Shortlist Announced for 2023 Chicago Review of Books Awards

This week, the Chicago Review of Books announced the finalists for its eighth annual literary awards. The shortlisted works for the 2023 Chicago Review of Books Awards (CHIRBy Awards) in fiction, nonfiction, poetry and short story/essay range in subject matter from queer motherhood to belonging and migration, Chicago’s Black cowboy culture, and women’s overlooked heroism during World War II.

“The mission of the Chicago Review of Books is to shine a light on the Chicago literary scene,” says Editor-in-Chief Michael Welch. “Our founding editor Adam Morgan introduced the CHIRBy Awards in 2016, as a way to celebrate our vibrant writing community, and it's only grown since then as Chicago continues to enjoy a literary renaissance. Many of the works featured in our 2023 shortlist are both critical and commercial standouts, proving once again that our city leads the way in the publishing world.”

The CHIRBy Awards celebrate outstanding literary works from the past year that were either written by authors living in the Chicagoland area, or in which Chicago plays a prominent role. Among this year’s shortlisted finalists is Dipika Mukherjee, an award-winning author of fiction and poetry, for her new poetry collection Dialect of Distant Harbors (CavanKerry Press, October 2022). The book explores issues of illness and family in the home as well as broader themes of belonging and migration in a prejudiced world.

“I am thrilled to have Dialect of Distant Harbors on the shortlist for the 2023 CHIRBy Awards!” says Mukherjee. “I love the work of so many people on this list—beyond just poetry—and I am overwhelmed, and also very grateful to CavanKerry Press and the University of Chicago Press for getting this book out into the world and in the hands of readers.”

Author Dipika Mukherjee and the cover of Dialect of Distant Harbors

Author Dipika Mukherjee, photo credit Winnie Gwee

National bestselling author Luis Alberto Urrea, a Pulitzer Prize finalist for nonfiction, is nominated for a CHIRBy Award for his new novel Good Night, Irene (Little, Brown and Company, May 2023), an epic based on the true story of heroic Red Cross women in wartime, including his own mother. Urrea lives in the Chicago area with his family and is a distinguished professor of creative writing at the University of Illinois—Chicago.

“To be a finalist in this esteemed publication’s awards is utterly delightful,” he says of the Chicago Review of Books recognition. “You have honored the tragically forgotten women who risked everything for their country in WWII. If my mother were here, she’d be weeping with joy.”

Author Luis Alberto Urrea and the cover of Good Night, Irene

Author Luis Alberto Urrea, photo credit Joe Mazza - Brave Lux

Francesca T. Royster, a Chicago native and professor of English literature at DePaul University, was nominated for her nonfiction book Choosing Family: A Memoir of Queer Motherhood and Black Resistance (Abrams Press, February 2023). This literary memoir of a multiracial household and chosen family is told against the backdrop of Chicago’s North and South Sides.

"I am so proud to be a part of Chicago's vibrant community of writers, and appreciate so much the nomination of Choosing Family: A Memoir of Queer Motherhood and Black Resistance for the CHIRBy Awards shortlist,” says Royster. “As I was writing it, I imagined this as a Chicago story, including my own close community of loved ones. I've appreciated the warm reception the book has received so far. In a cultural moment of increased tensions around publishing and teaching stories about African American and LGBTQIA+ life, I'm heartened that Choosing Family has been included in conversations about the changing face of what family means and how we can remake it.”

Author Francesca T. Royster and the cover of Choosing Family

Author Francesca T. Royster, photo credit Vidura Jang Bahadur

Mukherjee, who teaches at StoryStudio Chicago and the University of Chicago’s Graham School, notes she was surprised at how warmly Dialect of Distant Harbors has been received by young writers specifically—from being approached by students at readings, to receiving MFA papers written in appreciation of her book for class assignments.

“This is my ninth book, and by now I strongly believe that every book comes with its own destiny, poetry or prose, and all we can do is write the best possible book that we have within us, and let the readers take it further," she says. "This book is no longer only mine, it belongs to everyone who reads it."

The CHIRBy Awards are voted on by a committee of Chicago booksellers and Chicago Review of Books staff. Past winners include renowned authors Mikki Kendall (for Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot), Rebecca Makkai (for The Great Believers), Erika L. Sánchez (for Crying in the Bathroom: A Memoir), Megan Stielstra (for The Wrong Way to Save Your Life and “An Axe for the Frozen Sea”) and Eve L. Ewing (for Ghosts in the Schoolyard: Racism and School Closings on Chicago’s South Side; 1919; and Electric Arches).

This year's winners will be announced at a public ceremony on Thursday, December 7 at Volumes Bookcafe (1373 N. Milwaukee Avenue). More details will be announced soon.

Finalists for the 2023 CHIRBy Awards

2023 Fiction Award

2023 Nonfiction Award

  • King: A Life, by Jonathan Eig
  • Who is the City For?: Architecture, Equity, and the Public Realm in Chicago, by Blair Kamin with Photographs by Lee Bey
  • Choosing Family: A Memoir of Queer Motherhood and Black Resistance, by Francesca T. Royster
  • B.F.F.: A Memoir of Friendship Lost and Found, by Christie Tate
  • The Wandering Womb: Essays in Search of Home, by S.L. Wisenberg

2023 Poetry Award

  • I Done Clicked My Heels Three Times, by Taylor Byas
  • Dialect of Distant Harbors, by Dipika Mukherjee
  • Where Are the Snows, by Kathleen Rooney
  • Trace Evidence, by Charif Shanahan 
  • Super Sad Black Girl, by Diamond Sharp

2023 Essay/Short Story Award

Picture of the author
Elizabeth Niarchos Neukirch

Elizabeth Niarchos Neukirch is a Greek American writer and PR consultant for Chicago arts and nonprofit organizations. Her fiction, essays and criticism have appeared in publications including Mississippi Review, Take ONE Magazine, The Sunlight Press and The Daily Chronicle. Follow her on Twitter/X at @EJNeukirch and learn more at elizabethniarchosneukirch.com. Photo by Diane Alexander White.