rile*books
rile*books is a Brussels based bookshop and project space for performance and publication. Open Wednesday to Sunday, 11-18h.
events
[Lancement] Goblinhood, en mode gobelin, avec Jen Calleja
Join us for the release of the French edition of Goblinhood: Goblin as a Mode by Jen Calleja (Rag Editions, 2026). We are joined by Jen and the editors of RAG and co-editor Librarioli for readings in French and English, followed by a conversation.
read moreabout [Lancement] Goblinhood, en mode gobelin, avec Jen Calleja[Reading] Nadia De Vries, Sharon Kivland and Alix Chauvet
We are excited to invite you for an afternoon of readings and presentations of three newly released Yellow Jacket editions by Tenement Press: a new collection of poems by Nadia De Vries, a novel-in-correspondence with Lacan by Sharon Kivland and an unfaithful translation of Les Fleurs du Mal by Alix Chauvet. Come swoon! đ
read moreabout [Reading] Nadia De Vries, Sharon Kivland and Alix Chauvet[Launch] PACES THE CAGE with S*an D. Henry-Smith
We're excited to welcome you for the Brussels launch of PACES THE CAGE, S*an D. Henry-Smithâs second full-length book of poems, recently published by The Song Cave. Together with a cast of diasporically-encountered collaborators, changing in each city, the poet, artist, and improviser presents an improvised reading-performance. Henry-Smith will be joined by the acclaimed DJ, livwutang, and Brussels-born singer-songwriter, vixnde, together activating the publication through sound and voice.
read moreabout [Launch] PACES THE CAGE with S*an D. Henry-Smithrecent arrivals
Goblinhood - en mode gobelin !
[Preorder. Available Saturday April 25]
Enfin la traduction en français du best-seller de Jen Calleja, qui sera présente pour une lecture croisée. Repassez vos capes et astiquez vos chaßnettes.
La figure du gobelin est espiĂšgle, marginale, rĂ©pugnante et fascinante et le mode gobelin peut ĂȘtre envisagĂ© comme un mode de vie Ă part entiĂšre.
Jen Calleja, depuis son obsession pour les objets verts et les marionettes, ses souvenirs familiaux, son rapport au corps et au dégoût de soi, au chagrin, au sexe et au deuil, propose avec malice une pensée hybride entre essai, auto-fiction, poésie et théorie de la gobelinité.
En chacunx de nous, suggĂšre-t-elle, sommeille un gobelin quâil est temps de libĂ©rer.
Vrai travail
Le Collectif Occasionnel a organisĂ© en Suisse deux expositions qui prĂ©sentaient les oeuvres de personnes Ă la fois artistes et travailleureuses du sexe. Cet ouvrage prolonge leur travail en proposant des textes et des entretiens avec des Tds ou des alliĂ©xes. Permettant lâauto-reprĂ©sentation des personnes interrogĂ©es, les entretiens mettent en lumiĂšre la pluralitĂ© des pratique du travail du sexe, mais aussi lâimportance de construire des solidaritĂ©s travailleuses, des outils pour dĂ©faire les stigmates et des perspectives de luttes intersectionnelles.
Affiliation
Mira Mattar, Judith Abensour and 1 more
Affiliation, de Mira Mattar, autrice londonienne issue de la diaspora palestinienne, explore des thĂšmes tels que le genre, la famille, la religion, la guerre, lâĂ©cologie, le colonialisme et lâamour, en lien avec des lieux comme la Jordanie, le Liban, la Palestine et le Royaume-Uni. Interrogeant nos affiliations personnelles et collectives, et la maniĂšre dont les systĂšmes de pouvoir influencent nos dĂ©sirs et nos identitĂ©s, le livre sâouvre sur quatre Lettres dâAmman qui propulsent le texte poĂ©tique dans le mouvement du monde et attestent de la dynamique de lâexil palestinien, oĂč lâĂ©clatement, lâeffacement et lâappropriation se mĂȘlent avec les effets contemporains de la mondialisation.
La deuxiĂšme partie du livre, intitulĂ©e Affiliation (pour mon pĂšre) est un long poĂšme rĂ©trospectif qui court sur une trentaine de pages. LâĂ©criture Ă la premiĂšre personne de Mira Mattar met en tension des contextes politiques, domestiques, intimes, Ă©conomiques oĂč se dĂ©ploient des affiliations coloniales, capitalistes, patriarcales, nationalistes. Elle en restitue les violents processus internes, passant du refus de se soumettre Ă lâimpossible Ă©chappĂ©e. Dans Affiliation, on fait lâexpĂ©rience dâĂȘtre en dehors: en dehors de son corps, en dehors dâun pays, en dehors dâune piĂšce. Il nây a aucune position stable, et le sujet se construit dans un Ă©clatement constant. Peu de livres articulent aussi finement expĂ©rimentation formelle et nĂ©cessitĂ© de lâexpression verbale. Affiliation est un flux de langage dont on peut sentir lâurgence Ă chaque vers.
Heights of Macchu Picchu
Pablo Nerudaâs Alturas de Macchu Picchu is a poem that distrusts solitary authority even as it passes through a single voice, moving from the lyric âIâ toward a collective utterance grounded in labor, history, and shared breath.
Producing the first collaborative translation of Alturas de Macchu Picchu is not incidental but consonant with its deepest claims. Attentive to Nerudaâs unique lyric pressure, this new English version resists the tradition of singular, authoritative renderings by allowing meaning, rhythm, and decision to emerge through dialogue and negotiation.
In this way, the translation does not merely transmit Nerudaâs poem but enacts its insistence that voice is a collective achievement, not a solitary possession.
The Cows
Lydia Davis is mathematician, philosopher, sculptor, jeweler, and scholar of the minute. Few writers map the process of thought as well as she, few perceive with such charged intelligence. The Cows is a close study of the three much-loved cows that live across the road from her. This chapbook, written with understated humor and empathy, is a series of detailed observations of the cows on different days and in different positions, moods, and times of the day.
Nowhere Near
Nowhere Near follows the authorâs psychogeographic journey from Los Angeles to Pangasinan to Mexico City after his departure from the United States, where he lived undocumented for twenty-six years. Returning to the Philippines with his grandmother to search for lost land and to confront a âfamily curse,â Revereza surfaces legacies of Spanish colonialism and US imperialism as they bear out in its continued present. Through film stills, photographs, family archives, and a rapt, first-person narrative, Nowhere Near excavates the amnesias and silences that shape personal and historical memory in the exilic, diasporic impasse.
Miko Revereza's Nowhere Near is the 2021 Open Reading Period Book Prize winner, and was selected by guest judge John Keene.
About the author
Miko Revereza (b. 1988, Manila, Philippines) is an award-winning experimental filmmaker raised in California and currently residing in Oaxaca City. His upbringing as an undocumented immigrant and current exile from the United States informs his relationship to moving images. He has made a series of personal documentaries informed by his experiences with migration and exile: DROGA! (2014), Disintegration 93 â 96 (2017), No Data Plan (2018), Distancing (2019), El Lado Quieto (2021), and Nowhere Near (2023). These works have been screened at festivals and institutions such as Locarno, TIFF, NYFF, and MoMA. No Data Plan is recognized with such honors as the Sheffield Doc Fest Art Award, and was listed in BFIâs Sight & Sound Magazineâs 50 Best Films of 2019, Hyperallergicâs Top 12 Documentary and Experimental Films of 2019, and CNN Philippinesâ Best Filipino Films of 2019. Nowhere Near (recipient of Hubert Bals Fund) was among Film Commentâs Best Undistributed Films of 2023 and CNN Philippinesâ Best Filipino Films of 2023. Revereza was included in Filmmaker Magazineâs New Faces of Independent Cinema, is a Flaherty Seminar featured filmmaker, and is a recipient of the 2021 Vilcek Prize in Filmmaker. He holds an MFA from Bard College, Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts. His films are distributed by LUX, London.
Praise
In his powerful and entrancing voice, fueled by irony and critique, Miko Revereza explores neoliberal capitalism, the challenges facing undocumented families, the non-existent âAmerican dream,â and internal and external exile, showing how borders of all kinds (geographical, racial, psychic), though regularly traversed, are policed and criminalized. Nowhere Near is a cri de coeur about twenty-first century American society.
âJohn Keene
Miko Reverezaâs captivating book is a companion to his diaristic 2023 feature of the same title, and it is a pleasure to encounter on the page the resonant literary voice he developed while making that film. Befitting its rich entwining of personal and political histories, Nowhere Near contains a wondrous range of modes and moods: raw and revealing one moment, sharply and humorously observant the next, by turns poetic and plainspoken.
âDennis Lim
Nowhere Near is a document of lives lived undocumented. Here, form matters: text branches out from image, while dialogue counterpoints an easy, self-reflexive poetic. With the acuity necessitated by a status requiring constant vigilance, negotiating the privatized avenues of Americaâs dream, Reverezaâs words carry a weight that belies their simplicity. Here and now, our attention matters, as Americaâs icy grip chills us all.
âAlia Syed
Among a Sea of Influences
Mirene Arsanios, Rachel Valinsky
Among a Sea of Influences documents a series of workshops and conversations hosted by Wendyâs Subway and organized by English-Arabic bilingual magazine Makzhin editor Mirene Arsanios on questions of formative literary influences. Three female Arab writers were invited to choose and discuss ten books that shaped their understanding of poetry and translation. Notwithstanding the difficulty of the task, Marwa Helal, Mona Kareem, and Iman Mersal played along, selectingâamong a sea of influencesâauthors and/or translators whose works were key to their own practice, and to their embodied understanding of what it means to write in Arabic from a female perspective. Asking what kind of writings are/were available to them, and which books or translations unseated their understanding of the world, Helal, Kareem, and Mersal discuss writing within the diaspora and across borders, radical publishing and translation networks, cultural and linguistic translation, vernacular language as resistance, and more.
Among a Sea of Influences is co-published by Fully Booked, Makhzin, and Wendyâs Subway on the occasion of Makhzinâs residency at Wendyâs Subway from February 1 to May 31, 2017.
The Joy of Electronic Music
This book is for people who love electronic music, people who probably have a synthesizer or two at home. Itâs for people who tell themselves that they should find some time for their passion, who blame themselves for not making enough music. This book is for them.
For decades, I thought that I could be a music producer. But over the years, I have discovered that my contribution to the electronic scene wasnât exactly the music itself. Although I was lucky enough to produce a few successful tracks in Lithuania, back in the â90s, my actual achievement turned out to be raising interest in electronic music, for other young people. Iâm still surprised when someone remembers my old tracks, but Iâm very proud when someone tells me that listening to me speak on the radio about Berlin techno changed their dreams back in the day. Later, in the 2000s, I was part of the early SoundCloud team. The code we wrote has touched hundreds of millions people around the world. No track or song I would have ever produced would have had such an effect. There is a reason that Brian Eno says the evolution of music is moved by technology as much as it is by artists. The people who created Logic and Ableton, those who code SoundCloud and Spotify, design Korg and Roland synths, they influence the course of music on a massive scale. The development of music technology is the work of many people and Iâm happy to call myself one of that gang.
This book is a natural extension of those ideas. Itâs not based on scientific or journalistic research, but itâs not a biography, either. I imagine this book sitting on a studio desk, or in a gig bag. In the process, I hope that some young music creators will find answers here, and inspirations, to the questions theyâve been wrestling with for a long time.
Post-Nationalism
Why is post-nationalism so difficult to accept? Why is it that everyone still clings to ideas about their nations and cultures that limit exchange and construction? Why is it that Europe, the post-national project par excellence, is still facing a deficit in commitment compared to national and even local commitments?
In this riveting essay, Rosi Braidotti tackles these questions through a renewed examination of the social imaginary underlying how people understand their communities, cultures and nations. Europeans in particular need to become Europeans just as we became French, Italian or German in the past.
In the contemporary geopolitical context â war, the rise of authoritarian right-wing politics, the return of illiberal, neofascist political movements spreading a climate of gloom and crisis â the unfinished task of becoming post-national has acquired new urgency. The way to make it possible might lie in a renewal of love and solidarity, creative energy and affirmative ethics.
Rosi Braidotti is a philosopher and feminist theorist. A distinguished university professor emerita at Utrecht University and honorary professor at RMIT University, her work is discussed all around the world. She has authored more than 20 books. Her last book in English is Posthuman Feminism (Polity, 2022).
Midnight Mass Press & Heretic House
WITCHES
A collection of portraits by original riot grrrl, filmmaker, and zine queen, G.B. Jones. All of them witches â from the silverscreen, woodlands, and the streets.
Featuring provocative essays by Caroline Azar, Paul P., Leafshimmer, Jenna Danchuk, Blake Baron Ray, and Scott Treleaven â each exploring how witches have been perceived, presented, and portrayed in popular culture. âRealer than real, stranger than fiction.â
PRAISE FOR G.B. JONES WITCHES
Witches by G.B. Jones is a summoning spell posing as a book, a paper potion like the potion Nicky gives Gillian in Bell, Book and Candle. It draws me to it and to whatâs in it, Jonesâ divine drawings of the witches we both worship, the witches of TV and film and true life. I go to it gladly. I go to it gayly. I pore over it and prize it and purr like Pyewacket.
â Derek McCormack, author of Castle Faggot
G.B. Jones is the original Foxy Genius. Her zines, drawings, music, and Super 8 films inspired both the Queer zine explosion and the Riot Grrrl movement of the 90s. Witches sees G.B. once again crafting her magic.
â Kathleen Hanna, singer, writer, artist, and front-woman of the bands Bikini Kill and Le Tigre
With her illustrated procession of witches, post-punk icon G.B. Jones acts as medium to a dazzling diversity of disrupters from across screen history, as well as a pantheon of real-life hellraisers, from Sybil Leek and Rosaleen Norton to Vali Myers and beyond â all woven through with astute commentary by a host of countercultural collaborators. A captivating book; I was certainly under its spell.
â Kier-La Janisse, author of House of Psychotic Women
Not A Cookbook
TBW Books is proud to announce the release of Not a Cookbook, the debut book by Canadian filmmaker and artist Robby Reis.
At first glance, Not a Cookbook appears to be just what its title impliesâbut beneath the surface lies a layered, collage-style portrait of a restaurant and the family that holds it together. Centered on Resto Palme, a Caribbean restaurant in Montreal run by married duo Lee-Anne Millaire Lafleur and Ralph Alerte, the book offers a deeply personal and provocative exploration of kitchen culture, where food becomes a lens through which to examine family, friendship, labor, and resistance.
A longtime friend of the family, Reis takes an embedded, nonlinear approach to storytelling. Through photographs, texts, and contributions from customers and staff, Not a Cookbook captures not just the daily challenges of running a family business, but also the peripheral storiesâof racism, activism, and the emotional labor required to build and protect something shared and sacred.
Despite its name, Not a Cookbook does offer some treasured family recipesâhowever, when it comes to a few key ingredients that make a certain sauce so special, Alerte leaves us simply with, âsorry blood, I canât give it away.â The result is a new model for the cookbook: a radical kitchen guide rooted in community, resilience, and love. Less about whatâs on the plate, and more about everything that makes the plate possible.
Steak Zine
Steak Zine is the new issue of Cake Zine. Cake Zine is a literary print magazine exploring art, history, and pop culture through food.
For this pocket-sized special issue, Cake Zine is setting off into carnivorous territory. Serving up 208 pages of non-fiction and fiction exploring the cultural impact of red meat, including:
The last days of Acropolis, Portlandâs beloved strip club-steakhouse, by Sophia June
A profile on the women going viral by eating raw meat online by Ella Quittner
A night at a fictionalized steakhouse kaleidoscoped through the roles of maĂźtre dâ, bartender, server, chef, and guest, by Leah Abrams, Isle McElroy, Lillian Fishman, Stephanie Wambugu, and Hannah Kingsley-Ma
Examinations of the enduring escapism of Outback Steakhouse and Fogo de ChĂŁo by Ruby Robina Saha and Adam Dalva
A trip through Nebraska to trace how historic stockyard closures in the late 1990s have affected those serving up beef in the Beef State, by Jamal Dauda
A wistful look back at a romance fueled by ribeye and red leather booths, by Emma Specter
NDA-risking testimony from a lab tech at a plant-based food start up who went from vegetarian to carnivore in the noble name of research, by AUTHOR REDACTED
Tracing the roots and uncertain future of Hong Kongâs sizzling steak by Madeline Leung Coleman
Plus the steak heists prompting retailers to put meat behind lock and key, the body horror of cannibalist cinema, revisiting molecular gastronomyâs embrace of meat glue, the social tensions behind ordering well-done meat, the trauma of growing up on an Australian cattle ranch, and much more.