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The Transition by Luke Kennard

January 15, 2018

transition

What if you had broken the law and rather than being sent to prison you could opt into a program that would make you a better person? The upside is it’s not prison, you get to keep your job, you have no living expenses, and when you’re finished after six months you’ll be provided with a down payment on a new home and will be on your way to personal and profession success. The ... Read More...

9 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary life, debut, Farrar Straus Giroux, marriage

The Immortalists

January 10, 2018

immortalists

Chloe Benjamin swings for the fences with the concept of her new novel: how would you live your life if you knew the date of your death? The Immortalists is about four siblings: Varya, Daniel, Klara, and Simon, who visit a psychic when they are children and are, one by one, in private, told the day they’re going to die. They never share these dates with each other, but the ... Read More...

14 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 1980s, book clubs, family saga, Putnam

The Hate U Give

January 8, 2018

hate

On the surface Starr Carter is a normal sixteen-year-old girl. But look closely and you’ll see a young woman struggling to make it in two very different worlds. Her home is a poor, largely black neighborhood and both her parents work, but she goes to school at a private school where she is one of only a few black students and she has a white boyfriend. While her neighborhood ... Read More...

4 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, coming-of-age, HarperCollins, racism, social issues, young adult

Enchantress of Numbers

December 26, 2017

enchantress

  What kind of child might you get if you matched a world-famous poet known for his outrageous lifestyle and a genteel woman with a penchant for knowledge and restraint? If it was the early 1800s in England then you’d get Augusta Ada Byron, the only legitimate heir of Lord George Gordon Byron. Enchantress of Numbers is Jennifer Chiavarini’s new novel about Ada’s life—a ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 19th century, Dutton, historical fiction, women

Mrs. Osmond by John Banville

December 15, 2017

osmond

  “You seem to me, Miss Archer, a person possessed of a large potential; do be careful not to underspend your resource.” I read Henry James’s Portrait of Lady a long time ago, but still remember how bad I felt for its heroine, Isabel Archer. She’s a young American who goes to England and comes into a small fortune, is taken in by a worldly older woman who educates ... Read More...

4 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: classics, historical fiction, Knopf, literary, marriage, women

A Star Called Henry

December 11, 2017

star

  There may be a lot about the reality of historical Ireland that I don’t like (being a woman and all), but fictionally, male Irish authors are some of the most lyrically gifted I’ve ever read. My longtime favorite was William Trevor (The Story of Lucy Gault, Death in Summer) and then this fall I added John Boyne (The Heart’s Invisible Furies, The Boy in the Striped ... Read More...

4 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 20th century, childhood, historical fiction, Ireland, Viking

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