Patterson puts her brief, 85-page "essay," as the publisher calls it, in direct conversation with Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s 1982 classic experimental autobiography Dictee. Chronology is ostensibly about Patterson's failed attempt to translate a Sesotho short story into English, which, leads her into other topics, including feminism, African writers, the relationship between language and colonialism, and the difference between oral and written versions of a language (something Cha also focused on in her book). Chronology combines emails, bits of memoir, handwritten notes, press releases, scraps from other texts, lists of words in Sesotho and English that verge on poetry, and several loose reproductions of photographs that are inserted between specific pages of the book as illustrations. Patterson's book is but a fragment compared to Cha's rich text, but it is, nevertheless, a fascinating, multifaceted fragment.