cover image Freeman’s: The Best New Writing on Power

Freeman’s: The Best New Writing on Power

Edited by John Freeman. Grove, $16 trade paper (288p) ISBN 978-0-8021-2820-1

The latest installment in a series of themed anthologies from Freeman (How to Read a Novelist) explores, as his introduction notes, multiple “vectors of power,” and not simply the “flagrant and breathtaking abuses of power ongoing right now.” The selections range from prose nonfiction to poetry and graphic essay, and come from such long-established authors as Margaret Atwood and Julia Alvarez, as well as newer voices like Nicole Im and Edouard Louis. In “A Note on ‘Penelope’ & ‘Rereading the Classics,’ ” Alvarez recalls breaking with the domination of the literary canon by “works mostly by white male writers.” In “On Sharks and Suicide,” Im writes intimately about powerlessness in relation to suicidal thoughts. Some pieces are searing in their search for answers. For example, in “Captive,” Nimmi Gowrinathan finds the Stockholm syndrome framework inadequate for understanding female kidnapping victims who seem to identify with their captors, because “it is in fact a lifetime of oppressive moments—the dark molecular makeup of her [the victim’s] politics—that matters.” From the abstract to the literal, there is no shortage of provocative, thoughtful pieces here. (Oct.)