Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Laurie McRae Andrew

Preview
Trump threats cause dilemma for US officers: disobey orders or commit war crimes Legal experts say attacking Iran’s infrastructure would constitute a war crime – but would military officers be held responsible?

Sorry, but this is not a dilemma

2 weeks ago 656 176 12 9
Preview
The old, familiar, generalized fondness: George Saunders’s ‘Vigil’ The jury has been out on George Saunders lately. There’s no denying his place on the A-list of American literary fiction, widely lauded and established as a subject of academic study, with an immed…

New post in time for the weekend: on George Saunders's 'Vigil' and the questionable value of empathy in the face of corporate climate denial

lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2026/03/13/t...

1 month ago 0 1 0 0
Preview
The old, familiar, generalized fondness: George Saunders’s ‘Vigil’ The jury has been out on George Saunders lately. There’s no denying his place on the A-list of American literary fiction, widely lauded and established as a subject of academic study, with an immed…

New post in time for the weekend: on George Saunders's 'Vigil' and the questionable value of empathy in the face of corporate climate denial

lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2026/03/13/t...

1 month ago 0 1 0 0
Preview
Better weird than eerie: C. D. Rose’s ‘We Live Here Now’ There’s an enduring modern attraction to the weird and the eerie. For Mark Fisher, in his book The Weird and the Eerie, the appeal of these two ‘modes’ is connected to ‘a fascination for the outsid…

NEW WRITING on last year's Goldsmiths Prize winner, C. D. Rose's 'We Live Here Now' (@melvillehouse.bsky.social) - via Mark Fisher, the weird and the eerie, the value of artworks, and the rhapsodic flow of global capitalism...
lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2026/01/26/b...

2 months ago 8 5 1 0

You're welcome, it was great fun to read and think about!

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
Better weird than eerie: C. D. Rose’s ‘We Live Here Now’ There’s an enduring modern attraction to the weird and the eerie. For Mark Fisher, in his book The Weird and the Eerie, the appeal of these two ‘modes’ is connected to ‘a fascination for the outsid…

NEW WRITING on last year's Goldsmiths Prize winner, C. D. Rose's 'We Live Here Now' (@melvillehouse.bsky.social) - via Mark Fisher, the weird and the eerie, the value of artworks, and the rhapsodic flow of global capitalism...
lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2026/01/26/b...

2 months ago 8 5 1 0
Post image

'Ghostland' by Edward Parnell: lively and engaging exploration of how the shadowy, haunted sides of modern British writing and culture are rooted in place and landscape

2 months ago 1 0 0 0
Post image

‘Helm’ by Sarah Hall: the UK’s only named wind as a transhistorical thread drawing together fragments from the stone age to the present. Landscape, climate, ecology as enduring structures of human thought and action, from archaic myth to modern science.

3 months ago 0 0 0 0
Advertisement
Preview
The wrong angle, somehow: Ben Pester’s ‘The Expansion Project’ Tom Crowley – the central character of Ben Pester’s The Expansion Project – is having a bad day at the office. In fact, the badness has already started before he leaves the house, as he despairs at…

New post on Ben Pester's 'The Expansion Project' and the contemporary office novel: lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2025/11/17/t...

5 months ago 2 1 0 2

'The vital function of @benpester.bsky.social’s weird office fiction is both to make us look askance at the way we organise & value work, & at the same time to prompt us to look for the contours of other possibilities in the strange & alienating spaces of contemporary labour'

Enjoyed this ⬇️

5 months ago 1 1 0 0

Ah wow - really loved reading this review of The Expansion Project. I know these things are not for the author really but you have to say thanks when someone is writing at this level about your work. Incredible. So grateful.

5 months ago 6 2 2 0

Thanks for reading, glad you enjoyed it!

5 months ago 1 0 1 0
Preview
The wrong angle, somehow: Ben Pester’s ‘The Expansion Project’ Tom Crowley – the central character of Ben Pester’s The Expansion Project – is having a bad day at the office. In fact, the badness has already started before he leaves the house, as he despairs at…

New post on Ben Pester's 'The Expansion Project' and the contemporary office novel: lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2025/11/17/t...

5 months ago 2 1 0 2
Preview
Words are your weapons: Natasha Brown, ‘Universality’ How are the relationships between power and discourse formed in contemporary British journalism and (what passes for) public debate? In what ways do class, race and economics interact with conventi…

NEW POST: on Natasha Brown's 'Universality'

lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2025/07/28/w...

8 months ago 1 1 0 0
Preview
Words are your weapons: Natasha Brown, ‘Universality’ How are the relationships between power and discourse formed in contemporary British journalism and (what passes for) public debate? In what ways do class, race and economics interact with conventi…

NEW POST: on Natasha Brown's 'Universality'

lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2025/07/28/w...

8 months ago 1 1 0 0
Advertisement
Post image

'Perspectives' by Laurent Binet: a clever, playful historical thriller mixing art and politics in C16 Florence - complete with an Assassin's Creed reference and a Renaissance bullet-time moment. What's not to like?

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Post image

'Sick Houses' by Leila Taylor: a fascinating exploration of the real and imagined domestic architecture of horror, both serious about the cultural politics of the genre and joyfully enthusiastic about its pleasures

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

I've written about grief and labour in Spiritfarer, via Judith Butler, for this month's issue of @unwinnable.com

1 year ago 6 4 0 0
Preview
What had I arrived at?: Holly Pester’s ‘The Lodgers’ It’s not particularly surprising that housing has been a prominent concern in fiction of the last decade or so. On a general level, the experience of domestic precarity, enfolded in a larger discou…

New blog post: on Holly Pester's fantastic novel 'The Lodgers', published by @grantabooks.bsky.social
lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2025/03/31/w...

1 year ago 0 1 0 0
Preview
What had I arrived at?: Holly Pester’s ‘The Lodgers’ It’s not particularly surprising that housing has been a prominent concern in fiction of the last decade or so. On a general level, the experience of domestic precarity, enfolded in a larger discou…

New blog post: on Holly Pester's fantastic novel 'The Lodgers', published by @grantabooks.bsky.social
lauriemcraeandrew.wordpress.com/2025/03/31/w...

1 year ago 0 1 0 0

Thanks for checking it out!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

A fantastic piece about the importance of a meaningful death and how labor ties into Spiritfarer's message of grief. I love this game so much, and @lmcraeandrew.bsky.social has articulated one of the biggest reasons why here.

1 year ago 8 2 1 0
Post image

'I Want To Go Home But I'm Already There' by @roisinlanigan.bsky.social: a bit of millennial gothic, mixing classic haunted house tropes with Gails and Fleabag references. Finely poised between realism and horror, a compelling invocation of the cursedness of the contemporary housing situation.

1 year ago 3 1 0 0
Preview
Spritfarer and the Labor of Grief - Unwinnable Judith Butler helps us see how Spiritfarer’s gameplay mechanics connect labor with the politics of grief.

"[I]n Stella’s work as Spritfarer, labor is reclaimed and redirected toward the ends of care and the creation of grievable life."

Feature Excerpt: @lmcraeandrew.bsky.social applies Judith Butler's theories on grief to Spiritfarer:

1 year ago 51 16 0 6
The cover of 'The City Changes Its Face' by Eimear McBride: a cropped photograph showing a young woman lying on a sofa with a lit cigarette in her hand.

The cover of 'The City Changes Its Face' by Eimear McBride: a cropped photograph showing a young woman lying on a sofa with a lit cigarette in her hand.

'The City Changes its Face' by Eimear McBride: revisits the setup of 'The Lesser Bohemians' in a remarkable novel about language and art as the interface between private darkness and shared/public experience, with McBride's sentence-level experiments matched by subtle structural intricacy.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
Advertisement
A man in military uniform is impaled on a spike with blood around his mouth. A subtitle reads 'His Nobleness has decided to listen to "The Visitation" one last time'.

A man in military uniform is impaled on a spike with blood around his mouth. A subtitle reads 'His Nobleness has decided to listen to "The Visitation" one last time'.

The main character, a nun in a wimple, dwarfed by enormous stacks of paper and looking up at some mechanical rails high in the distance.

The main character, a nun in a wimple, dwarfed by enormous stacks of paper and looking up at some mechanical rails high in the distance.

The main character, a nun in a wimple, looks at a gigantic fish suspended from the ceiling.

The main character, a nun in a wimple, looks at a gigantic fish suspended from the ceiling.

A first-person view of a mirror in which the character's reflection is replaced by the devil.

A first-person view of a mirror in which the character's reflection is replaced by the devil.

Indika is very bizarre and extremely Russian - the theological themes are fine, but its real richness comes from the extraordinary environmental design and a thorough immersion in the absurdist tradition of Gogol, Bulgakov etc.

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
The cover of 'The Peckham Experiment' by Guy Ware, showing high-rise blocks of flats and a chain-link fence against a pink background.

The cover of 'The Peckham Experiment' by Guy Ware, showing high-rise blocks of flats and a chain-link fence against a pink background.

'The Peckham Experiment' by Guy Ware: deftly refracts a history of postwar progressive reconstruction, its internal tensions, and its eventual undoing through a singular and well-crafted voice whose (sometimes gleefully) compromised position saves the novel from over-earnest didacticism

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

I've written about grief and labour in Spiritfarer, via Judith Butler, for this month's issue of @unwinnable.com

1 year ago 6 4 0 0
Post image

'Orbital' by Samantha Harvey: a slim and sparse reflection on the numinous experience of a planetary view, albeit tempered with insistent consciousness of climate breakdown. Attempts the important work of re-enchantment in an age of Starlink and spiralling ecological disaster.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
The cover of 'Confessions' by Catherine Airey: a photograph of a young woman on a city street holding a small kitten.

The cover of 'Confessions' by Catherine Airey: a photograph of a young woman on a city street holding a small kitten.

'Confessions' by Catherine Airey: a big transatlantic multi-generational novel that takes on some hefty themes. The plotting is a bit over-neat, with one coincidence that stretches credulity, but overall it's well structured, precisely written and deftly handled.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0