rile*books
rile*books is a Brussels based bookshop and project space for performance and publication. Open Wednesday to Sunday, 11-18h.
events
[Launch] THEY LIED TO YOU ABOUT THE EUNUCHS by Odete
Join us for the launch of đŻïž THEY LIED TO YOU ABOUT THE EUNUCHS đŻïž, a book project by Odete, published by OUTLINE (2025). The book introduces the history of eunuchism through auto-theory, historiography, historical fiction and poetry, exploring this identity in the ancient world and what kind of echoes can be heard in the present day. After a reading by Odete, she will be joined in conversation with our dear Ire.
read moreabout [Launch] THEY LIED TO YOU ABOUT THE EUNUCHS by Odete[Launch] Insula with Théo Casciani, Gabriel René Franjou and Megan Bruinen
Join us for the launch of Insula, a new speculative fiction novel by Théo Casciani blending autofiction, intimate confessions, queer aesthetics, video games, and a formidable apocalyptic vision of the contemporary world. Théo will be accompanied by musician and artist friend Megan Bruinen who is working on the sound design for the theatrical adaptation of the book. After the reading, Théo will be joined in conversation by our dear Gabriel René Franjou about the book and Théo's work. Welcome!
read moreabout [Launch] Insula with Théo Casciani, Gabriel René Franjou and Megan Bruinenrecent arrivals
Pfeil Magazine #18 â Body
From its anatomy and autonomy to its death and diet, this issue focuses on the motif Body and all its meanings, direct and indirect, for instance as in relation to human and non-human bearers of bodies, its inhabitants like bacteria and organs, its social, medical and juridical conditions, its intoxications, chemical processes, traumas, transitions, well-being, replacements, weaknesses, and its opposites.
Within the format of a magazine, each page of Pfeil represents the floor, walls, or ceiling which together create an imagined room displaying a printed exhibition. Each issue is dedicated to a specific word, and artists are invited and given space to work on and with this term, and to construct or deconstruct the architecture around it. Combined, the contributions transform into an organic display surrounding the leitmotif.
Unfinished Histories â Radical Rediscoveries: Performance Texts from the Womenâs Theatre Movement 1969-1987
Jane Arden, Winsome Pinnock and 1 more
Radical Rediscoveries: Performance Texts from the Womenâs Theatre Movement 1969â1987 is the first of three volumes by Unfinished Histories as part of Montez Press imprint Scores, in collaboration with the Associate Artists programme at London Performance Studios. This collection brings together six seminal works of British alternative feminist and womenâs theatre from the archive, with a contextual introductory text by Dr. Susan Croft, co-founder of Unfinished Histories.
The play texts included are: Vagina Rex and the Gas Oven by Jane Arden (1969), Go West Young Woman by Pam Gems (1974), Ophelia by Melissa Murray (1979), Minutes by Hesitate & Demonstrate (1979), Room by Natasha Morgan (1981) and The Wind of Change by Winsome Pinnock (1987).
Vestiges_07: Catachresis
To wilt tears for an infatuation who has no name of their own. To weep rain like a sentence that passes through the unrequited glimpse. Language is the instrument of our shivers; literature the wink that slips into a wince.
Out of profane necessity we dress the missing words for each circumstance in ecstatic deprivation. Anticipation and alienation. Shock and sorrow. Craving and cruelty. Elation and tension. Emotion is the borrowed absence of transferred meaning: the sensuous "legs" of a table and the sunrise that falls-in-shadow upon the "foot" of a bed. Quintilian's "thirsty" crops that have neither tongue nor throat. Barthes' compassed "wings" of a house. Augustine's "piscina" in which no fish are to be found (and only humans drown). With delirium we endure, and delight in, the abuse of our sensibilities by the sadistic literalization of metaphor.
Featuring Will Alexander, Kimberly Alidio, César Dåvila Andrade, Martine Bellen, Stanislav Belsky, Anselm Berrigan, David Buuck, Garrett Caples, Sam Cha, Logan Fry, Lawrence Giffin, Tilghman Alexander Goldsborough, E. Tracy Grinnell, Karen Holman, Elise Houcek, Andrew Joron, Inna Krasnoper, Carlos Lara, Jonathan Larson, Sueyeun Juliette Lee, Michael Leong, Douglas A. Martin, olga mikolaivna, Sheila E. Murphy, Ann Pedone, Sal Randolph, Martha Ronk, Jonathan Simkins, Christophe Tarkos, Edwin Torres, Christina Vega-Westhoff, Wendy Xu & John Yau
49 Venezuelan Novels
Sebastian Castillo, Elisa DĂaz Castelo
This new bilingual edition of Sebastian Castillo's long-out-of-print first book reintroduces a classic of American microfiction and features a translation into Spanish by acclaimed Mexican author Elisa DĂaz Castelo.
The Difficulties
If there is a centre around which the language of this pamphlet circulates, then it is Palestine. As this centre, Palestine enables a transformative power that persistently and steadfastly turns repression and silencing into solidarity. Essay-fiction, prose poetry, radical philosophy, speculative nonfiction â this uncategorizable collection of texts brings militant inquiry to each utterance, each narrative turn, in acts of transnational and transhistorical becoming.
Yellow Songs 1: Voiced-Voiceless
Fifty years after the fall of Saigon, Dao Stromâs Yellow Songs vibrates with the ramifications and ripples of Empire. Each of the four Yellow Songs books reckons with the intimate consequences of the colonial project, reconfiguring them into complex and lucid, literal and figurative songs of selfhood. Embodied, critical, wholehearted, collective, personal, genre-defyingâYellow Songs renders the brute force of history with tender precision. Art book quality printing in full color with felt paper inserts.
Yellow Songs 1: Voiced-Voiceless unearths, unwinds, un-bodies the violence of stigma, reclaiming the ventriloquized voice of David Bowie's "China Girlâ through a lyric-critical essaying (assaying) of cultural tropes, racialized and gendered power plays, and memory.
French Cooking for One
French cuisine, classic though it is, still holds delicious surprises. From quick bites for busy days to sumptuous main courses for those who enjoy spending more time in the kitchen, the focus throughout is on dishes that are simple and fun to prepare, and results that are mouthwatering to contemplate and, of course, to eat. A unique work of literary and culinary joie de vivre, part food memoir, part recipe book, French Cooking for One is MichĂšle Roberts' first cookbook, and a quirky take on Ădouard de Pomiane's ten-minute cooking classic. Once a food writer for the New Statesman, Roberts was born in 1949 and raised in a bilingual French-English household, learning to cook from her French grandparents in Normandy. Her love of food and cookery has always shone through in her novels and short stories.
CUNY Center for the Humanities
Algeria: Capital Algiers
Algeria, Capital: Algiers by Anna Gréki is co-published by Pinsapo Press and CUNY Lost & Found, translated by Marine Cornuet, and introduced by Ammiel Alcalay.
Anna Gréki (1931-1966) was an Algerian poet of French descent. A member of the Algerian Communist Party, she was arrested and imprisoned for her participation in the Algerian liberation struggle in Algiers, in 1957. Algérie, capitale Alger, a collection of poems written during Gréki's imprisonment, was published in 1963 in a French and Arabic bilingual edition. Algeria, Capital: Algiers makes this work available to English readers for the first time.
"Anna GrĂ©ki was a particularly inconvenient pied noirânot loyal enough for the French colonists and too compromised for the Algerian nationalistsâand so she was shunted to the margins of Algerian literary history. Nevertheless, itâs time she takes her place at the center of that narrative, and these accomplished translations constitute a necessary English-language introduction to this secret garden of Maghrebi poetry. GrĂ©kiâs poetry is electrified by the heady heights of the war of liberation, but arguably it finds its truest expression in her paeans to the wild hills and impregnable peaks of the AurĂšs mountains, where she was born and where she found a sense of peace which otherwise eluded her in her brief life." âAndrĂ© Naffis-Sahely
âNothing happens here but everything burns.â From the prison where she was tortured by French authorities in 1950s Algeria, Anna Greki stays in touch, feverishly, with âthis world of vulnerable flesh.â Addressed to her friends and comrades in struggle, to the land and the leaves and the birds, these poems defy âthe war, this male ax,â invoking the future with âa trust so total / I can almost touch it.â Marine Cornuetâs translation deftly conveys Grekiâs intimate language of the senses, to âtranscribe with words what is done without them.â âOmar Berrada
"How fitting that a bilingual edition of Anna GrĂ©kiâs poems should be published now: a French poet born in Algeria, anti-colonialist (imprisoned for that) as Algeria battled for independence, writing in French, like Kateb Yacine, to show her freedom from French hegemony, but also her freedom as a woman writer to forge a transcendent and engaged poetics." âMarilyn Hacker
Girl With a Bullet
Ukrainian poet Anna Malihonâs English-language debut gathers daring, resilient, open-eyed poems written before and after Russiaâs full-scale invasion. The difficult fates voiced by the protagonists of Malihonâs poems intertwine with her own experience, weaving an alarming but beautiful world where the young grow old and love is met with war. This world, at first shocking, holds the reader in suspension, compelling a desire to rethink and reread. With deft allegory and startling metaphor, Malihon crafts a poetry that seeks to influence the course of events, to reroute history.
Elegies of the Earth
Ahmad Shamlou, Niloufar Talebi
A sweeping centennial edition of Iranâs iconic twentieth-century poet of liberty, whose work shaped modern Persian poetry. Known for his political engagement and deep humanism, and his pivotal role in Persian poetryâs modernist turn toward free verse, Ahmad Shamlou (1925â2000) crafted poems that carried both lyrical intimacy and cultural force. A central, defiant voice in Iranâs modern literary history, Shamlou championed the power of poetry as an instrument of liberation. His work, long suppressed in his homeland, remains urgent for readers everywhere confronting censorship, exile, and erasure. This bilingual edition honors Shamlouâs centennial with the most expansive selection of his poetry to date in English, encompassing his wide thematic range: from fierce protest to intimate love, mythic storytelling to existential reflection. Niloufar Talebiâs vibrant translations and deeply researched commentary shine new light on Shamlouâs legacy and his relevance today.
Theory of the Voice and Dream
Liliana Ponce , Michael Martin Shea
Obsessing on the relationship between creation and absence, Argentine poet Liliana Ponce presents an unsettling meditation on body, language, and self. For the first time in English, this edition brings together Ponceâs serial poems from the closing years of the twentieth century, the widely anthologized Theory of the Voice and Dream and Fudekara, a shorter sequence written in response to a Japanese calligraphy course. In these major works, Ponce questions the nature of writing itself, of how to write when to write today is an emptiness, or when mouth and voice cannot find each other. Breaking with Argentine poetic conventions, Ponce charts a new model for poesisâoneiric, embodied, and urgent. As she says, I write so I donât have to speak, so I donât have to watch.
Smoke Drifts
Nadia Anjuman, Diana Arterian and 1 more
Afghan poet Nadia Anjuman (1980-2005) drew on the lineage of Persian and Sufi writing and her life under Taliban rule, attending to love, oppression, myth, and devotion through lyrics that both embrace and resist tradition. Anjuman grew up in the Herat, Afghanistan, a city known for centuries for its poetry. While the Taliban was in power, Anjuman met with other women in what appeared to be a needlepoint school, one of the few sanctioned pastimes for women, to secretly discuss literature and poetry. After the fall of the Taliban, Anjuman was finally able to attend university. She wrote and published a celebrated volume of poetry and was set to publish another before her early death due to domestic violence. Selections from both of Anjumanâs collections are presented here for the first time in English.