The New Midwest
A sleek volume that expands our understanding of the Midwest through the writers who have portrayed it. Hailed by The Chicago Tribune for seeing the Midwest "for what it really is."
In the public imagination, Midwestern literature has not evolved far beyond stories of heartland laborers and hardscrabble immigrants from past centuries. But as the region has changed, so has its fiction. In this book, Mark Athitakis explores how shifts in work, class, place, race, and culture have been reflected or ignored by contemporary novelists and short story writers. Authors Athitakis considers include Marilynne Robinson, Toni Morrison, Jane Smiley, Leon Forrest, Aleksandar Hemon, Bonnie Jo Campbell, and Stewart O'Nan.
This book is a call to reconsider the way we think about Midwestern fiction, and one that is sure to prompt some new must-have additions to your reading list.
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Become an affiliate"Readers may cavil with Athitakis' choices, but they can't question his research, erudition, and clarity of expression." -- Kirkus Reviews
"[In The New Midwest] Athitakis' selections are sharp, and his close-readings succinct, and his wrangling of these many works and many subjects into conversation is as necessary as it is daunting ... At its best, the book is an illustrative and auxiliary text to anyone seeking a better comprehension of the Midwest, its history, the ongoing cultural discourses surrounding it and, of course, the discourse surrounding the stories the region tells and the stories we tell about it." -- The New Territory
"The New Midwest is a crisp, engaging tip sheet and guide for further reading." -- Milwaukee Journal-Sentinal
"In The New Midwest, [Athitakis] attempts to illustrate the variations within the region's literature in just under 100 pages. He delves into how writers have yet to really interrogate the region's modern-day relationship with issues surrounding social class, place, and race." -- Lit Hub
"Athitakis parses how the best Midwestern fiction punctures the region's superficially comforting image and re-examines its past to uncover a less idyllic, more troubled history." -- Huffington Post
"[The New Midwest] rightly praises the Midwestern novels of Marilynne Robinson, Jeffrey Eugenides, Toni Morrison and Jonathan Franzen, but also points out works of comparable merit that warrant rediscovery." -- Washington Post