Tag Archives: Five Book Friday

Five Book Friday!

Happy Friday, dear readers, and Happy Birthday to long-time bibliophile, and father of some of the longest sentences in literature–Victor Hugo!

Víctor-HugoAside from being a great, empathetic, and engrossing author, Hugo was also a champion of human rights around the world. He spoke out in favor of freedom of the press and self-government for Poland, and, though he was elected to the French Parliament as a Conservative, he broke with his party to speak out on behalf of the poor, advocating for universal suffrage, free education for all children, and the abolition of the death penalty.  After being sent into exile by Napoleon III, he moved to Britain, where he not only helped spare the lives of six Irish Republicans who were on trial there, and also helped abolish the death penalty in Columbia and Portugal.  He waited until the death of Napoleon III to return to France in 1870, and remained there until his own passing in 1885 (at the age of 83).  When it was opened, it was discovered that his will contained only five sentences:

“I leave 50,000 francs to the poor. I want to be buried in their hearse.  I refuse [funeral] orations of all churches. I beg a prayer to all souls.  I believe in God.”

So, while you are toasting the literary and personal heroics of Victor Hugo today, why not check out of a few of his books–or perhaps these new works that made their way onto our shelves this week?

Five Books

3722317Native: Dispatches from an Israeli-Palestinian LifeThis collection of satirical articles written by Sayed Kashua for the the Israeli newspaper Haaretz are phenomenal for their bone-dry wit, droll observations, and also their utterly sympathetic humanity.   In documenting his own life, as well as the lives of his children, neighbors, and friends, Kashua is able to speak to a common humanity living in the midst of some often inhuman circumstances, and bring to light a place that many of us have heard of, but have seldom come to understand.  Publisher’s Weekly has hailed this collection as “Startling and insightful. . . . Kashua conveys devastating social critique through dry wit, precise metaphor, and seemingly innocent subjects. . . . Kashua’s subtly shaded, necessarily complex, and ultimately despairing account of the tensions within his homeland, ‘so beloved and so cursed,’ is bound to open the eyes and awaken the sympathies of a new swath of loyal readers.”

3698144And After Many Days: Nigerian author Jowhor Ile’s debut is both a personal story about one family’s loss and a broad, searching history of Nigeria’s past that works beautifully on both levels.  When seventeen-year-old Paul Utu disappeared from the busy town of Port Harcourt, in Nigeria, his family is not only forced to deal with the loss of one they dearly loved, but also to search their own past for answers.  Traveling to their ancestral village, the family, and, in particular, Ajie, the youngest of Paul’s siblings, relive the myths of their people, and the scars of past conflicts that still affect life in the present day.  Kirkus Review loved this book, saying “The story gracefully weaves back and forth in time from the siblings’ early childhood to the present day in their Port Harcourt, Nigeria, neighborhood, and suddenly, every little thing is imbued with deeper meaning, made fateful through retrospect…This engrossing novel, couched in poetic, evocative language, creates a suspenseful yet sophisticated narrative from the first page.”

3689904Free Men: Katy Simpson Smith’s latest novel is as much about a time and a place as it is about the four men who inhabit its pages, and her blend of historic detail and narrative insight have delighted critics and readers alike.  Set in the American South in 1788, this novel tells the story of Cat, a white man from South Carolina, Bob, a black man on the run, and Istillicha, who has been forced out of his Creek town’s leadership, who meet in the woods of Alabama, each on their own quest.  Within a few days, the men commit a murder that brings the force of the law on their heels in the person of a French tracker named Le Clerc, who is as intrigued by these three unlikely comrades as he is repulsed by their actions.  Publisher’s Weekly calls this searching novel for its willingness to probe “connection and isolation, forgiveness and guilt…this novel evokes the complexity of a fledgling America in precise, poetic language…it is rich with insights about history and the human heart.”

3690345Ginny Gall: Charlie Smith’s work also deals with race, murder, and the American South, but this time, the setting is the Great Depression, and the heo is Delvin Walker, a young man abandoned by his mother after she murders a white man.  As racial tensions around him escalate, Delvin realizes that to survive, he has to flee, and takes to riding the rails across the United States, until another murder pulls him into the prison system himself, falsely accused of the murder of two white girls along with several other young black men.  But Delvin is a man whose strength only grows through adversity, making this novel a fascinating, grim, and powerful tale that is creating quite a buzz.  The New York Times Book Review wrote that this book is “An intricate examination of the coming-of-age of a young black man caught in the cross hairs of American racial history… A story that is equal parts-and often simultaneously-moving and harrowing… The quotidian country world is full of magic in [Smith’s] hands.”

3677777The Plague of Thieves Affair: This fourth entry in Marcia Muller’s and Bill Pronzini’s historical detective series set in late 19th century San Francisco, and  featuring Sabina Carpenter and John Quincannon sees the two detectives facing their most quizzical case yet: Sherlock Holmes–or, rather, the man who is pretending to be him, and who insists on meddling (albeit helpfully meddling) in their cases.  While Sabrina begins a hunt for this Holmes’ real identity, John finds himself on a case that will put his reputation on the line, as several brewmasters are found drowned in their own vats of beer.  This story is more like two novellas, but both author’s bring such a sense of fun and professional acumen to their work to keep readers enthralled.  The San Francisco Chronicle has loved this series thus far, saying “Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini have brought together the distinctive personalities and differing investigative styles of their fictional snoops. The result is a team that is as memorable as Nick and Nora Charles…. When they combine forces, they double our pleasure.”

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!

 

 

Five Book Friday!


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From the Jefferson County Public Library

Guess what?  It’s still February.

And, to add insult to injury, the Valentine’s Day Candy is gone.

However, the Cadbury Eggs have arrived, and many a Library Blog Keeper runs on Cadbury Eggs, so things aren’t all that bad, I suppose…

But for those of you looking for a reason to celebrate this month, here are some obscure, but fun (and often delicious) holidays to observe in the coming weeks:

February 21: National Sticky Bun Day
No one knows who originally created this swirly treat, but they first arrived in this country along with German immigrants, who called the treat schnecken.  

February 22: National Cook A Sweet Potato Day
I’m not making this up.  The sweet potato is loaded with Vitamins A, C, and B-6 (which is good for your brain), as well as magnesium, and is the state vegetable of North Carolina.

February 26: National Tell A Fairy Tale Day
How cool is this day?!  I have a feeling that Lady Pole and I will have great fun celebrating, and here are some ideas for your celebration, courtesy of Grammarly.

February 28: National Chocolate Souffle Day
Here are some ideas for your celebration of this day.  We here at the Library are willing to taste-test your creation–as an act of public service.  Obviously.

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Did you also know that February is Library Lovers Month, too?
You can show your support for this holiday by visiting your local library–and maybe even checking out some books!  Here are some ideas to get you started, chosen from the books that have appeared on our shelves this week:

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3690159The Quality of SilenceIn this beautifully imagined and viscerally real novel, Rosamund Lupton tells the story of astrophysicist Yasmin, who arrives in the remote wilds of Alaska, along with her deaf daughter, Ruby, to be told that her husband Matt is dead.  Yasmin refuses to accept this information on blind-faith, however, and sets off into a growing storm, and into the unforgiving wilderness with Ruby to find answers…but it isn’t long before Yasmin beings to realize that someone else in out in the storm with them…and that turning back could cost them both their lives.  Lupton’s story-telling skills are very well known, and it is that talent that makes this book something more than a thriller.  As The Guardian observes, “The Quality of Silence is an elegant and icily unique thriller: you won’t read anything like it this year. I’ll bet it leaves you (like me) longing for a trip to Alaska, even if you don’t plan on swiping a truck once you’re there.”

3660905The Ex-Patriates: Janet Y.K. Lee earned a legion of fans with her novel The Piano Teacher, so the arrival of this new work is sure to bring joy to many hearts.  Here, Lee tells the intertwined stories of three American women living within the small ex-pat community in Hong Kong.  Each has a life before them, but secrets, doubts, and fears behind them, which Lee describes with poignant insight.  But it is how these women’s lives collide, and the results of their meeting that will change each of their paths forever…for better or for worse.  This is a book that manages to be both a cultural commentary and a personal journey, and Lee’s ability to navigate the different perspectives within her work is earning rave reviews.  The Christian Science Monitor hails “At turns illuminating, entertaining, cringe-inducing, piercing . . . With meticulous details and nuanced observations, Lee creates an exquisite novel of everyday lives in extraordinary circumstances. . . . How Lee’s triumvirate reacts, copes, and ventures forth (or not) proves to be a stupendous feat of magnetic, transporting storytelling. . . . Mark my words: The Expatriates will appear repeatedly on year-end award nominations and all the ‘best of’ compilations.”

3703972Lovecraft Country: “Lovecraft Country” has become a literary term that describes the somewhat bleak, mysterious New England landscapes that Lovecraft described so well in his stories, but Matt Ruff uses this term as a way to get under the skin of some of the darker, much less savory aspects of Lovecraft’s character….Frankly put, Lovecraft was a horrific racist–even by the standards of his own time he was considered rather repugnant (even by his friends), and it’s created a great deal of tension amongst many readers.  Ruff bashes through that tension with a book about a young African-American army veteran named Atticus Turner, who travels to “Lovecraft Country” in a search for his missing father along with his uncle George, the author of The Safe Negro Travel Guide–a real book that was intended to offer traveling African Americans help in navigating Jim Crow America.  Along the way, they encounter monsters aplenty, of both the mythical and all too human variety in a timely and very brave work that Booklist calls “Nonstop adventure that includes time-shifting, shape-shifting, and Lovecraft-like horrors … Ruff…vividly portrays racism as a horror worse than anything conceived by Lovecraft in this provocative, chimerical novel.”

3700424The Immortals: The multi-talented Jordanna Max Brodsky has launched a new urban fantasy series set in Manhattan, and featuring all the Gods of Olympus–though they currently wear the faces of ordinary New Yorkers.  But when the solitary young Selene DiSilva discovers a murdered woman washed ashore and wreathed in laurel, a rage she has held in check for centuries begins to rise, as does the memory of a promise she made when her name was Artemis…This book, and Brodsky’s inventive story-telling, is winning a good deal of attention, with Publisher’s Weekly giving it a star review and cheering, that it “Plays with more modern mythology, employing New York’s own secret places and storied history to great effect. This intelligent, provocative fantasy breathes exciting new life into old, familiar tales.”

 

3677997Citrus: If there is anything that tastes like summer and sunshine, it is citrus.  There is, perhaps, nothing better for the winter doldrums than making the food in this book…and then sharing it with your local Library Staff.

 

 

Until next week, Beloved Patrons–happy reading!

Five Book Friday!

So it’s really cold out there today.  Like, record-breaking, it-hasn’t-been-this-cold-on-this-day-in-over-a-century cold out there.  Do you know what that means?

Buzzfeed
Buzzfeed

 

According to the entry in Wikipedia, blanket forts are “a staple of early childhood entertainment”, however, we here at the Library know that blanket forts are for everyone, and blanket forts are for always.  In case you need some inspiration, there are a number helpful hints here, though we recommend bringing your books into the fort, rather than using them as counterweights.  Books work much better as books.

And speaking of books….why not pick up a few books from the library to bring into your fort?  Here are five new titles that have graced our shelves this week that would love to come and visit:

3699037My American Duchess: There are very few writers, especially romance writers, whose every release is a sure-fire success, but Eloisa James is absolutely one of them.  Instead of building a story around a tragic event, or a dark, traumatic past, or a lurking secret, she tells stories about real, honest, troubled, lovely, loveable people who are empathetic and whose relationships are wholly believable; in sort, she writes real, honest-to-goodness love stories that are just irresistible.  In this newest release, Merry Pelford arrived in London with two failed engagements in her past, but she has vowed that her third engagement will be a success, no matter what.  And things seem to be going along swimmingly–until she meets the Duke of Trent.  Trent could very well be everything that Merry wants in a man…if she weren’t already engaged to his brother.  This trope is a tricky one, but James pulls it off in a story that is light, wise, and perfectly charming.  RT Book Reviews agrees, cheering “Smart heroines, sensual heroes, witty repartee and a penchant for delicious romance have made James a fan favorite … readers will be hooked from beginning to end.”

3690168Youngblood: Non-fiction writer Matt Gallagher’s first novel begins as the American Army is about to withdraw from Iraq, but newly-minted lieutenant Jack Porter can’t seem to find any reason to celebrate.  A series of backhand deals and schemes have made this withdrawal possible, and he knows that chaos still looms just around the corner.  But even as the arrival of a new, brutal commanding officer unleashes Jack’s worst fears, he finds himself growing increasingly intrigued by a tale of a lost American soldier, and Rana, a local sheikhs’ daughter, a story that could bring down Jack’s new commander–or lead to his own destruction.  But as his fate grows intertwined with Rana’s, Jack realizes that the truth may be worth any price.  This book has been getting a good deal of attention, partly because it manages to tell a kind of parable out of such hard and true facts, and partly because of Gallagher’s intense humanity in depicting some of humanity’s greatest shortcomings.  Kirkus gave this book a starred review, calling it, “A complex tale about the Iraq War, intrigue, love, and survival…Gallagher subtly weaves throughout this excellent, brutal tale intrigue, a mystery, and two compelling love stories… A fresh twist on the Iraq War novel adds depth to this burgeoning genre.”

3686865The Killing Forest: Sara Blaedel’s work has flown off the shelves in her native Denmark, and her series featuring DI Louise Rick has grown into an internationally-bestselling one, so now seems like a perfect time to jump on the bandwagon!  In this eighth series installment, Louise Rick has returned to work at the Special Search Agency, an elite unit of the National Police Department, and is quickly assigned the case of a 15-year-old boy who disappeared the previous week–but Louise soon realizes that this new case dovetails with her own personal investigation into her long-ago boyfriend’s death.  But the farther she digs into the past, and re-enters the complex world of her hometown, the more she realizes that some secrets are better left uncovered, and some truths are too dark for the light of day. Booklist loves Blaedel’s work, and calls this book “Another suspenseful, skillfully wrought entry from Denmark’s Queen of Crime.”

3693317 (1)Shylock is My Name: Howard Jacobson takes one of Shakespeare’s most memorable characters from out of the pages of The Merchant of Venice, and re-imagines him in the present day, as an art dealer named Simon Strulovitch.  While remaining faithful to the basic premise that Shakespeare set out, Jacobson uses Shylock’s feelings of betrayal, his anger, and his shocking bargain (in the original, a pound of flesh, but Jacobson gets a bit more creative….) to explore questions about Jewish and English culture that makes this story feel wholly original.  Critics in the UK are going wild over this book, and the Independent has declared it “Supremely stylish, probing and unsettling…This Shylock is a sympathetic character in his private life…In his dialogues with Strulovitch he is both savagely funny and intellectually searching, both wise and sophistical, intimate and coldly controlling… Jacobson’s writing is virtuoso. He is a master of shifting tones, from the satirical to the serious. His prose has the sort of elastic precision you only get from a writer who is truly in command.”

3694314In Europe’s Shadow: Two Cold Wars and a Thirty-Year Journey Through Romania and BeyondJournalist Robert Kaplan has made his career by writing about the Balkans, and all of his books are beautifully sympathetic and insightful, offering a fascinating blend of history and current events that will make you feel like you’ve lived there with him for some time.  In this newest release, he focuses on Romania, a country that exists somewhere between the East and the West, a place that experienced some of the worst effects of Communism, that is now, somehow, transforming itself into a place for Western tastes and tourism.  Kaplan makes the generations of history that have formed Romania’s ambiguous relationship with Europe, and it’s very tense, storied experience with Russia clear, accessible, and deeply empathetic, and may just make you want to back your own bags for a visit.  The New York Times Book Review seems to agree, calling this work a “haunting yet ultimately optimistic examination of the human condition as found in Romania . . . Kaplan’s account of the centuries leading up to the most turbulent of all—the twentieth—is both sweeping and replete with alluring detail.”

Until next week, beloved patrons, keep warm and happy reading!  If anyone needs me, I’ll be in my blanket fort….

Five Book Friday!

I had an enormous amount of fun putting together a list of things to make you smile in our last Five Book Friday.  So I’m doing it again, because it’s snowy and February-ish, and…why not?

1) Heart and Brain Dealing With Snow:

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http://theawkwardyeti.com/comic/snow/

 

2) The Calming Manatee.  Go to calmingmanatee.com for some more words of wisdom:

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3) This ridiculously beautiful poem by Nabokov…about the refrigerator making noise in the middle of the night, which contains the following lines: 

a German has proved that the snowflakes we see
are the germ cells of stars and the sea life to be…

4) A quote from one of my favorite human beings, Nikola Tesla:

TeslathinkerOf all things I liked books best.

5) New Books!  Here are five new books that have scampered onto our shelves this week.  Enjoy!

3698394Travelers RestA genre-bending haunted house story, Keith Lee Morris’ third novel is part family saga, part science-fiction, and part horror, all set in the confines of one very weird Idaho town.  While taking their troubled Uncle Robbie home from yet another stint in rehab, the Addison family find themselves caught in a freak blizzard, and are forced to stop in the derelict town of Good Night, Idaho, and its forlorn hotel, Travelers Rest.  But inside the hotel, it seems that the laws of physics hold no sway, and the town itself is full of secrets.  Will the Addisons be able to find their way home, and together, or will they become one of the ghastly souvenirs of Good Night?  Publisher’s Weekly gave this one a starred review, saying “Expertly refurbishing an old structure, this haunted-hotel novel generates some genuine chills . . . Morris handles the spooky materials deftly, but his writing is what makes the story really scary: quiet and languorous, sweeping steadily and inexorably along like a curtain of drifting snow identified too late as an avalanche.”

3705716Jane and the Waterloo Map:  Fans of Stephanie Barron’s Jane Austen mysteries will be delighted to hear that her thirteenth tale is ready for circulation today–and it is high time that new readers discover this clever series.  Written in the form of the great Miss Austen’s diaries, this adventure sees Jane finishing the proofs for Emma, while staying at the home of her beloved brother, Henry.  While touring Buckingham Palace, Jane stumbles upon a dying man whose last words are “Waterloo Map”–and the stage is set for an investigation that delighted the readers at Library Journal, who noted “Barron deftly imitates Austen’s voice, wit, and occasional melancholy while spinning a well-researched plot that will please historical mystery readers and Janeites everywhere. Jane Austen died two years after the events of Waterloo; one hopes that Barron conjures a few more adventures for her beloved protagonist before historical fact suspends her fiction.”

3700758The Firebrand and the First Lady: This book, a ground-breaking work that details the friendship between Eleanor Roosevelt (a woman whose lineage allowed her into the Daughters of the American Revolution) and a writer-activist (whose grandfather was a slave), took Patricia Bell-Smith twenty years to research and write, but its very clear that the results are worth the lifetime of effort.  Pauli Murray met the Eleanor Roosevelt in 1933, at the housing camp where Murray was living, but it was the letter she wrote five years later, protesting racial segregation in the American South after she was denied admission to University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (a school that prided itself on its socially-progressive policies) because of her race that brought the two women together.  Murray would go on to co-found the National Organization for Women, and become the first African-American Episcopalian Priest, while Eleanor Roosevelt would go on to become the first chair of the UN Council on Human Rights, but this book shines a light on their personal relationship, and how it changed both their lives.  Booklist gave the book a starred review, hailing it as a “sharply detailed and profoundly illuminating . . . Bell-Scott’s groundbreaking portrait of these two tireless and innovative champions of human dignity adds an essential and edifying facet to American history.”

3690143The High Mountains of PortugalIt’s been fifteen years since Yann Martel published The Life of Pi, but, all signs point to the fact that this second novel was well worth the wait.  The setting this time is Lisbon, in 1904, and our hero is Tomás, who discovers an old journal that may very well help re-write history, if he can track down the artifact described within its pages.  While Tomás sets off in one of the first automobiles ever made, the story speeds ahead fifty years to a grieving Canadian diplomat, who has arrived in Portugal following the death of his beloved wife.  You’ll have to check out the book itself to understand how the two narratives are linked, and what magic tricks Martel will pull off in the midst of it all, but the Wahington Post has no qualms in ordering everyone to ““Pack your bag…Yann Martel is taking us on another long journey….but the itinerary in this imaginative new book is entirely fresh. . . . Martel’s writing has never been more charming, a rich mixture of sweetness that’s not cloying and tragedy that’s not melodramatic. . . . The High Mountains of Portugal attains an altitude from which we can see something quietly miraculous.”

3660909Coconut CowboyTim Dorsey’s beloved Serge Storm is back in this wild road trip across the Florida panhandle in a search for the American Dream, as he attempted to finish the journey begun by his freewheeling heroes, Captain America and Billy, which was cut short after their murder.  Along with his side-kick, the drug-riddled Coleman, trivia-nerd and Florida aficionado Serge are on the road again in a tale full of their hallmark weirdness and oddly touching friendship.  The Tampa Bay Times raved about this latest installment, saying “The Serge books are often hilarious, but there’s always something serious underpinning the antics”, while the Providence Journal cheered that this is “one of his funniest and most deftly plotted yet.”

Five Book Friday!

In 2005, Cliff Arnall, a former lecturer at Cardiff University, was commissioned by a U.K. travel agency to determine the most depressing day of the year in order to best a market winter vacations.  It turns out, according to his not-so-very scientific study, that the third Monday in January is “Blue Monday”, the most depressing day of the year.

And since this week began with Blue Monday, I thought the best way to introduce today’s list of books was with a list of things to make you smile a bit.  So, without any further ado…..

1) Peabody the Owl, taking a bath.  And, by the way…Library Trustees?  Could we please have a Library Owl named Peabody?  Please?

http://youtu.be/8bFmwp-p1Sc

2)  Buzzfeed’s list of “The 27 Most Exciting Books Coming In 2016”, which is obviously subjective, but still gives you plenty of things to look forward to this year.

3) This stunningly beautiful poem about not giving up hope.

4) This plush piece of pizza that looks super-happy to see you:il_570xN.720325247_iaa5

And, finally….

5) A list of some new books to make your weekend a little more fun:

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3698393The Rogue Not Taken: Romance author extraordinaire Sarah MacLean is back with a new series that is guaranteed to delight her fans, and perfect for new comers.  This first Scandal and Scoundrels book features Sophie, a heroine who is a magnet for scandal–she’s already landed her philandering brother-in-law in a fishpond, and is desperate to find a new start in London.  But the carriage in which she’s stowed away isn’t empty.  It’s full of trouble–and Kingscote, “King,” the Marquess of Eversley.  Their chemistry is a recipe for disaster…but in the close confines of their carriage, Sophie and King might just find that opposites attract…MacLean’s books are good for whatever ails you, and, as RT Book Reviews said of this monumental success, “MacLean has the magic touch… This lovely story is perfect in so many ways; it’s funny, with rapier wit, sweet and super-sexy, one of those stories you’ll keep close to your heart.”

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The Old Farmer’s Almanac 2016: Who is the Old Farmer?  No one is quite sure.  In fact, no one is quite sure how the good people at the Old Farmer’s Almanac make their predictions.  According to their website, “We derive our weather forecasts from a secret formula that was devised by the founder of this Almanac, Robert B. Thomas, in 1792. Thomas believed that weather on Earth was influenced by sunspots, which are magnetic storms on the surface of the Sun.  Notes about that formula are locked in a black box in our offices in Dublin, New Hampshire.”  Though these predictions are now enhanced with state-of-the-art magic weather wands, the Old Farmer is still a joy to read for the snippets of poetry, growing advice, and weather lore included in it, along with weather predictions, tide charts, and growing seasons.

3660916EleanorOn the surface, Jason Gurley’s newest release is a tale about a girl who attempts to heal her family after her twin sister, Esme, dies in a tragic accident.  But it is also so very much more than that.  Because in the course of her struggle, Eleanor finds herself whisked off into another reality, and forced to contend with the real cost of grief and the price she will have to pay to appease it.  A fascinating genre-mash up that is part surrealist fiction, part science fiction, part tragedy, and part coming-of-age story, this book was originally self-published, but has been reworked and re-edited into this current edition.  The San Francisco Book Review cheers, “Jason Gurley weaves a gorgeous story…that grabs a hold and won’t let go…As with most of Gurley’s work, this novel is the very best kind of mash-up between the fantastic and the literary. It’s a smart, beautiful story with vivid images and polished prose, the kind of novel you can read over again and will want to recommend to others.”

3706550American HousewifeHelen Ellis is a master of black comedy, and this collection of short stories is being hailed by all and sundry as one of the funniest books of the year.  Though, on the surface, the women of American Housewife look the part, with their strings of pearls, their perfectly coiffed hair, and their perfect casserole recipes, beneath the surface, they are just as vicious, snide, snarky, and brutal as the rest of us.  They just do it with better style.  Vogue summed up this quirky, madcap collection thusly: “Delightful in its originality and eerie, almost demented, humor… Ellis’s stories start in a place that’s quite familiar—the domestic sphere of New York City’s ritzy Upper East Side, where the author also resides—and end in a place that’s decidedly not. Her characters are stealthily complex, their perfectly composed, well-maintained exteriors the ideal cover for inner lives that seethe with pathos and ambition.”

3703503MapleOk, I admit it.  This book isn’t strictly “new”.  But it’s full of 100 recipes that use maple syrup, and maple syrup is a perfect food.  Yay maple syrup!  (Also: if anyone needs a taste-tester for the recipes in this book, you know whom to call……)

Five Book Friday!

As promised, dear readers, a number of new books have made it on to our shelves this week–nearly all of them fiction.  January is a bit of a slow month for publishing (every one is still recovering from the holidays, businesses and people alike), so what does come out this time of year tends to be the really interesting stuff, the stuff that will made the hard-core readers sit up and take notice (ahem…hello.)  So it is my sincere hope that these books give you a little bit of an escape from the chill and the gloom of January, and keep your imagination racing!

…Also, apparently it’s National Hot Tea Month.  Celebrate appropriately.

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3644851The Lady’s Command: Perennial fan-favorite Stephanie Laurens launches a new series, called The Adeventurers Quartet, with this tale of a marriage that it thoroughly unconventional…because it is emphatically a marriage of equals.  When Captain Declan Frobisher first met Lady Edwina Delbraith, he knew that she was the woman for him…and, happily, Edwina seemed just as sure as Declan.  But though Edwina may look like a delicate angel, she is determined to be Declan’s partner in all things.  And if that means sailing with him to West Africa on a secret mission, then so be it.  Booklist loved this one, saying “Laurens launches her new Adventurers Quartet on a high note, with a fast-paced tale that is jam-packed with dangerous intrigue and red-hot passion…..Readers looking for something a little bit different than the usual Regency historical will be delighted with the exotic African setting of the book as well as its swashbuckling plot…”

3710216The CovenantIn this second adventure for former Memphis police detective Jackie Lyons, Jeff Crook provides another atmospheric mystery full of twists, turns..and a little ghostly mischief.  There is little reason to think that Sam Loftin, Jackie Lyons’ father, didn’t commit suicide–except for the fact that Jackie witnessed his ghost playing out the last moments of his life, and there is definitely indication of foul play.  But as her investigations goes deeper, she finds herself drawn into a local feud between the moneyed suburbanites and a charismatic preacher tended to the younger generation, and getting closer and closer to a secret that has been guarded by a secret society for generations… Publisher’s Weekly gave this book a starred review, hailing, “Jackie is a compellingly flawed lead, and Crook convincingly incorporates the supernatural into a nicely hard-edged noir.”

Fallen Land3675024Taylor Brown’s historical novel is being cheered as something of a marvel.  Though set in the wake of the Civil War, this book is about a personal battle, a tale of love and loyalty set amidst the chaos of the post-war South, both small in scale and huge in scope.  When Callum, a seasoned and skilled horse-thief, discovers orphaned Ava hiding in the crumbling remains of her family’s house, he determined to bring her to safety.  Their trek will take them through the shattered beauty of the South, on the run from slave hunters and marauders, and bring them face to face with the remarkable survivors of the war, until their journey finally intersects with Sherman’s cataclysmic March to the Sea.  Kirkus reviewed this book with gusto, saying, “Like McCarthy’s Border Trilogy or Frazier’s Cold Mountain, this is American literature at its best, full of art and beauty and the exploration of all that is good and bad in the human spirit.”

3660913Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a FistSunil Yapa’s debut novel, set during the 1999 WTO protests in Seattle, brings together a cast of seven unlikely characters in a tale that puts readers directly in the middle of the hope, confusion, rage, and despair that ruled the streets during those historic days.  Defiant and scrappy, young Victor decides to take part in the 50,000 strong protests in Seattle before leaving for good.  But what began as a final fling in his hometown soon becomes an epic, life-changing afternoon that will force Victor, and those close to him and around him, to think long and hard about their lives, their futures, and make the achingly impossible choice between what might be, and what should be.  The Washington Post cheers that this is “A fantastic debut novel…. What is so enthralling about this novel is its syncopated riff of empathy as the perspective jumps around these participants–some peaceful, some violent, some determined, some incredulous… Yapa creates a fluid sense of the riot as it washes over the city. Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist ultimately does for WTO protests what Norman Mailer’s Armies of the Night did for the 1967 March on the Pentagon, gathering that confrontation in competing visions of what happened and what it meant.”

3709419This Census-TakerA new book by China Miéville is always a cause for celebration, and while this book isn’t quite as outlandish as his earlier works, it is just as atmospheric, unsettling, and engrossing as anything he has written to date.  Set in a remote hilltop home in a remote and strange city, a young boy witnesses a horror will change his life.  But his attempts to escape his home fail, and he soon finds himself trapped in the house with his increasingly deranged parent, dreaming of the lives the far-off children below might be living.   When a stranger comes knocking on the door, the boy can only hope for deliverance–but who is this census-taker, and what is it he truly wants?  RT Book Reviews certainly enjoyed this latest offering, saying, “The success of Miéville’s novella lies in its chillingly stark, strange atmosphere, which is alive with eerie menace and a haunting beauty that inevitably pulls readers in, even as the shifts in time and perspective obscure the full truth of the narrative. The result is something like the memory of a nightmare — at once realistic and fantastically surreal — that is bizarre, compelling and unnerving all at once.”

 

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!

Five Book Friday!

Book Sandwich
A note: Eating a sandwich while reading a book is great. Eating a book sandwich is not a good idea.

 

A New Year, a new Five Book Friday, in which we introduce you to some of the new books that have found their way on to our shelves this week.  Because the end of December and the first week in January is so flat-out insane, the book publishing industry as a whole takes a wee bit of a break during this time…however, they compensate by bringing out a whole slew of new books in January and February, so we are all looking forward to some of the super-terrific books slated to arrive shortly.  If you’re interested in seeing some, here is a list to get you in the bookish spirit, courtesy of the lovely Lady Pole!

And now, without further ado, we present our first Five Book Friday of 2016 for you to, ahem, devour…

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3698391The Match of the CenturyCathy Maxwell is one of the stars of historical romance, and this new series opener has been garnered rave reviews from fans and critics alike.  Some may think Elin Morris lucky because she doesn’t have to hunt for a husband–she’s been engaged since she was born–but Elin knows differently.  Because she’s in love with her fiance’s brother, Ben.  Even though duty and loyalty state that Ben must forget the woman who stole his heart so many years ago, he can’t seem to drive Elin, or his memories of her, away.  And when Elin finds herself in danger, Ben resolves to do anything to keep her safe–even if it means losing her forever.  RT Book Reviews said of this new release, “Maxwell infuses the first of her new series with great depth of emotion. Readers will experience her characters’ anger, frustration, sadness and joy, and they’ll sigh with satisfaction at this master storyteller’s ability to create a delightful, emotional read.”

37007992016 Pushcart Prize XL : Best of the Small PressesThe Pushcart Prize has become an institution in American literature, celebrating small presses and the authors who keep them running, and this 40th Anniversary Collection, with 65 essays, poems, and stories from around the country, is being hailed as their best collection to date.  Editor Bill Henderson (who created the Pushcart Prize, and still keeps it running today) and over 200 contributing editors are to thank, and, of the contents, Booklist has declared it, ““One of the zestiest and most impressive installments in Pushcart’s proud reign as the most bountiful and exciting of literary harvests.”

3212540My Brilliant FriendElena Ferrente’s Neapolitan Novels have been hailed as the some of the best books of the year–collectively and individually, with each book being hailed as a triumph.  This book begins the tale of two friends, Elena and Lila, focusing on their childhood and adolescence in 1950’s Naples.  With nothing to reuly on but each other, Elena and Lila begin to develop into brilliant, complex women, at once dependent on each other, and wholly independent spirits.  The New York Times Book Review has declared, “Elena Ferrante is one of the great novelists of our time . . . In these bold, gorgeous, relentless novels, Ferrante traces the deep connections between the political and the domestic. This is a new version of the way we live now — one we need, one told brilliantly, by a woman.”  Thankfully, we now have each of the four novels in this much-celebrated series for your enjoyment.

3651513Forty Thieves: Thomas Perry’s latest stand-alone novel features the husband and wife detective team of Sid and Ronnie Abel, both retired from the LAPD, who are teamed up with another husband and wife–of trained assassins, however.  Together, they are ordered to do damage control on the murder of a local research scientist, whose death may be a cover for some shocking and deadly secrets.  This book certainly looks wholly original, and Booklist gave it a star review, saying “Along the way to a knockout finale . . . Perry offers a master class in narrative sleight of hand . . . . Perry’s books, whether series or stand-alone, absolutely resist easy categorization, thoroughly melding character and plot, light and dark, and totally immersing the reader in the irresistible narrative.”

3680617City of Thorns: Nine Lives in the World’s Largest Refugee Camp: The makeshift city of Dadaab, in the hostile desert of northern Kenya, is a place where building are made of mud and plastic, the inhabitants live on rations and luck, since nothing will grow there but thorns, and where whole lives are lived entirely in limbo.  Human Rights Watch researcher Ben Rawlence spent four years getting to know the refugees at Dadaab, from former child soldiers to peddlers, to schoolchildren, and tells their life stories in this heart-wrenching, and vitally necessary book.  Writers and readers around the world are hailing this book as a tour de force of journalistic writing, and Booklist praises, “That Rawlence has managed to capture so much of this unlikely city’s chaos and confusion in a narrative that is very nearly impossible to put down is an achievement in reportage that few have matched. Dadaab’s half a million residents could not have asked for a better champion…and while the facts and figures he shares are stunning, it is the nine individuals whose stories he focuses on who give the book its hearT.”

 

Until next week, beloved patrons–Happy Reading!