Shelf Awareness for Readers | Week of Friday, October 11, 2024
Publisher:Zibby Books
Genre:Psychological, Domestic, Literary, Thrillers, Fiction
ISBN:9781958506448
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$27.99
Fiction
The Undercurrent
by Sarah Sawyer

A new mother returns to her Texas hometown seeking answers in Sarah Sawyer's debut, The Undercurrent, an unsettling literary suspense novel about difficult decisions, broken families, and the lengths to which mothers will go for their children.

In 2011, Bee is struggling with postpartum depression and isolation. When Leo, her brother's lifelong best friend and her first love, asks to meet, she's stunned to learn from him that her troubled, unpredictable twin, Gus, wants to talk to her after 17 years. Then she reads about a possible break in the case of Deecie, a girl who went missing during the summer of 1987, when Bee feels that everything fell apart. Bee decides it's time for her to finally return to Texas and introduce her baby to her mother.

In 1987, two women watch their sons grow into unknowable young men, creatures on the edge of adulthood with secret thoughts and activities. Mary has dedicated so much of her life to being Bee and Gus's mother that she clings to the dream of normalcy until an unplanned pregnancy and a terrible discovery force her to reevaluate everything. Across the street, Leo's mother, Diana, struggles to maintain her career and parent a child who has been getting in trouble at school for setting fires. Then Deecie disappears.

With beautiful, insightful prose and a thoroughly developed cast of flawed, relatable characters, Sawyer has crafted paragraphs that readers will stop to savor even as they breathlessly race through her pages. The Undercurrent is a great fit for book groups and fans of Angie Kim and Chris Whitaker. --Suzanne Krohn, librarian and freelance reviewer

Publisher:Knopf
Genre:Women, Friendship, Holidays, Fiction
ISBN:9780593470701
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$28
Fiction
A Home for the Holidays
by Taylor Hahn

Complicated loss, maternal secrets, and newfound hope are blanketed by Chicago snow in Taylor Hahn's tenderhearted novel A Home for the Holidays. It's nearing Christmas when wedding singer Mel Hart's mother dies after an enduring problem with alcohol at the same time that Mel's situationship with a bandmate ends. Reeling from the complexities of her grief, Mel has barely begun her "crash course in death logistics" when a woman claiming to be her mother's estranged best friend appears, asking for a chance to tell Mel about the version of her mother she never knew. A hesitant but aching Mel agrees.

Within Barb's yellow house, which smells "like holiday Yankee candles and baking and a hint of mildew," Mel discovers more than old photo albums and stories about the talented woman her mother was. A connection with Barb's son and blossoming friendships with Barb's daughter and grandson prompt Mel to wonder if her loss means being truly alone--or if there could be a different sort of life ahead.

A Home for the Holidays is well-balanced and lovely. Hahn (The Lifestyle) writes funny and heartwarming scenes as deftly as she renders the illogical nature of grief (as when Mel replies "But I have a Christmas tree with me" to the doctor on the phone who informs her of her mother's death) and how it drives humans to search for answers. Those seeking some heft in their seasonal reading may find comfort in the truism underpinning Hahn's novel: that the home one needs now might not be the home one has always known, and that honoring both is possible--for the holidays and beyond. --Kristen Coates, editor and freelance reviewer

Publisher:University of Pittsburgh Press
Genre:Short Stories (single author), Fiction
ISBN:9780822948360
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$24
Fiction
Obligations to the Wounded
by Mubanga Kalimamukwento

Zambian author Mubanga Kalimamukwento's Obligations of the Wounded contains 16 stories, all but one spotlighting the lives of Zambian women in and out of their native country: they're victims and survivors, resigned and ferocious, trapped and free. Obligations won the 2024 Drue Heinz Literature Prize, which has honored writers of short fiction since 1981, chosen by Angie Cruz (Dominicana), who deemed Kalimamukwento's work "a graceful, touching, and generous collection."

The wounds of familial relationships loom throughout. In "A Doctor, a Lawyer, an Engineer, or a Shame to the Family," a new aunt writes a five-part "cheat sheet for how to not disappoint your Zambian parents" for her infant niece, which already demands the impossible: "Be born first (and male) AND MALE." Young girls face fearful futures in stories like "Inswa," about a 13-year-old who's married off to the old, already-many-times-married village chief, seemingly in retaliation for discovering her sexuality with her best friend. But women impressively rebel in "Whisper Down the Lane," when students return their teacher's zealous abuse; and in "#BaileyLies," in which a struggling journalist publicly exposes a foreign humanitarian's mendacious memoir.

In a few stories, Kalimamukwento strikingly experiments with form--visual layout, inventive punctuation, extended white spaces--emphasizing a sense of elliptical not-knowing. Crossed-out text cleverly reveals the unfiltered, honest conversations social norms won't allow. For the dispossessed and discarded--too many of them "wounded" women--independence and agency are hard-won victories. Kalimamukwento, a Zambian Fulbright scholar with a U.S. law degree, writes with empathic knowing, deftly treading between resignation and hope. Her enigmatic storytelling underscores that silence is not an option, that bearing witness is obligatory. --Terry Hong

Publisher:Simon & Schuster
Genre:Women, Rock Stars, Music, Romance, Fiction, Performing Arts
ISBN:9781668015766
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$28.99
Fiction
The Lightning Bottles
by Marissa Stapley

Marissa Stapley's The Lightning Bottles is part love story, part mystery. Jane Pyre, a retired rock 'n' roll singer, and her teenage neighbor set out to uncover what happened when Jane's husband and band partner, Elijah Hart, mysteriously disappeared in 1994. In 1999, Jane is widowed, widely ridiculed by the media, and desperate to have a private life. She moves to the German countryside to do just that, and is surprised that her neighbor, a friendless girl named Hen, is a fan of her former band, the Lightning Bottles, and a firm believer that Elijah is not dead.

The two misunderstood characters join together for a road trip where they follow clues to answer the questions raised when Elijah went missing. Stapley (Lucky) intersperses their journey with flashbacks of Jane and Elijah's relationship as it grows from their initial meeting in an online chat room to a bond they deem unbreakable. Through the formation of the Lightning Bottles, Stapley celebrates the Seattle, Wash., rock scene and how two people find each other and their place in the world. The Lightning Bottles' rise embodies the metaphorical and literal highs of fame, as well as its the rock-bottom lows.

The odd pairing of rock star Jane and country girl Hen creates insightful dialogue as their search becomes increasingly thrilling and revealing. Jane's last shred of hope exists alongside her guilt over how she and Elijah left things, while an all-encompassing passion for music fuels Hen's optimism that her hero is still alive. Stapley's depiction of the 1990s rock scene highlights the transformative power of music and the importance of human connection. --Clara Newton, freelance reviewer

Publisher:Tor
Genre:Epic, Fantasy, Fiction
ISBN:9781250895332
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$27.99
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Blood of the Old Kings
by Sung-il Kim, trans. by Anton Hur

Through a trio of characters on separate paths of survival and resistance to an empire's control, South Korean author Sung-il Kim creates a world of intrigue and heart-pounding drama in Blood of the Old Kings, the first volume in an epic fantasy trilogy.

Loran is determined to avenge the deaths of her husband and child at the hands of the imperial prefect who governs the former kingdom of Arland, and she begs assistance from the dragon sworn to protect the realm. Meanwhile, Cain, an Arlander sent to the capital after his parents were charged with treason, stumbles into a ring of conspiracy while investigating the death of his friend Fienna. And 16-year-old Arienne accepts guidance from a dead sorcerer to escape the Imperial Academy, where sorcerers are forced to enroll so the Empire can harness the power from their bodies after they die. Each character's motivation is personal, but all three become part of something larger as rebellion brews among groups with competing ideologies and methods. The paths they are thrust onto force each of them to make impossible choices and decide what kind of person they are--or are willing to become.

Kim emphasizes plot over character yet still conveys emotional depth, and his focus on ordinary people becoming reluctant heroes is a fresh contribution to the fantasy trope of rebellion against an imperial power. Exciting plot twists and nail-bitingly narrow escapes crescendo as passion for revolution ignites. --Dainy Bernstein, freelance reviewer

Publisher:Avon
Genre:Women, Romantic Comedy, Holidays, Mystery & Detective, Adaptations & Pastiche, Romance, Fiction, Women Sleuths
ISBN:9780063276680
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$24.99
Romance
The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year
by Ally Carter

Presents are under the tree but the hostess is nowhere to be found in Ally Carter's holiday romance meets mystery romp, The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year. Carter (The Blonde Identity) blends the large cast and locked-room-mystery fun of Knives Out with a rivals-to-lovers romance for a swoony whodunnit that's sure to please.

Fresh off a painful divorce, cozy mystery writer Maggie Chase is surprised with the chance of a lifetime: an invitation to spend Christmas in England with her idol, blockbuster crime writer Eleanor Ashley. Unfortunately, fellow author Ethan Wyatt, Maggie's "least favorite person in the world," is also on Eleanor's guest list. After they arrive at Eleanor's gorgeous remote estate, Eleanor introduces them to an eclectic group that includes members of her extended family, her solicitor, her doctor, and others--then disappears from her locked office. Why did Eleanor gather all of these people together for Christmas? And where has she gone?

A winter storm strands them in Eleanor's mansion, and Maggie and Ethan must work together to discover the truth behind Eleanor's sudden disappearance before someone in the house claims more than just an inheritance. Mystery fans will enjoy following the clues with Ethan and Maggie, while romance devotees will adore watching Maggie figure out that Ethan has loved her for years.

Kisses in secret tunnels, attempted murder, and family secrets--The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year delivers all this and more in one delightful package. --Suzanne Krohn, librarian

Publisher:Canary Street Press
Genre:Women, Holiday, Family Life, Romance, Fiction, Siblings
ISBN:9781335929358
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$18.99
Romance
The December Market
by RaeAnne Thayne

The spirit of Christmas mends broken hearts in The December Market, a tender holiday romance by RaeAnne Thayne (15 Summers Later).

As in Thayne's 2023 novel Christmas at the Shelter Inn, this one is set in Shelter Springs, Idaho, a small town that nourishes a sense of community, especially at Christmas. But for 31-year-old Shelter Springs native Amanda Taylor, the holidays resurrect sad memories of her father's alcoholism, which destroyed many lives, and her fiancé's drinking problem, which ended their relationship. As the owner of an eco-friendly skin care store, Amanda buries herself in work and oversees the Holiday Giving Market, where local merchants and artisans gather to sell their wares for two weeks during the month of December.

Amanda keeps crossing paths with Rafe Arredondo, the handsome paramedic and firefighter who tends the first-aid booth at the market. Amanda learns that Rafe and his lovable six-year-old son, Isaac, have moved to her neighborhood. Rafe is widowed after his wife died of a drug overdose. When Amanda pays a visit to her plucky grandmother at the local retirement community, she and Rafe meet again and discover they have even more in common: their grandparents, both residents, are dating. Fate brings Amanda and Rafe together and their past heartaches are confronted by the prospect of a budding romance.

Prolific Thayne unravels a heartfelt, hopeful story in which grief is transcended by the power of love. --Kathleen Gerard, blogger at Reading Between the Lines

Publisher:Pantheon
Genre:Horror, Fantasy, General, Comics & Graphic Novels
ISBN:9780593701706
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$34
Starred Graphic Books
Final Cut
by Charles Burns

Charles Burns, winner of the Eisner/Harvey/Ignatz graphic trifecta for Black Hole, dramatically explores the (un)balance of isolation and creativity in Final Cut. When they were young teenagers, Brian and Jimmy started making slasher films, complete with intergalactic worms and murder by forked eyeball. Now as young adults, filmmaking still looms large, particularly for Brian who, unlike affable Jimmy, prefers his intricate, surreal drawings being readied for their celluloid closeups to actual human interactions.

Their latest film, Brian explains to his star-to-be, Laurie, "is about my head.... It's about all the fucked-up shit going on inside my head." Inspired by the black-and-white classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Brian has "the whole movie all planned out," with storyboards reflecting his growing obsession with Laurie. She quickly realizes being on camera constantly "actually isn't all that fun," particularly as Brian's gaze becomes more intrusive. Brian, Jimmy, Laurie, and their crew manage to gather the raw footage, but intention and reality aren't aligned in the final cut.

Burns alternates chapters between Brian's and Laurie's points of view: Brian sinks further into his own fantasies; Laurie seems more grounded. Traversing between disparate perspectives encourages interactive engagement to distinguish between cleverly intricate layers of filmmaking and storytelling--the two are not the same. Burns's exactingly bordered layout underscores a need for order, as if he is keeping at least the visuals tightly controlled. Working in vivid colors (notably Laurie's ginger tresses) with every panel filled to the absolute edges, Burns memorably produces sweeping cinema on the page. --Terry Hong

Publisher:Drawn & Quarterly
Genre:Form, Humorous, Comic Strips & Cartoons, Literary, Comics & Graphic Novels, Humor
ISBN:9781770466982
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$24.95
Graphic Books
Forces of Nature
by Edward Steed

If it's true that society's intelligence as a whole is going to the dogs, then cartoonist Edward Steed hasn't gotten the memo. Forces of Nature collects about 150 of his cartoons, a lot of them thinkers, all of them witty, a number of them brilliant.

Steed is best known for his single-panel New Yorker cartoons, many of which are reproduced here. That magazine was also, of course, home to the work of Addams Family cartoonist Charles Addams, for whom Steed is a match in morbidness: he has built reams of jokes around the damaged, dying, and deceased. "It's what he would have wanted," says a clown at a graveside service after four clown pallbearers drop the casket and a clown corpse comes tumbling out.

Unlike Addams, who drew people with invitingly cushiony shapes and often set characters against well-appointed backdrops, Steed works in slim black lines against stark white. And whereas Addams kept his characters clothed, Forces of Nature offers a steady stream of shirtless, and occasionally also pantsless, men; one appears wearing bikini underwear while holding a banjo on a deserted club's stage and complaining, "This next song is about narrow-minded record executives and their reluctance to take a chance on anything a bit different." Some cartoons herein aren't macabre but absurd, as when a potato wearing high-heeled shoes is shamed for cheating by a judge at the World's Tallest Potato Contest. As anodyne as that perfectly executed joke is, readers shouldn't expect to see Steed's work in the funny papers anytime soon. --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer

Publisher:Other Press
Genre:Biography & Autobiography, Middle East, Travel, Non-Classifiable, Asia, General, Israel, Arab & Middle Eastern, History, Israel & Palestine, Memoirs
ISBN:9781635425215
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$16.99
Starred Biography & Memoir
A Rift in Time: Travels with My Ottoman Uncle
by Raja Shehadeh

In A Rift in Time: Travels with My Ottoman Uncle, Raja Shehadeh (Palestinian Walks) invites readers into a "momentary... respite from the terrible confines of the dismal present" by retracing how his great-great-uncle Najib Nassar escaped from arrest under the Ottoman Empire. Shehadeh poignantly brings to life a historical moment not often considered in contemporary discussions, expressing sadness for what might have been and hope for what may yet be, even if it does not happen in his own lifetime.

Shehadeh blends Nassar's personal story; political shifts surrounding World War I that affected Nassar, an outspoken political journalist; his own present-day experiences; and the political situation affecting the landscape today. In addition to lamenting the homes and villages destroyed during the 1948 Nakba and the 1967 war, Shehadeh highlights how the fracturing of a region once unified under the Ottoman Empire and defined by religious diversity into separate nations with strict borders and visa regulations made re-creating Nassar's journey almost impossible.

As a Christian Palestinian, Shehadeh understands the region's complexity. He presents viewpoints from individuals past and present, commenting on each with sharp intellect and empathy. He provides context for Arab views of the Ottoman Empire, attitudes of Muslim Arabs toward Christian Arabs, and depictions of Palestinians who stayed on their land as brave resistance fighters or cowardly collaborators. Above all, he takes a long view of the land, which "has been there for centuries," to unequivocally condemn colonial and Zionist destruction of land and people and assert that it "will be there long after all of us are gone." --Dainy Bernstein, freelance reviewer

Publisher:Viking
Genre:Biography & Autobiography, Women, United States, Wars & Conflicts, 20th Century, History, World War II - General
ISBN:9780593297803
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$35
Starred Biography & Memoir
Kingmaker: Pamela Harriman's Astonishing Life of Power, Seduction, and Intrigue
by Sonia Purnell

Sonia Purnell's Kingmaker: Pamela Harriman's Astonishing Life of Power, Seduction, and Intrigue stands as a model for what all biographies should strive for. It strikes the difficult balance of history, gossip, and journalistic insight in pitch-perfect prose that reads like a novel. This riveting account of Pamela Harriman's extraordinary life is highly recommended for readers interested in 20th-century history or politics, or in the lives of fascinating individuals.

Purnell follows Harriman through her early days as a socialite and courtesan who had "a strategic sex life" in service to the British government during World War II and to her farther-in-law, Winston Churchill; her third marriage, to diplomat Averell Harriman; and her later years as a political powerhouse and ambassador to France. The result is a detailed portrait of a woman who defied expectations and shaped the course of history. Harriman's relationships with world leaders and leading cultural figures, including John F. Kennedy, Edward R. Murrow, and Bill Clinton are explored in depth, providing a fascinating glimpse into the inner workings of diplomacy and international politics.

Purnell's elegant and effortlessly engaging writing draws readers into Harriman's rarified world with vivid descriptions and insightful context. The biography unfolds briskly and is filled with dramatic twists and turns that make the book's 500-plus pages seem barely long enough. Harriman's life is a fascinating kaleidoscope of power, love, and ambition, and Purnell (A Woman of No Importance) expertly weaves these threads together into an irresistible story.

It is a testament to Purnell's skill as a biographer that she makes Harriman's life both relatable and extraordinary. --Elizabeth DeNoma, executive editor, DeNoma Literary Services, Seattle, Wash.

Publisher:Atlantic Monthly Press
Genre:Biography & Autobiography, Women, Science, History, Science & Technology
ISBN:9780802163820
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$30
Starred Biography & Memoir
The Elements of Marie Curie: How the Glow of Radium Lit a Path for Women in Science
by Dava Sobel

In Ève Curie's biography of her mother, she wrote: "There are, in the life of Marie Curie, so many great moments that one is tempted to tell her story as a legend." This new biography by Dava Sobel (The Glass UniverseLongitudeGalileo's Daughter) traces not only the legend of Curie's scientific breakthroughs, but her impact on the presence of women in the sciences. The Elements of Marie Curie paints a human portrait not of an isolated genius, but of a woman who existed in and built scientific community. She was committed to the expansion of knowledge for all even as she sought to stare down Nature itself and determine what made it up.

Sobel analyzes her subject with care and through detailed historical and personal accounts, following Curie's life from childhood to death. The biography's chapters are named after people who were close to her or who played a major part in her life, and with the element or research that arose from that person crossing paths with Curie. As such it makes more visible not only the number of young women Curie helped to achieve their own scientific discoveries, but also showcases more than 20 further scientific developments born from the work that Marie and Pierre Curie conducted on radium and radioactivity. The Elements of Marie Curie is a necessary reminder of Curie's remarkable contributions to science, and how one person, using the opportunities given to them, can open doors for other people and reshape entire fields. This is an essential read for anyone who values works that highlight women in the sciences. --Michelle Anya Anjirbag, freelance reviewer

Publisher:Open Letter
Genre:Biography & Autobiography, Women, Literary Figures, Eastern (see also Russian & Soviet), Literary Collections, European, Interviews
ISBN:9781960385253
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$14.95
Essays & Criticism
A Muzzle for Witches
by Dubravka Ugresic, trans. by Ellen Elias-Bursać

Dubravka Ugresic (The Museum of Unconditional Surrender), who died in 2023, was a towering figure in literature. A Muzzle for Witches--which has been translated from the Croatian into impeccable English by Ugresic's longtime translator, Ellen Elias-Bursać, for this posthumous publication--makes a fitting capstone to her English-language oeuvre.

Ugresic left her native Yugoslavia during its civil war and subsequent disintegration, a time in which she was branded a "witch" for not embracing nationalist Croatian sentiments. This is largely the context in which this collection of interviews, conducted by Merima Omeragić, should be understood.

This set of interviews portrays in painful detail the sexism to which women writers and women in general find themselves subjected in the former Yugoslavia. "Time and effort are needed if the system of patriarchal values is to be extirpated, as it has flourished over the last thirty years, while rooting itself ever deeper, in the fertile manure of nationalism," Ugresic asserts. She also decries how the government destroys and suppresses books in acts of "cultural libricide" done in the name of nationalism that other countries can unfortunately draw parallels to.

The subjects covered in the slight volume are as thought-provoking as they are wide-ranging. They include the ongoing depiction of women as victims in art, the variety of nonliterary positioning activities that authors engage in to increase their visibility, and Ugresic's sense of the utter futility of those endeavors. "They will be pushed aside by a flood of new creative people.... They are all seeking, in a frenzy, the best possible way to leave a trace of their existence." --Elizabeth DeNoma, executive editor, DeNoma Literary Services, Seattle, Wash.

Publisher:Norton
Genre:Design, Technology & Engineering, History & Criticism, Industrial, Transportation, History, Automotive
ISBN:9781324075288
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$29.99
Travel Literature
The Driving Machine: A Design History of the Car
by Witold Rybczynski

Architect and emeritus professor of urbanism at the University of Pennsylvania, Witold Rybczynski (How Architecture WorksNow I Sit Me Down) believes cars are "cultural artifacts" whose design reflects and enriches the times. This idea becomes a stimulating springboard into The Driving Machine, where, with exuberant insight, Rybczynski offers an intriguing, cross-continental history of the evolution of automobile design over 150 years. He also shares stories of the many cars he has owned over five decades.

Rybczynski creatively compares and contrasts car designs past and present. He launches his thorough yet concise examination in 1967, when he purchased his first vehicle, a Volkswagen Beetle--the "people's car" created in 1938 in response to Adolf Hitler's "national policy to motorize Germany." Throughout history, car designs have built on prior inventions. Vehicle power evolved from steam to gas-fueled to electricity. Creative ingenuity led to widespread, worldwide car ownership as vehicles eventually became more budget-friendly and, later, were mass-produced on every continent.

Designing cars requires "balancing technical demands and human needs... with aesthetics and taste." Thus, Rybczynski traverses all aspects of automotive technology--form and function--as well as car culture. The car design evolution continues today after being spurred on by the likes of innovative automotive engineering designers including Henry Ford, Walter P. Chrysler, Preston T. Tucker, and Tesla's designer, Franz von Holzhausen.

The lively charm of this accessible, enjoyably mapped-out narrative is further enriched by Rybczynski's well-crafted drawings of referenced cars. And he seamlessly weaves historical facts with personal, passionate car-themed stories and opinions. Automotive enthusiasts and general readers alike will be equally enthralled. --Kathleen Gerard, blogger at Reading Between the Lines

Publisher:Oxford University Press
Genre:Biography & Autobiography, Music, Genres & Styles, Individual Composer & Musician, Pop Vocal
ISBN:9780197627822
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$25
Performing Arts
Within You Without You: Listening to George Harrison
by Seth Rogovoy

Writing about music isn't easy--as the saying goes, it's like dancing about architecture. Also difficult: getting a handle on George Harrison (1943-2001), the enigmatic Beatle. Seth Rogovoy (Bob Dylan) meets both challenges in Within You Without You: Listening to George Harrison, a persuasive and provocation-rich corrective.

Rogovoy argues that the Beatles' lead guitarist, who was commonly viewed as second rank to primary songwriters John Lennon and Paul McCartney, has been short-shrifted. When Harrison wasn't, say, making a landmark sitar contribution to the band's "Norwegian Wood," he reliably lent Beatles songs an elevating touch; Rogovoy points to Harrison's signature unresolved guitar chords and calls him "a master craftsman of the opening hook." About Harrison's own compositions--for the Beatles and as a solo artist--Rogovoy makes pronouncements both convincing ("Piggies" amounts to "a musical version of Orwell's Animal Farm") and likely to stir the pot ("Bangla Desh" is "one of Harrison's all-time best songs").

While Rogovoy hasn't set out to write a biography, Within You Without You contains multitudes on the polydimensional character of Harrison, an introverted spiritualist who collected racing cars and wrote cranky lyrics about his finances. Rogovoy can be repetitive, and even Harrison defenders may think the author oversteps when he says the Beatle left behind "a body of work as great as any other single recording artist and singer-songwriter of the rock era" except for maybe Bob Dylan. But occasional vexation will pay readers dividends if it sends them scrambling to Harrison's music in search of answers. --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer

Publisher:Algonquin
Genre:Biography & Autobiography, Literary Collections, African American & Black, Memoirs, Essays
ISBN:9781643753959
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$19.99
Now in Paperback
Inciting Joy: Essays
by Ross Gay

If the subject matter of his books is any indication, poet Ross Gay has a single-minded focus: making the world a better place. Following on his bestselling 2019 collection, The Book of Delights, Gay returns with Inciting Joy: Essays, a collection of 14 energetic reflections that investigate how to "make joy more available to us" and "how joy makes us act and feel."

In the service of this goal, Inciting Joy surveys an assortment of topics drawn from Gay's own experience that display his gift for intensely observing the world around him. They include his involvement in the creation of a community orchard in his hometown of Bloomington, Ind., and his appreciation for the standup comedy of Richard Pryor.

But the volume isn't a catalog of unalloyed pleasure. In "Through My Tears I Saw (Death: The Second Incitement)," Gay recounts the death of his father, a man with whom he had a difficult relationship, from liver cancer at age 58. He returns briefly to that event in the collection's penultimate and longest piece, "Grief Suite (Falling Apart: The Thirteenth Incitement)," a wide-ranging survey of male emotions and his own struggle with mental health issues.

Gay concludes Inciting Joy with an essay on gratitude, describing Aretha Franklin's rendition of "Amazing Grace," in a documentary of the making of her record of the same name. One can almost hear the ecstatic voices of a gospel choir in Gay's admonition that "we belong not to an institution or a party or a state or a market, but to each other. Needfully so." It's a fitting ending to a consistently uplifting book. --Harvey Freedenberg, freelance reviewer

Publisher:Riverhead
Genre:Women, General, Literary, Fiction, Historical
ISBN:9780593418406
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$18
Now in Paperback
The Vaster Wilds
by Lauren Groff

Lauren Groff's fifth novel, the riveting The Vaster Wilds, combines visceral detail and magisterial sweep as it chronicles a runaway servant's struggle to endure a bitter colonial winter.

Grounding facts are rare--as in Matrix, Groff's previous work of historical fiction, the outlook perhaps feels more timeless than period-specific--but gradually the scene emerges: the year is 1610 and the teenage protagonist has escaped the famine- and disease-ridden Jamestown colony in Virginia. Not long ago, "the girl," as she is almost always called, sailed from England, accompanying her mistress and the woman's second husband, a minister, and intellectually disabled daughter, Bess. The girl fell in love with a Dutch glassblower while on board the ship, but a violent storm separated them.

Flashbacks to these and other traumatic events seep into her mind as she copes with the harsh reality of life in the wilderness. With faith and resilience, she finds shelter, builds fires, repairs her garments, and subsists on raw fish, duck eggs, and berries. However, terror of the forest and its creatures never leaves. Groff (Fates and FuriesArcadia) briefly departs from the close third-person narration to detail masterfully plotted histories of a Jesuit priest turned hermit who deems her a she-devil and a soldier who pursues her, ready to take out his sadism on a "murderess."

The mystery of the incident to which he's referring remains until near the novel's end, adding a filament of suspense to what becomes a classic study of solitude. The result is as evocative and affecting as Girl with a Pearl Earring--and as brutal as anything Cormac McCarthy has written. --Rebecca Foster, freelance reviewer, proofreader and blogger at Bookish Beck

Publisher:Grove
Genre:Dystopian, Literary, Political, Fiction
ISBN:9780802163523
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$18
Now in Paperback
Prophet Song
by Paul Lynch

The ease with which a democratic country can degenerate into a police state is the premise of Prophet Song, Paul Lynch's frightening, all-too-plausible novel, winner of the 2023 Booker Prize.

One night, molecular biologist Eilish Stack is at home in Ireland, looking outside as the dark, in Lynch's elegant prose, "gathers the last of the leaves and the leaves do not resist the dark but accept the dark in whisper." Two officers from the secret police tell her they're looking for her husband, Larry, the deputy general secretary of the Teachers' Union of Ireland. When Larry goes to the police, detectives inform him that his behavior "looks like the conduct of someone inciting hatred against the state." In the aftermath of a protest march, authorities use the newly passed Emergency Powers Act to round up union personnel. Larry is among them. He doesn't return.

So begins a nightmare for Eilish and her family that Lynch (GraceBeyond the Sea) describes with effective immediacy. When 16-year-old son Mark is called for national service, Eilish wants to send him to boarding school over the border, but Mark joins the rebel forces instead. Daughter Molly lapses into depression. Younger son Bailey starts exhibiting hostile behavior at home. Simon, Eilish's widowed father, suffers from encroaching dementia. It's a lot for Eilish to deal with, even before the fighting comes to Dublin. Lynch presents it all with matter-of-fact poetry that makes the events credible and serves as a chilling reminder that no country is immune. Prophet Song is a disquieting novel from an exceptional writer. --Michael Magras, freelance book reviewer

Publisher:Mariner
Genre:Dark Humor, Humorous, Mystery & Detective, General, Literary, Fiction
ISBN:9780063318519
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$19.99
Now in Paperback
America Fantastica
by Tim O'Brien

Set against the backdrop of an unnamed but recognizable American presidency, Tim O'Brien's black comedy, America Fantastica, takes both the dark and the comic to epic proportions with simultaneous absurdism and poignancy. O'Brien (The Things They CarriedIf I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home) offers his first novel in more than 20 years, a sprawling, madcap tale of road trips, crimes large and small, love, loss, and, most of all, lying. And he revels in detail and highly specific lists, so that the world portrayed feels robust and brimming.

Readers first meet O'Brien's antihero, Boyd, in action. He departs his Kiwanis brunch early to head to the bank, where he presents a gun and leaves with just under $81,000 and the teller, "a diminutive redhead named Angie Bing." Boyd and Angie hit the road, seeking first Boyd's ex-wife, Evelyn, and then her father, Dooney, against whom Boyd holds a significant grudge. Their travels prompt movements by an increasingly colorful cast of bizarre characters. These characters and events, in a series of deftly drawn American locales, form a fantasmagoria, a version of reality that both bizarrely exaggerates and digs directly into the emotional truth of the real world.

O'Brien showcases a broad emotional range and demonstrates an electric combination of deadpan humor, vicious wit, and a masterful eye for detail in capturing a peculiarly American form of torment. --Julia Kastner

Publisher:Random House
Genre:World Literature, Africa - Nigeria, General, Literary, African American & Black, Fiction
ISBN:9780812987010
Pub Date:October 2024
Price:$17
Now in Paperback
Tremor
by Teju Cole

Tremor, Teju Cole's third novel, is an impressively kaleidoscopic work of autofiction that journeys between the U.S. and Nigeria as it questions the ownership and meaning of Black art. Tunde, a Nigerian photographer and Harvard academic, appears to be an autobiographical stand-in for the author. Tunde's antiquing trip to Maine with his Japanese American partner, Sadako, sparks ethical ruminations. Surprised to find an authentic African headdress on sale, Tunde decides "he ought to rescue it" by purchasing it. Cultural appropriation ("vampirism"), microaggressions, Harvard's history of slavery, and the literal theft of African artifacts are the stuff of his interior musings as well as of his recorded lecture describing museums as "a zone of sustained shocks." Tunde decries the "persistent history of white people thinking they know better than the rest of us."

The time devoted to Tunde's niche obsessions--Black serial killer Samuel Little; jazz and world music; the legend of Sundiata Keita, founder of Mali--edges toward self-indulgent, but Cole (Every Day Is for the Thief) widens the frame with an ever-shifting point of view. The first half sticks close to Tunde via third person, but later his travels occasion a series of first-person testimonials--from a chauffeur, a mural artist, a church musician, and so on--that coalesce into a glistening portrait of contemporary Lagos. Closing sections alternating between Tunde's and Sadako's first-person narration make clear Cole's debt to Virginia Woolf. The sophisticated structure is just one of the highlights of this elegant study of art criticism, suffering, and subjectivity. --Rebecca Foster, freelance reviewer, proofreader, and blogger at Bookish Beck

Publisher:Abrams Books for Young Readers
Genre:Friendship, Animals, Humorous Stories, Dogs, Social Themes, Juvenile Fiction
ISBN:9781419757518
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$18.99
Starred Children's & Young Adult
Nose to Nose
by Thyra Heder

A dog's lucky find turns into a massive canine misunderstanding in the smart, funny, and playful picture book Nose to Nose, written and illustrated by Thyra Heder (How Do You Dance?).

Toby, a black-and-tan dog with a long tail, has moved into a new neighborhood and would like to make some friends. He introduces himself by marking a brick retaining wall, but making a splash on the wall does not help him make a splash socially. Other dogs don't acknowledge Toby when leaving their contributions, shown by Heder as colorful graffiti messages such as "Beware the babies" and "Frizz-Bs r best!" Then Toby finds a ball that "smell[s] like puddles and raccoons" and takes it home. The next morning, the scent messages are abuzz that the ball has a worried owner named Pancake. Toby's message of reassurance gets washed out, leaving a garbled note that appears to say, "mine now" and "fear me." Toby arrives at the park with the ball only to find angry messages and tense pups. When Toby and Pancake meet nose-to-nose, Toby smooths over the ruff feelings by initiating a game of chase, and soon all the dogs are having a ball.

Heder cleverly (and humorously) shows the hidden world of dog communication in a story that highlights the difficulties and rewards of seeking new friends. The artwork shines in light-drenched scenes and soft, translucent colors, and the spraying, crouching, and squatting postures of dogs leaving messages should appeal to young readers' senses of humor. This dog's-nose view of socializing would go well on any animal lover's shelf, and it may also resonate with children experiencing life as "the new kid." --Jaclyn Fulwood, youth services manager, Allen County Public Library

Publisher:Scholastic Press
Genre:Horror, Thrillers & Suspense, Social Themes, Young Adult Fiction, Supernatural, Prejudice & Racism
ISBN:9781338894134
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$19.99
Starred Children's & Young Adult
Ruin Road
by Lamar Giles

Ruin Road by Lamar Giles (The Getaway) is an unnerving, spine-tingling paranormal horror novel driven by a frank and sharp dissection of race and class.

Cade Webster, 6'2" with "hands like tennis rackets," is a formidable player for his high school football team. Even though he's the star wide receiver, his rich white teammates won't go near his Black "gangsta" neighborhood and his size and skin color make the white people with whom he interacts perceive him as a threat. Cade wishes people would stop acting so scared around him--a wish that is granted when he unknowingly makes an infernal pact by "buying" it in a pawn shop that deals "in the outer limits of despair." Suddenly everyone around Cade seems to have lost all fear and become more violent. Cade realizes it's because of his wish, and he must find a way to undo the deal before his friends and family suffer more.

In Ruin Road, supernatural chills effortlessly share the lane with equally scary real-life horrors: blatant racism and microaggressions, malevolent power, and instigated suffering. Giles effectively uses the lenses of power and fear to examine these concepts, delivering cutting social commentary--e.g., by demonstrating that an absence of fear can lead people down a path to something truly scary, as when repressed resentment is unleashed. His macabre descriptions ("Fingers crawled over him like bugs, boneless arms looped around him like tentacles") and visual language ("an ice spider skittered up my neck") instill dread and create a creepy atmosphere. This thriller is unsettling, fast-paced, and shrewd. --Lana Barnes, freelance reviewer and proofreader

Publisher:Chronicle Books
Genre:Concepts, Colors, Animals, Birds, Size & Shape, Juvenile Fiction
ISBN:9781797200576
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$12.99
Starred Children's & Young Adult
Flora and Friends: Colors
by Molly Idle

Molly Idle continues her ingeniously whimsical board book series with Flora and Friends: Colors. After showcasing counting, opposites, and letters, Idle's fourth board book--part of the larger Flora family, which debuted with 2014 Caldecott Honor-winner Flora and the Flamingo--is spectacular, melding superb art, minimal text, and an interactive layout that teaches the youngest readers about the transformative magic of color.

Pink-cheeked, button-nosed Flora simply adores her avian friends, and her story begins with a single floofy chick. Both Flora's overalls and the bird are red, matching the word on the left page. Open the right flap, and the red bird joins its flock while a few feathered friends fly off to the next page, where Flora--now garbed in yellow--beckons toward a yellow bush with yellow friends. When the right panel is opened, the full sentence is revealed: "Red and Yellow make Orange" and, indeed, an orange bush with an orange flock welcomes both red and yellow residents. Flora's invitations continue as her overalls colorfully adapt: yellow meets blue, producing green; blue comes back to red, making purple; until all the colors meet in a massive gatefold that turns the book into a brilliant rainbow.

Idle cleverly elevates simplicity--paper, colors, pictures--into an exquisite learning experience, gifting the youngest audiences with both enlightenment and entertainment. Beyond mixing hues, this board book is also a wonderful reminder that blending different groups can signal new beginnings. And those curious penguins at book's end? They are both a callback (Flora and the Penguin) and hopefully a promise for more. --Terry Hong

Publisher:HarperCollins
Genre:Friendship, Values & Virtues, Emotions & Feelings, Family, Social Themes, Juvenile Fiction, Siblings
ISBN:9780063064553
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$19.99
Children's & Young Adult
The Verts: A Story of Introverts and Extroverts
by Ann Patchett, illust. by Robin Preiss Glasser

With The Verts: A Story of Introverts and Extroverts, their third picture-book collaboration following Lambslide and Escape Goat, adult-book titan Ann Patchett and Fancy Nancy illustrator Robin Preiss Glasser step away from the barnyard and into an apartment building, where two odd-couple siblings act out a most entertaining case study in opposites.

It's young Ivan's birthday, and he doesn't want so much as his photo taken to mark the occasion. (He consents to raising his foot from behind the couch for Grandmother Vert's camera, but that's it.) Ivan's older sister, Estie, has a different perspective on birthdays: she rounds up her human and animal neighbors to toast Ivan at the Verts' apartment. "I don't think Ivan wants a party," the siblings' mom tells Estie, but she's not having it. Ivan, meanwhile, comes up with ways to elude the spotlight and enjoy his big day. Grandmother Vert just doesn't get her grandchildren, prompting their dad to twice offer some variation on "Ivan is Ivan, and Estie is Estie"--in other words, "The kids are all right."

Glasser comes shining through with her flouncy and unmistakable ink, watercolor, gouache, and colored-pencil art, and she and Patchett give readers everything they need to be amused by Estie's blind spot as far as Ivan goes. Setting aside any inkling that a child Estie's age (she appears to be around seven) would have registered Ivan's introverted personality by now, The Verts is a rollicking be-yourself message book that welcomes readers of both "-vert"s to the party. --Nell Beram, freelance writer and YA author

Publisher:Tu Books
Genre:Asia, Family, Stories in Verse (see also Poetry), Juvenile Fiction, Places, Siblings
ISBN:9781643796420
Pub Date:September 2024
Price:$24.95
Children's & Young Adult
A Two-Placed Heart
by Doan Phuong Nguyen

Lyrical and honest, A Two-Placed Heart is a fictionalized novel-in-verse about author Doan Phuong Nguyen's childhood, offering a window into the life of a Vietnamese immigrant struggling to adapt to life in the United States.

It's 1996, and Bom and her family live in a double-wide trailer in Nashville. Bom's younger sister is forgetting their life in Vietnam, so Bom determinedly writes their family story. The 12-year-old sits down at her father's typewriter and poetry--about their family history, time in Vietnam, Bom's struggles with ESL classes and school bullies--pours out onto the pages. Are her words enough to help her sister remember?

Nguyen (Mèo and Bé) doesn't shy away from the harsher details of reality, laying bare histories of political upheaval, starvation, lost children, and death, including harrowing reflections about whether fish in a specific creek are "the ones who ate" her murdered grandfather. But Nguyen's love for her homeland and her (slightly fictionalized) family shine through every poem. Immersive details bring the book's Vietnam sections to life, with particular care given to mouthwatering descriptions of foods that are likely to leave readers pleasantly hungry. Though the narrative ends abruptly amid Bom's struggles with her heritage, an epilogue allows a slightly older Bom to embrace who and what she is: "Việt Kiều,/ refugees,/ immigrants,/ not fully Vietnamese or American,/ a blend of the two." Fans of novels-in-verse like Jane Kuo's In The Beautiful Country or Jasminne Mendez's Aniana del Mar Jumps In should add A Two-Placed Heart to their reading lists. --Nicole Brinkley, bookseller and writer

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