rile*books
rile*books is a Brussels based bookshop and project space for performance and publication. Open Tuesday to Sunday, 11-18h.
events
[Launch] Blackout by Yann Chateigné Tytelman
Join us for the launch of Blackout by Yann Chateigné Tytelman, translated from french by Clem Clement and published by Les Fugitives 2025. Neither diary, nor essay, nor short story, Blackout is a weaving, a braid made from lines of silence. Through fragments it tells a story of a dispossession, of an entry into darkness. After the reading Yann will be joined by Anne-Claire Schmitz to discuss the book and its translation.
read moreabout [Launch] Blackout by Yann Chateigné Tytelman[Launch] MAKAN #3 Synthetic Agencies
Join us for the launch of MAKAN #3 / Synthetic Agencies. The journal, published by Think Tanger, explores themes of control, resistance and the architectures of the unseen. We will be joined by MAKAN's editor-in-chief Ali T. As’ad and publication director Hicham Bouzid alongside Fehras Publishing Practices and Saba Innab and Nuha Innab from OPPA Research Architecture. The event was made possible through the collaboration of Tashattot Collective.
read moreabout [Launch] MAKAN #3 Synthetic Agencies[Launch] 45-120, with Bea Ortega Botas and Leto Ybarra
Welcome to the launch of 45-120, a bilingual anthology of poetry edited by Juf project and published by Caniche editorial, 2025. The publication brings together the work of eighteen contemporary poets to reflect on how political, social, sexual, racial, class, and accessibility factors shape our notions of personal space. We will be joined by editors Bea Ortega Botas and Leto Ybarra for a reading and presentation.
read moreabout [Launch] 45-120, with Bea Ortega Botas and Leto Ybarrarecent arrivals

Exhibiting for Multiple Senses
Exhibiting for Multiple Senses looks into artistic and curatorial research practices that emphasize the multisensory character of the human body in the encounter with artworks. For some time now, numerous contemporary artists and curators have moved beyond the primacy of the visual in the experience of art exhibitions. The book discusses this shift by bringing together experimental exhibition-making, curatorial theory, art, design, and museum research, disability activism and crip theory. Its intent is to demonstrate resonances between curatorial theory and practice and between disability and crip art activism. While the latter is still often regarded as relevant for only small portions of visibly disabled people, in recent years neurodiversity and invisible disabilities have proven to be relevant for the sensory experiences of much larger parts of exhibition audiences.
Exhibiting for Multiple Senses shares famous and lesser-known examples of experimental exhibitions as well as of artistic practices linked to exhibitions. By mobilizing the senses of touch, smell, taste, and hearing, as well as applications of multimodal technologies and insights from neuroscience, these examples all explore abilities and possibilities of the complex and diverse sensory apparatus that is the human body.
Contributors: David Bobier, Luca M. Damiani, Stephanie Farmer & Hettie James, Eva Fotiadi, David Gissen & Georgina Kleege, Adi Hollander, Lilian Korner, Elke Krasny, Renata Pękowska, Caro Verbeek

Conspiratorial Design. Information design for the bigger picture
This book deals with Design and Conspiracy Theories, two things that are often thought of as opposites. Design is generally perceived as something that simplifies and targets the essence of things; something that should say the Truth. Conspiracy theories instead are far-fetched and create confusion. Design is expected to be able to bypass false rhetorics because its very premise is to deal with how things work in reality. However, what is argued in this book is that design and conspiracy theories mirror each other. They act with similar goals and they adopt comparable representations. They intersect in their practices and in their artifacts because they share a common ground at their fundaments. This common ground is Conspiratorial Design.

Monument Zero
Niloufar Nematollahi, Jose Rosales
Monument Zero emerges from International Women’s Day on 8 March 1979 in Iran. The archival materials that form the starting point depict six days of protests, sit-ins, and conferences that began on this day in Tehran. These historical objects have been preserved by the mercy of their creators, who were present during the 1979 protests, and are scattered across personal and public holdings worldwide. By bringing together the materials that depict this forgotten history, Monument Zero counters historical erasure and explores the preservation of political struggles through collective artistic practice.

Little Joy: Selected Stories
Poet, writer, and translator Cecilia Pavón emerged in the late 1990s as one of the most prolific and central figures of the young Argentine literary scene—the so-called “Generation of the 90s”: artists and writers whose aesthetics and politics were an earnest response to the disastrous impact of American-exported neoliberal policies and the resulting economic crisis of 2001. Their publications were fragile—xeroxed, painted on cardboard—but their cultural impact, indelible.
A cofounder of Buenos Aires’s independent art space and publishing press Belleza y Felicidad—where a whole generation of soon-to-be-famous Argentine artists showed their work for the first time—Pavón pioneered the use of “unpoetic” and intimate content—her verses often lifted from text messages or chat rooms, her tone often impish, yet brutally sincere.
In 2015, Pavón’s first volume of collected poems, ‘A Hotel with My Name’, was published in English. Contemporary writers in the United States, Australasia, and Europe discovered a deep affinity with her work. Pavón’s protagonists, Ariana Reines noted, “are absolute women, guileless dreamers, saints in sneakers, on sidewalks, in jail, in Zara, on buses, in nightclubs, in bed.”
Translated by Pavón’s own poetic protégé Jacob Steinberg, ‘Little Joy’ collects the best of Pavón’s short stories written between 1999-2020, originally published in three volumes in Spanish.

Resisting Erasure: Capital, Imperialism and Race in Palestine
Adam Hanieh, Robert Knox and 1 more
A materialist analysis of the links between global capitalism, energy politics, and racial oppression in Palestine.
Why has Palestine become a defining fault line of contemporary politics?
Challenging mainstream narratives that reduce Palestine to ancient hatreds, humanitarian tragedy, or legal abstractions, Resisting Erasure places Israeli settler-colonialism within the broader historical arc of imperialism, race, and fossil capitalism in the Middle East.
Resisting Erasure is a succinct and far-reaching critique of the socio-economic and political forces that sustain the Israeli settler-colonial project. An essential introduction for anyone looking to understand what Palestine reveals about the world – and what it demands of us today.

Acker
A lyric essay written through Kathy Acker's evocative prose, public statements, and private archives.
A cover of Kathy Acker’s career and a study of the development of narrative in her books deftly tracing Acker’s interactions with a diverse palette of avant-gardisms, world letters, cultures, and theory. Martin follows Acker through New York’s downtown St. Mark’s Poetry Project scene, Black Mountain College, and the Beats, as Acker embarks on her own deconstructions of subjects autobiographical and historical, art procedurals, proto-conceptual writing, legacies, and spirits.

Horse Saison #4
Horse Saison est une revue apériodico-saisonnière sur les chevaux et l’espèce équine en général. Cette revue est née d'une envie de penser et de montrer le monde équestre autrement. Chaque numéro présentera des contributions variées d’artistes d’horizons aussi différents que leurs pratiques artistiques, toustes s’étant intéressé.es pour le magazine au monde équin et à son écosystème.
Avec les contributions de : Xavier Klein, Mona Glassfield, Eliot Duran, Maxence Doucet, Twotma, Eric Kinny, Lois Ladent, Coldruru, Euro Love, Bérénice Béguerie, Emile Barret et Aurélien Masson

Abattre les arbres, boucher les fontaines, renverser les pierres
Abattre les arbres, boucher les fontaines, renverser les pierres réunit les 4 tomes d’un conte épisodique initialement paru en auto-édition tout au long de l’année 2021.
”Abattre les arbres, boucher les fontaines, renverser les pierres” sont les mots d’une archéologue s’exprimant à la radio au sujet des intentions des premiers chrétiens arrivant en Grande Bretagne. Cette formule a attendu de longues années dans mes notes avant de devenir un récit d’images.

Collection Perruches #1 Tatiana Defraine
La collection Perruches se consacre à rassembler des conversations d’artistes s’intéressant dans leur pratique à des animaux autres qu’humains. Chaque artiste est ainsi pour l’occasion considéré·e comme un « terrain » d'étude au sens ethnographique du terme, ou comme un monde à venir découvrir et comprendre.
The Perruches collection is dedicated to bringing together conversations by artists whose practice interested in non-human animals. Each artist is considered as a “field” for study in the ethnographic sense of the term, or as a world to be discovered and understood.
Ces entretiens tentent de rendre compte des différentes relations que ces praticien·ne·s de l’art entretiennent avec le vivant. Pour ce premier opus, la collection Perruches a invité l’artiste peintre Tatiana Defraine.
These interviews attempt to capture the different relationships that these art practitioners have with living things. For this first opus, the Perruches collection has invited the painter Tatiana Defraine.

ESDS Archives 3 : Pascal Doury - carnet inédit c.97-99
Facsimilé d'un carnet inédit de Pascal Doury réalisé par Jonas Delaborde (Der Vierte Pförtner Verlag) et co-produit par les Editions l'Amazone, réalisé dans le cadre de la publication des Archives Elles Sont de Sortie suite à la parution de Choquer le monde à mort. Elles Sont de sortie. Bruno Richard - Pascal Doury.

Ungenießbare Zeichnungen
„Ungenießbare Zeichnungen“ is a series of visual traces by artist Shin Kudo. „Ungenießbar“ means „Unenjoyable“ in German, which is a term that is used to describe a certain category of fungi, considered not edible but also not poisonous. What is enjoyable and what is not? For whom should it be enjoyable? Spores, Blood vessels, nature energy, Alien….Shin Kudo’s intuitive drawing triggers our feelings between our daily world and the world that we often overlooked - The world full of life circling and endless streaming.
The book contains 24 drawings from the “∞” series and the spore print series “The Unknown Friends”, following with an interview conversation with the artist.

Post-Comedy
Not so long ago, comedy and laughter were a shared experience of relief, as Freud famously argued. At their best, ribbing, roasting, piss-taking and insulting were the foundation of a kind of universal culture from which friendship, camaraderie and solidarity could emerge.
Now, comedy is characterized by edgy humour and misplaced jokes that provoke personal and social anxiety, causing divisive cultural warfare in the media and among people. Our comedy is fraught with tension like never before, and so too is our social life. We often hear the claim that no one can take a joke anymore. But what if we really can’t take jokes anymore?
This book argues that the spirit of comedy is the first step in the building of society, but that it has been lost in the era of divisive identity politics. Comedy flares up debates about censorship and cancellation, keeping us divided from one other. This goes against the true universalist spirit of comedy, which is becoming a thing of the past and must be recovered.