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Small Admissions: A Novel

January 3, 2017

small admissions

  Small Admissions is an example of a book whose writing goes the same way as its plot. Confused? I know, it’s weird, but what I mean is that it’s the story of a young woman named Kate whose life goes off the rails when she is unceremoniously dumped by a boyfriend. She basically checks out of life in the most stereotypical ways possible, lingering in an almost catatonic ... Read More...

10 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: Atria Books, coming-of-age, family, humor, Manhattan

The Mare: A Novel

December 21, 2016

mare

  The Mare by Mary Gaitskill begins when Velvet, a Dominican girl living in NYC, is eleven and ends when she thirteen, but her life experiences go far beyond her age. Through the Fresh Air Fund, she gets to go to upstate NY for a summer and stays with Ginger (“this blond lady…her face full of niceness with pain around the edges”) and her husband Paul. They live near a ... Read More...

12 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, coming-of-age, family, Vintage

Miss Jane: A Novel

December 12, 2016

miss jane

Jane Chisolm is a surprise baby, born to her parents long after her two older brothers have gone off to college and her sister is ten-years-old. But that’s not the only thing about Jane that’s unexpected. Her body didn’t fully develop in the womb and she is born with genital defects that rule out a normal woman’s life in rural Mississippi. It’s 1915, a time when no medical ... Read More...

4 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: family, historical fiction, literary, Southern life, W.W. Norton

Cruel Beautiful World

October 26, 2016

cruel beautiful

  Sometimes a book’s marketing can end up working against it. I found this to be the case with Caroline Leavitt’s Cruel Beautiful World. The synopsis and various blurbs referenced the Manson murders—a real piece of clickbait and yet, aside from being set in the summer of 1969 and the main protagonist’s worry about being left home alone the novel had nothing to do with ... Read More...

6 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: 1960s, Algonquin Books, coming-of-age, family, literary

The Mothers: A Novel

October 10, 2016

mothers

Upper Room Chapel is a church that is at the center of a Southern California black community in Brit Bennett’s debut novel, The Mothers. In the last year, it is where Nadia Turner’s mother was last seen alive before she killed herself, where her father, Robert goes every day to volunteer his truck in an effort to assuage his grief and where her friend Aubrey appeared, crying ... Read More...

6 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary life, debut, family, friendship, literary, Riverhead Books

Shelter in Place

September 28, 2016

shelter in place

  Alexander Maksik doesn’t waste any time getting to the meat of his new novel Shelter in Place.  The first chapter is a small paragraph introducing Joe March with three facts: his mother beat a man to death with a hammer, he fell in love with a woman named Tess and he battles a black weight that fills him, sometimes taking the shape of a large bird. Joe also lets us ... Read More...

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Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary fiction, Europa Editions, family, literary, mental health, Pacific Northwest

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