Five Book Friday!

Remember when everyone was thinking of heading to the beach in February, dear readers?  Well, as we all knew, here we are in March paying for the unseasonable warmth with…unseasonable cold.  March, it truly seems, has trotted in like the proverbial lion…

BRITON RIVIÈRE, UNA AND LION

…But is that what that phrase actually means?  A few years ago, The Paris Review published a fascinating piece on the phrase “in like a lion, out like a lamb”, trying to conclude the origin of the phrase in an article that is both informative and delightfully quirky.  I’ll just leave it here for you to check out.

And if you’re looking for things to keep you busy this chilly weekend, here are a selection of the super-terrific books that have waltzed their way onto our shelves this week, and are very eager to make your acquaintance!  Though the summer thrillers are already making their appearance, they are also perfectly suitable for helping you through a lion-like March just fine:


The Girl Before
Oh hey, look!  It’s another book with “Girl” in the title.   *Sigh*.  Anyways, despite my overwhelming frustration with this trend, there’s no arguing that J.P. Delaney’s is getting everyone very excited–critics, authors, and reviewers alike are raving, and Ron Howard has already started adapting it for film.  The story centers around two women who, it would seem, have found the perfect home; an architectural marvel; a masterpiece in design.  However, enigmatic architect who designed the house retains full control: no books, no throw pillows, no photos or clutter or personal effects of any kind. The space is intended to transform its occupant—and it does..  But before they move in, they are both confronted with an odd request….Please make a list of every possession you consider essential to your life.  For Emma, who is still coping with the after-effects of a traumatic break-in, this is the first place that feels safe.  For Jane, who is dealing with a painful tragedy, the place (and its creator) are a haven and a welcome distraction.  Until Jane learns about the girl before her, and her untimely end.  And as she tries to uncover the truth about Emma, she finds herself caught in the same situation, encountering the same people–and sharing the same fate?  This is a twisty, turny, psychological novel that is drawing comparisons to Gillian Flynn and Paula Hawkins, with the USA Today gleefully commenting that “Delaney has created a genuinely eerie, fascinating setting in One Folgate Street. . . . The novel’s structure, volleying back and forth as first Emma and then Jane begin to question their improbable luck, is beautifully handled. The pages fly.”

Her Every FearAnd while we’re on the topic of houses being scary, Peter Swanson’s newest book features a Boston house doing it’s best to freak us all out, and the woman who has to face down the truth these walls conceal.  Kate Priddy has always been anxious and perhaps a bit obsessive–traits that grow nearly crippling after an ex-boyfriend kidnaps and nearly kills her. When Corbin Dell, a distant cousin in Boston, suggests the two temporarily swap apartments, Kate, now an art student in London, leaps at the idea, hoping that a change of scene will help her get a grip on her life again.  But soon after her arrival at Corbin’s Beacon Hill apartment, Kate makes a shocking discovery: his next-door neighbor, a young woman named Audrey Marshall, has been murdered.  Though Corbin is quick to profess his innocence, several discoveries in the apartment make the jet-lagged Kate more and more uneasy about her cousin–and Alan, the quiet, attractive young man across the courtyard.  Is there anyone she can trust?  Swanson excels at writing good noir, shifting narrative perspective with ease and creating an atmosphere that is being compared to Hitchcock’s Rear Window as his heroine confronts the evil before her and the fear inside her in a story that earned a starred review from Booklist, who said “The skillfully conjured Boston winter creates the perfect atmosphere for breeding paranoia… Swanson … introduces a delicious monster-under-the-bed creepiness to the expected top-notch characterization and steadily mounting anxiety.”

The DryFrom the chill of a Boston winter, we move to the deadly heat of an Australian summer in Jane Harper’s mystery debut.  Federal Agent Aaron Falk arrives in his hometown for the first time in decades, after being summoned to attend the funeral of his best friend, Luke. Two decades ago, Falk was accused of murder, and Luke was his alibi. Falk and his father fled under a cloud of suspicion, saved from prosecution only because of Luke’s steadfast claim that the boys had been together at the time of the crime. But now more than one person knows they didn’t tell the truth back then, and Luke is dead.  Now, amidst the worst drought in a century, Aaron is beginning to realize just how well little towns can keep secrets–and to discover who killed his best friend.  In addition to praising Harper’s ability to set a scene, crafting the choking heat and creeping menace of a hometown that will make your skin crawl, her talent at crafting a mystery has reviewers raving.  Kirkus gave it a starred review, declaring it “A nail-biting thriller…A chilling story set under a blistering sun, this fine debut will keep readers on edge and awake long past bedtime.”

The Aleppo Cookbook: It probably should come as a surprise that one of the world’s most long-inhabited cities is also home to some of its richest culinary traditions. And in this stunning new cookbook, Marlene Matar, one of the Arab world’s most renown chefs, takes us on a tour of the many cultures, people, and ingredients that have shaped, and been shaped by, this remarkable city.  Along with the requisite pictures of food (which are quite enough to produce a fit of the munchies in and of themselves), there are also a number of photographs of the markets and people of Aleppo, offering readers insight into life there today.  The result is a deliciously enticing cookbook, as well as a haunting testament to the survival, endurance, and humanity of the people of Syria.

Blitzed: Drugs in the Third ReichIt has taken several generations of historians to being to tackle the nuances and intricacies of the Third Reich–and understandably so, as we are still trying to cope with the larger horrors of the Holocaust–but within recent years, some genuinely fascinating pieces have been written on gender, economics, humor and, now, on the drugs of Hitler’s Germany.  Though the Nazi party may have touted an ideology of physical, mental, and moral purity, Norman Ohler reveals that the Third Reich was actually saturated with drugs of all kinds.  Powerhouses like Merck and Bayer cooked up cocaine, opiates, and, most of all, methamphetamines, to be consumed by everyone from factory workers to housewives to millions of German soldiers.  Indeed, soldiers were fed a form of crystal meth in order to keep their morale and ‘fighting spirit’ high (which is a big step up from the cocaine that they were fed during the First World War).  Rather than seeing this widespread intoxication as an excuse or a rationale for the course of history, Ohler instead argues that drugs are a vital way of making sense of Nazi German society.  His work is well-researched and completely readable, making for a book that has been garnering praise from historians and pop-culture outlets alike, with the British Times praising its depiction of “how Nazi Germany slid towards junkie-state status. It is an energetic … account of an accelerating, modernizing society, an ambitious pharmaceuticals industry, a military machine that was looking for ways to create an unbeatable soldier, and a dictator who couldn’t function without fixes from his quack … It has an uncanny ability to disturb.”

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!

Time for a Baileys (Women’s Prize for Fiction)!

And right in time for International Women’s Day, the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction announced the Longlist for the 2017 award!

The 2017 longlist and judges! Courtesy of http://www.womensprizeforfiction.co.uk/

This is the last year that Baileys will be sponsoring the award…insert loud, long sigh here…but the plus is that prize founder, Kate Mosse, has declared that whomever the next sponsor is will be spending the whole year promoting women’s writing, not only once a year, which, at least, makes me happy.  But, for now, let’s celebrate these phenomenal women and the stunning works they’ve given us!

For those who haven’t heard us go on and on about the greatness that is the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction, here’s a brief (but no less enthusiastic) recap:  This prize was was set up in 1996 to celebrate excellence, originality and accessibility in writing by women throughout the world.  In the 20 years since its establishment, the prize has become one of the most respected, most celebrated and most successful literary awards in the world, and remains one of the only prizes to recognize the unique contributions of women in fiction.   In a world where men (and white men…and middle-to-upper class white men) carry away a disproportionate amount of awards, where books about women are relegated to “Women’s Fiction” shelves, apart from the others (because Reasons), where female authors are categorized differently than male authors, where we desperately need more stories from different voices, the Baileys Prize (and whatever prize it shall soon be called) is a vital way to encourage new and diverse storytellers to set their voices free.  And, as readers, that means that their award is really our gain!

So without further ado…

If the book is available in the US, it will have a link.  If not, then the release information will be provided.  Enjoy!

Courtesy of http://www.womensprizeforfiction.co.uk/

Stay With Me, Ayobami Adebayo Will be released in August, 2017
The Power, Naomi Alderman Will be released in October, 2017
Hag-Seed, Margaret Atwood
Little Deaths, Emma Flint
The Mare, Mary Gaitskill
The Dark Circle, Linda Grant  Will be released in June, 2017
The Lesser Bohemians, Eimear McBride
Midwinter, Fiona Melrose Will be released in July, 2017
The Sport of Kings, C.E. Morgan
The Woman Next Door, Yewande Omotoso
The Lonely Hearts Hotel, Heather O’Neill
The Essex Serpent, Sarah Perry Will be released in June, 2017
Barkskins, Annie Proulx
First Love, Gwendoline Riley Will be released in March, 2017
Do Not Say We Have Nothing, Madeleine Thien
The Gustav Sonata, Rose Tremain

Six Book Sunday!

We were mired in a wealth of technical difficulties on Friday, beloved patrons (it’s been a frustrating month for technology, but we hope that it’s all under control at last), and as a result, we missed our regular Five Book Friday post, for which, a whole wheelbarrow-full of apologies.  As a way to make it up to you, we are bringing you a heaping Six Book Sunday, featuring some of the newest books to shuffle up onto our shelves this week, including a snazzy extra book for your reading pleasure!

All Our Wrong Todays: One of the most anticipated releases of the year, Elan Mastai’s novel of life, love, and time travel somehow manages to live up to all its hype, delivering a story that is unexpectedly funny and stunningly touching.  In Tom Barren’s version of 2016, technology has progressed, war is an outdated concept, and everyone lives a life of well-regulated hedonism.  But Tom Barren’s world has never been one into which he fit.  Then a bizarre time-traveling mishap launches Tom into our 2016.  It all seems like some kind of dystopian nightmare at first, but then Tom meets this world’s version of his family and acquaintances, and realizes that this messy, dirty, nasty world of ours might be worth much more than he first thought.  What makes this book so incredible is how Mastai blends complex science with simple, earnest, heartfelt story-telling to make a book that is high-concept, but utterly accessible.  RT Book Reviews gave his work a Top Pick rating, saying, “With humor, grace and dizzying skill, Mastai crafts a time-traveling novel that challenges every convention of the trope, and succeeds brilliantly. His droll, unassuming writing style couches a number of razor-sharp critiques…while the endless array of technological gadgets, innovations and possibilities give the story its drive and irresistible exuberance… heartrending, funny, smart, and stunningly, almost brazenly hopeful.”

Boston’s Massacre: Perfectly timed to coincide with the 247th anniversary of the Boston Massacre, Eric Hinderaker’s book offers a new take on this seminal event in the run-up to the American War of Independence.  On the night of March 5, 1770, British soldiers fired into a crowd gathered in front of Boston’s Custom House, killing five people–yet for all that we reference the event, very little about the “Boston Massacre” is known for a fact.  In this thoroughly-researched and illuminating work, Professor Hinderaker takes on the multiple competing narratives that emerged from the ‘massacre’, and draws connections between this event and more modern examples of police brutality, showing that the Boston Massacre still has some significance today.  As Publisher’s Weekly notes, “Hinderaker claims no definitive version of the event, instead offering a thoughtful meditation on the episode’s significance for shared American identity and memory. Untangling the complex circumstances under which Britain stationed thousands of troops in Boston in the peacetime of 1768…He ends with a provocative…reflection on the massacre’s symbolic resonance with more recent examples of police brutality, making this book important reading for anyone interested in questions regarding the limits of authority and protest.”

Girl in Disguise: Even though I’ve publicly stated that I will no longer tolerate another novel with “girl” in the title, Greer Macallister’s historic mystery is good enough to make me want to bend the rules.  With no money and no husband, Kate Warne finds herself with few choices. The streets of 1856 Chicago offer a desperate widow mostly trouble and ruin–unless that widow has a knack for manipulation and an unusually quick mind. In a bold move that no other woman has tried, Kate convinces the legendary Allan Pinkerton to hire her as a detective.  Faced with fighting criminals and coworkers alike, Kate immerses herself in the dangerous life of an operative, winning the right to tackle some of the agency’s toughest investigations, even at the risk to her own life and spirit.  Based on the adventures of real-life detective Kate Warne, Macallister has crafted a action-packed thrill-ride through 1850’s America that Booklist called “a rip-roaring, fast-paced treat to read, with compelling characters, twisted villains, and mounds of historical details adeptly woven into the tale of a courageous woman who loves her job more than anything or anyone else.”

Who Killed Piet Barol?:  Keeping within the realms of historic fiction, we have Richard Mason’s second book featuring Piet Barol (the first being History of a Pleasure Seeker), here, it is 1914, and Piet is living large in South Africa’s Cape Colony, pursuing his constant hunger for riches and comfort, even as imperial official ruthlessly turn native inhabitants out of their homes in an attempt to create a land of white settlers.  However, Piet’s prodigious luck is about to run out.  Reinventing himself once again as a furniture dealer–but the wood he needs is in a forbidden forest filled with sacred, untouchable trees. His pursuit of the bewitched trees of the fabled forest of Gwadana takes him deep into the Xhosa homelands, where unfailing charm, wit and the friendship of two black men are his only allies as he attempts an act of supreme audacity: to steal a forest from its rightful owners.  Mason always does a superb job of crafting a setting, and the portrait he paints of the violent and fascinating Cape Colony is one of his finest.  But more than that, this narrative–a bizarre blend of fact, fable, horror and hilarity, is one that is hard to put down or forget.  Library Journal loved this book, remarking on its “Eloquent, sensuous prose . . . Mason imbues the forest with life, taking readers inside the psyche of each tree, animal, or insect, as it senses the looming danger . . . Vivid . . . This profoundly tragic tale, in which colonialism battles tribal customs, and divisions of race and class sow distrust, should put Mason over the top.”


Lincoln in the Bardo
: Quite seriously, it’s only March, and George Saunders’ first full-length novel may be the biggest, most acclaimed book of the entire year.  After Lincoln’s beloved son, Willie, dies the president is bereft. Newspapers report that a grief-stricken Lincoln returns, alone, to the crypt several times to hold his boy s body. From that seed of historical truth, George Saunders spins an unforgettable story of familial love and loss that breaks free of its realistic, historical framework into a supernatural realm both hilarious and terrifying. Willie Lincoln finds himself in a strange purgatory where ghosts mingle, gripe, commiserate, quarrel, and enact bizarre acts of penance. Within this transitional state called, in the Tibetan tradition, the bardo a monumental struggle erupts over young Willie’s soul.  On one level, this is a novel about monumental loss–not only Lincoln’s son, but the thousands and thousands of sons who were killed in the Civil War, and the optimism of a nation that very nearly tore itself apart.  On the other, it is a stunning, whimsical, haunting story about life and living, that features an astounding number of individual voices, viewpoints, and truths.  For those who like audiobooks, Saunders gathered over 100 narrators for this book, making it one of the most impressive productions of the year, as well.  It’s hard to choose one good review out of the countless numbers that are rolling in, but we’ll go with Kirkus’ review here, which called this book “Exhilarating . . . Ruthless and relentless in its evocation not only of Lincoln and his quandary, but also of the tenuous existential state shared by all of us.”

Insomniac City: New York, Oliver, and MeOliver Sacks died of cancer in August of 2015, leaving behind a fascinating body of work focused on the brain, its vagaries, and the way it made us uniquely–sometimes bizarrely–human, a number of touching books and memoirs…and Bill Hayes, a photographer who came to New York in 2009 after the death of his partner, and fell in love with the city at night, with the people who inhabited it, and, especially, with his neighbor, Sacks.   This book of vignettes of Hayes’ memories of Sacks, and their shared love of New York City, including a number of Hayes startlingly honest, utterly captivating photos, offers a touchingly intimate view of a man that so many felt they knew from his books, from his falling in love for the first time at the age of 75 to his death.  While a heart-rending tale of loss, it is also a beautiful meditation on the moments that make life worth living, and the kind of love that comes along once in a lifetime.  Newsweek summed it up beautifully, saying “Buy a box of tissues and pray for snow: This…will have you alternately bawling and giddily clapping your hands for the lovers that may not have had the time they deserved, but certainly made the best with the time that they had.”

Until later, beloved patrons–happy reading!

Saturdays @ the South: Book Slump

Readers have an extraordinary internal life associated with books. There are so many emotions a reader goes through, during the course of reading a book, talking about books, finding out about books and even the space in between books. We’ve talked about book hangovers, Hermitage Week (or month), what happens when you just can’t and I’m sure there are many other thoughts on the spectrum of being a reader. I’ve been experiencing one of them lately: a book slump.

My experience with the book slump is somewhat different from not being able to focus on a book. I’m able to finish books with a reasonable amount of attention. I haven’t started and stopped more books that I normally do in my reading life. And yet, I’m facing a Goodreads feed filled with 3-star books and only a vague recollection of what I’ve read. The books haven’t been bad; they just haven’t wowed me.  I’ve been book-ambivalent lately and I’ve a sneaking suspicion it happens to all readers at some point (or perhaps at several points).

Sometimes you’re still enjoying the reading process, the ritual of whatever it is you do to read, whether it’s blocking out everyone else on the commuter train, listening to an audiobook in the bath (no wrinkly pages that way!) or settling into bed with a book. Whatever your ritual, you’re still into it; the focus and the will is there, but sometimes, the books just… aren’t.

With more and more books getting published and finding outlets to be published, there’s bound to be something for every taste, but let’s face it, not all of those books can be Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell or The Gentleman or (insert your amazing, gush-worthy read here). Getting out of your book slump might be as simple as revisiting a favorite and remembering what it is about that book that made you love it. Maybe after reading it you recognize you’re in the mood for more like that and suddenly, books seem exciting again. Or it might be a matter of sampling something different to pique your interest and keep your brain from getting bored. Or maybe you need to read in a different format (go electronic or audio for a change). Or maybe you don’t need to change anything and these books that are somehow smack dab in the middle of your bad—good scale are an essential part of what makes you appreciate a good book when it does come around for your.

During these times, remember that the library is here for you. We’re here to offer books to borrow for free so that your hard-earned money isn’t wasted on a book you may have enjoyed but don’t want to hold onto (maybe not even in memory) for very long. We’re here to make suggestions about books we love that hopefully you will love, too. And we’re also here to help you ride those times out. Even if you’re feeling that, somehow, your story-loving sense is askew, know that your next favorite read may be just around the corner and you can sample as many of our books as you want until you find it, and your book groove, again.

Till next week, dear readers, know that when it comes to reading, all feelings are valid and wallowing in a slump is OK. We’re here for you and the books are here for you however you want to ride it out.

The Romance Garden!

It seemed for a day or two that spring had finally sprung, dear readers, but it seems our hopes for our gardens may have been somewhat premature.  Thankfully, here in our Romance Garden, it’s always perfect weather, and the time is always right for a little romance.

And here are our genre aficionados’ selections for the month to help you find just the right romance to keep you going until the weather sees fit to cooperate once again!

Claude Monet, Lady in the Garden

Bridget:
Under the Wire by Helenkay Dimon
I’ve made my love of Helenkay Dimon’s stories quite clear in the past, and that adoration has only been confirmed by her Bad Boys Undercover series.  As usual, Dimon creates fascinating, complex plots, and deeply meaningful, complicated relationships among her protagonists.  Best of all, she clearly delights in subverting genre stereotypes in her books, ensuring that readers are always going to be kept on their toes.

In this fourth novel (more or less a standalone), Reid Armstrong, one of the elite operatives working for the security agency known as Alliance, is eagerly looking forward to a well-earned vacation.  That is, until he hears that his former fiancée has disappeared while on a top-secret scientific expedition.  He knows he blew his chances with Cara’s heart, but he isn’t about to turn his back on her.  When Cara wakes up alone in a destroyed camp, she knows that she is still a target.  And when Reid appears on the scene, it seems the danger has only increased.  Even if they manage to get home alive, being so close to the man she still loves could break Cara’s heart for good.

I loved the way that Reid–as stoic and apparently unflappable as they come–has his world turned upside down by Cara, and that, despite all his alpha-male tendencies, he isn’t afraid to let her shine all by herself.  Their adventures full of action and high-stakes tension, but Dimon certainly doesn’t skimp on the emotions here, making for a book–and a series–that readers will love.

Kelley: 

The Danger of Desire  by Sabrina Jeffries
A quick look at her website tells me that author Sabrina Jeffries is pretty prolific, but somehow I never managed to find my way to one of her wonderful romances until a trip to the library led me to the third book in her Sinful Suitors series, The Danger of Desire. Thankfully, reading the third book first was no problem, and being as I enjoyed the book so much I fully expect that I’ll be headed back for the first and second installments.

Our hero is Warren Corry, the Marquess of Knightford, a notorious rakehell who spends his evenings at cards and in brothels. Despite appearances, prone to horrifying nightmares, Knightford’s night life is less glamorous than it seems.  Our heroine is Miss Delia Trevor, a woman determined to avenge her brother’s death and ruin by disguising herself as a man and playing cards at a men’s club in order to uncover the identity of the man who cheated him. Delia’s dangerous game is uncovered by Knightford and the two quickly discover that they enjoy each other’s company even when they are at odds.

Being as my non-romance reading is often pretty dense, I tend to look for romances that are light and fun with plots that keep the pages compulsively turning. I like my heroes flirtatious and quick witted and my heroines independent and up for adventure. If there are some quirky and charming family members, or in this case aloof and selective cats, all the better. The Danger of Desire delivered on all of those things making for a lovely afternoon of escape reading. The resolutions of the book’s two primary conflicts are a bit oversimplified, but overall I would highly recommend it. I, for one, will definitely be checking out more of Sabrina Jeffries’ books in the future. Lucky for me, there are a lot of them!

Until next month, beloved patrons–happy reading!