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Girls Gone Wrong

July 18, 2014

girls gone wrong

You spend a long time waiting for life to start—the past year or two filled with all these firsts, everything new and terrifying and significant—and then it does start and you realize it isn’t what you’d expected, or asked for. Megan Abbott excels at portraying the almost overwhelming brew of hormones and perfumes that comes off teenage girls. Where she deviates from more ... Read More...

3 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary life, Farrar Straus Giroux, Little Brown and Company, women

Young God: A Novel

June 13, 2014

young god

Within the first eight pages of Young God, thirteen-year-old Nikki jumps off a cliff into a pool of water below after being dared, flirts with her mother’s boyfriend, and then watches her mother die as she attempts the same jump from the cliff. By the end of the second chapter, she has had sex with the boyfriend, stolen his car and his bag of drugs, and moved back into her ... Read More...

4 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: contemporary fiction, debut, Farrar Straus Giroux

The Snow Queen

May 14, 2014

snow queen

  People are more than you think they are. And they’re less, as well. The trick lies in negotiating your way between the two. Michael Cunningham’s new novel, The Snow Queen: A Novel, has an opalescent blue-green cover that shimmers with the same light Barrett Meeks sees above his head one stormy winter night in Central Park. Is it real or a product of his imagination? That ... Read More...

7 Comments
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, contemporary fiction, fairy tales, Farrar Straus Giroux, literary

The Submission by Amy Waldman

July 13, 2012

submission

  An anonymous competition to design the 9/11 memorial in NYC. A panel of 13 judges including the widow of a man who died in one of the towers. A winner who turns out to be a Muslim. With these straightforward facts begins a book that is anything but straightforward: Amy Waldman's debut novel, The Submission. Even at first glance it's clear that the opportunity for ... Read More...

1 Comment
Filed Under: Book Reviews, Fiction Tagged: book clubs, contemporary life, debut, Farrar Straus Giroux, Manhattan, social issues

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