. Most of all, Azim’s haunting illustrations in smoky colors perfectly portray this menagerie of spirits. Readers will find themselves looking over their shoulders.

—Alice Cary

We Love the Nightlife by Rachel Koller Croft book jacket

We Love the Nightlife

Read if your Halloween plans are: A bar crawl in a tiny costume, weather be damned

Quite often in fiction, the figure of the vampire has represented loneliness, but we’ve arguably never seen that sense of yearning quite the way Rachel Koller Croft portrays it in her new novel, We Love the Nightlife. Croft’s protagonist, Amber, is frozen in her party girl prime, turned in the waning days of the 1970s by her maker, the beautiful and manipulative Nicola. Decades later, Amber begins to imagine what life might be like without Nicola, and considers an escape plan. But Nicola’s influence is powerful, her ambitions are vast and her appetite for control deeper than Amber ever imagined. Despite her vampiric nature, Amber feels like one of us. This is mainly due to Croft’s skill; her conversational, warm and relatable prose depicts Amber not as a lonely monster, but as a person longing for freedom in a savage world covered in glitter and awash with pulsing music. We also get to see Nicola’s side of the story and her own brand of yearning, giving the book an antagonist who’s not just remarkably well-developed, but human in her own twisted way. These dueling perspectives, coupled with memorable side characters and a beautifully paced plot, make We Love the Nightlife an engrossing, darkly funny, twisted breakup story that’s perfect for vampire fiction lovers and fans of relationship drama alike.

—Matthew Jackson

American Scary by Jeremy Dauber book jacket

★ American Scary

Read if your Halloween plans are: Watching a brainy horror documentary, or peeking at spooky clips on YouTube

Any horror writer doing their job knows how to tap into the fears that plague us most. Jeremy Dauber’s American Scary: A History of Horror, from Salem to Stephen King and Beyond provides a robust account of how art has reflected American dread for centuries. As it turns out, our history is rife with foundational fear, making it prime territory for some scary storytelling. Dauber starts his “tour of American fear” with our country’s bloody beginnings and proclivity for blaming the devil for everything from bad weather to miscarriage (hello, Salem!). He then passes through slavery, the Industrial Revolution, the Civil War and beyond to more contemporary paranoias reflected in film: murderous technology (The Terminator), individual indifference (the Final Destination series) and surveillance (Paranormal Activity), to name a few. Dauber’s attention to the details of myriad cultural touchstones, both famous and obscure, will entice those who care to tiptoe deeper into the darkest of the dark. American Scary’s greatest success is making readers consider what art may be born of our late-night anxieties. Spooky stuff, huh?

—Amanda Haggard

The Village Library Demon-Hunting Society by C.M. Waggoner book jacket

The Village Library Demon-Hunting Society

Read if your Halloween plans are: Curling up in a chair at home, reading a lightly spooky book or one of the more gothic Agatha Christies

Librarian Sherry Pinkwhistle resides in a quiet hamlet in upstate New York. The only out of the ordinary detail about Ms. Pinkwhistle is that she loves to solve a good murder mystery—not only those in the books she protects and enjoys at work, but also the real-life, grisly deaths in the otherwise sleepy little town of Winesap. But when a string of local murders hits a little too close to home, Sherry realizes that she can no longer remain an unattached bystander. A demon, or several, might be at the heart of these ever-increasing deaths, and Sherry will need the help of her skeptical friends and her possibly-possessed cat to root out the evil in Winesap. C.M. Waggoner’s The Village Library Demon-Hunting Society is a stunning blend of genres, a dark supernatural adventure masquerading as a cozy mystery—and by the time readers realize this, they, like Sherry, are too deeply entrenched in the case to let it go. Waggoner infuses the pages with darkly humorous scenes and snappy dialogue, as well as unexpected magical touches that hearken back to the author’s previous fantasy novels, a combination that’s perfect for fans of horror tropes as well as lovers of mystery. Sherry Pinkwhistle is a sleuth to be reckoned with, and beneath her frumpy and soft exterior lies a pleasant surprise: a clever, determined heroine who will stop at nothing to protect the place she calls home and the people who live there. 

—Stephanie Cohen-Perez

Eerie Legends by Ricardo Diseño book jacket

Eerie Legends 

Read if your Halloween plans are: Circling up with friends and family for a night of scary stories

Eerie Legends: An Illustrated Exploration of Creepy Creatures, the Paranormal, and Folklore From Around the World arrives like Halloween candy, just in time for the spookiest season of the year. Austin, Texas-based artist Ricardo Diseño’s bold, offbeat illustrations don’t simply complement these spine-tingling stories, they lead the way. Each chapter blends elements of fiction and nonfiction, and includes a corresponding full-page illustration that stands on its own as a fully realized piece of art. The horror elements here are plenty scary, but skew toward the creature-feature end of the spectrum—think Universal Studio monsters, or even Troma’s The Toxic Avenger. The chapter on Krampus details the yuletide terror’s appearance with frightening specificity: “Part man, part goat, and part devil. . . . His tongue is red, forked, creepy, and always whipping around.” Diseño’s hoofed monster, straight out of the Blumhouse cinematic universe, is shown in the midst of abducting a child. Each chapter ends with a campfire-style tale about the designated monster, written with Lovecraftian zeal by Steve Mockus. As an added incentive, the cover glows in the dark—a feature I hadn’t noticed until after I fell asleep with it on my bedside table. Talk about eerie.

—Laura Hutson Hunter

The Empusium by Olga Tokarczuk book jacket

★ The Empusium

Read if your Halloween plans are: A hike contemplating the macabre beauty of seasonal decay—be sure to leave the woods before dark!

Nobel laureate Olga Tokarczuk’s fabulous novel, The Empusium: A Health Resort Horror Story, opens in 1913, when Polish 24-year-old Mieczyslaw Wojnicz arrives in the village of Görbersdorf, Germany, to be treated for tuberculosis. Tokarczuk is known for her penchant for the mythical and her deft, dark satirical wit, and as the subtitle, “A Health Resort Horror Story,” would lead readers to hope, the forests above the village whisper and echo with eerie sounds. The narration seems to come from ghostly entities who at times “vacate the house via the chimney or the chinks between the slate roof tiles—and then gaze from afar, from above.” A cemetery in a nearby town discloses evidence of a ritual killing every November. It is September, and the clock is ticking. Translated from Polish by Antonia Lloyd-Jones, The Empusium is about the rigid patriarchal world of pre-WWI Europe, and the tension between rationality and emotion. It is also about a young person coming of age—like Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain, from which it draws inspiration. Facing a threat he does not understand, Mieczyslaw responds to the mysteries around him with curiosity and seeks his own way forward. Tokarczuk also favors a new path and, as usual, casts her enthralling spell.

—Alden Mudge

Whether you’re a homebody or a thrill-hunter, we’ve got a seasonal, spine-tingling read for you.
Review by

Any horror writer doing their job knows how to tap into the fears that plague us most. Jeremy Dauber’s American Scary: A History of Horror, from Salem to Stephen King and Beyond provides a robust account of how art has reflected American dread for centuries. As it turns out, our history is rife with foundational fear, making it prime territory for some scary storytelling. 

Dauber starts his “tour of American fear” with our country’s bloody beginnings and proclivity for blaming the devil for everything from bad weather to miscarriage (hello, Salem!). He then passes through slavery, the Industrial Revolution, the Civil War and beyond to more contemporary paranoias reflected in film: murderous technology (The Terminator), individual indifference (the Final Destination series) and surveillance (Paranormal Activity), to name a few. 

One of his strongest examples illuminates the anxieties of women living in the late 19th century with Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour.” In the story, when a woman is told that her husband has died in an accident, her reaction is one of great, unexpected joy and an overwhelming sense of liberation. Just when you think that’s the end of the tale, she discovers the news was given in error: Her husband is still very much alive. The tale ends with her death, which somehow feels less tragic than her loss of freedom. “Chopin’s most pressing contributions to the American fearfulness,” writes Dauber, “. . . consist of the suggestion that liberation, at least for women, is impossible; that, in the end, that sort of awakening . . . is but an illusion.”

Clocking in at over 400 pages with an at-times academic approach, American Scary may come off a bit intimidating at first. But for lovers of all things macabre, the book is worth its weight. Dauber’s attention to the details of myriad cultural touchstones, both famous and obscure, will entice those who care to tiptoe deeper into the darkest of the dark. Dauber acknowledges as well that things in the real world are often scarier than the stories we tell; it’s not a new take, but it’s one he makes exceptionally well. 

American Scary’s greatest success is making readers consider what art may be born of our late-night anxieties. Spooky stuff, huh?

 

The rigorous yet still enticing American Scary invites readers to peer into the horror show of American history through the lens of literature and film.

If you believe that reality television began with a naked Richard Hatch strolling on a beach in Borneo in the first season of Survivor in 2000, longtime New Yorker television critic Emily Nussbaum’s Cue the Sun!: The Invention of Reality TV will provide a necessary corrective. While giving Mark Burnett’s “breakthrough for the reality genre” its due, Nussbaum traces that genre back to its roots in shows like Queen for a Day, which made the leap from radio to TV in 1956, and Candid Camera, which did the same in 1948. Her lively survey of the now ubiquitous and endlessly controversial televised product is thoroughly researched and comprehensive, and for aficionados of television and pop culture in general, simply plain fun. 

Though she recognizes it’s ripe for highbrow skewering, Nussbaum approaches her subject with an admirable degree of objectivity. She’s intent on providing a balanced assessment, acknowledging reality television’s often exploitative aspects, while arguing that there is “a lot of glory and beauty” in the way it has tackled formerly taboo topics and brought previously underrepresented groups into the spotlight. Above all, she’s succeeded in her goal of telling this sometimes sordid, sometimes exuberant story “through the voices of the people who built it,” including both its key creators and its participants.

Beginning in 1947, and concluding with her account of The Apprentice, Nussbaum proceeds in chronological fashion, methodically assessing reality-based shows that differed widely in their content, sophistication and quality. She goes behind the scenes of what the television industry euphemistically calls “unscripted programming” in an effort to explain the variety of subject matter within the genre and analyze with an experienced eye what makes these shows succeed or fail. One of her most interesting explorations is an extended retrospective on An American Family, the groundbreaking 1973 cinema verité show that brought audiences into the home of the aptly named Loud family. But she’s equally curious and illuminating about more contemporary fare, like the longest-running reality show ever, Cops.

Readers who have come to rely upon Emily Nussbaum for smart and well-written television criticism will devour Cue the Sun! Reality television is here to stay, and anyone who wants to understand what makes it so appealing, and at times so problematic, will find this book an excellent starting point.

Emily Nussbaum’s illuminating Cue the Sun! tells the sometimes sordid, sometimes exuberant story of reality TV “through the voices of the people who built it.”

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