THE LIBRARY AT MOUNT CHAR

This was an incredibly weird book that has stuck with me over the last month much more than I expected.  Set in a dystopian near-future, The Library at Mount Char imagines a set of gods or demi-gods who have controlled human history, and are in a moment of great upheaval. 

ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE

Call me lazy, but I think one of the reasons that I don’t often pick up collections of short stories is because they take a bit more effort to read than a novel.  I mean, you’ve just figured out who all the characters are and how they relate to one another and where the story is set and when, and the story is over and you have to start all over again with another story.  Who wants to work that hard, right?  Wrong!  You must read Elizabeth Strout’s newest short story collection, Anything Is Possible

WHAT WE LOSE

This debut novel was the choice for my October book club, and I honestly couldn’t put it down.  At just over 200 pages, it is a quick read, but less because of length and more that the writer's thoughts carry you along as though she has taken over your brain.  Her language is at once simple and poetic.  It often feels like stream-of-consciousness, and yet she is always concise.

IN THE COUNTRY

I don’t often read short stories, and have read exactly zero books set in the Philippines, but I am extremely glad to have picked this one up! Each story centers around either a visitor to the Philippines, or a Philippino living abroad in places as far as Bahrain and as near (to us) as Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Alvar has the incredible ability to jump into her stories and make you feel as though you have had a 200-page intro to the characters and circumstances with which she presents you.

SPECIAL TOPICS IN CALAMITY PHYSICS

will admit, this book took me a while to get into, but once I did, it was WORTH IT! The friend who recommendedSpecial Topics described it as Gilmore Girls meets murder mystery, and that’s a good place to start.  The protagonist and narrator is a super-smart, teenage girl with a single parent.  She doesn’t quite fit in at her new school, but is focused on her dream of getting to Harvard.

BEFORE I GO TO SLEEP, A Novel

Suspenseful.  A psychological thriller.  Chilling.  These are some of the reviewers’ comments on this debut novel by S. J. Watson.  I’m not normally drawn to this genre of writing, but the premise intrigued me.  The main character, Christine, has a neurological condition whereupon she wakes up each morning not remembering anything or anyone from the previous 25 years of her life. 

CLOSE TO HUGH

Endicott is an award winning Canadian author, though this book could easily have been set in small town New Hampshire or Connecticut.  I mentioned at my book club that this was perhaps the first Canadian novel I had read that was set in Canada, but not aboutCanada, and how, as an American, that actually took me a moment to wrap my brain around when the first clues about place were laid out. 

STATION ELEVEN, A Novel

To be perfectly honest, the idea of reading a dystopian novel didn’t really appeal to me.  But Station Eleven was a National Book Award Finalist and it came highly recommended to me by a friend whose taste in reading often matches mine.  And it is set in Canada, my book review co-editor’s current country of residence.  So, I decided to go for it.  It definitely exceeded my expectations.

A GENTLEMAN IN MOSCOW

This may be my favorite book that I’ve read all summer – and I’ve read some really good books!  I love everything about the novel:  the characters, the storyline, the plot, the writing and the unexpected ending.  It is a joy to read from beginning to end.

OUR SOULS AT NIGHT

Truly a gem of a book,Our Souls At Night, is like a cool drink on a hot afternoon or a leisurely walk with a good friend with whom you just don’t get to spend enough time.  It’s peaceful and uplifting – and replete with ideas and observations that will stay with you long after you’ve finished reading.

THE SYMPATHIZER

Last year’s Pulitzer Prize winner for fiction, this debut novel is somehow both brutal and funny, eye-opening yet reassuring.  The story is told from the perspective of a young man serving a high-ranking General in the Vietnamese Army as the Americans are pulling out of the war in 1975.

THE WONDER

From the author of Room, you will not want to put this book down.  The story follows an English nurse named Lib, who has been hired by a small town in Ireland to watch an 11-year-old girl who has reportedly been living without food for over four months.  Most in the town believe this to be a miracle, but Lib is tasked with watching closely for any trickery, before the girl can be declared officially miraculous.

KITCHENS OF THE GREAT MIDWEST, A Novel

I didn’t know what to expect from this novel when I started reading it.  But a good friend recommended it and she and I seem to have similar tastes in books.  Would it be a novel that somehow incorporated recipes?  A tour of kitchens in Minnesota and Indiana?  What I got – and you will too – is a delightful and truly unique novel, constructed as a series of stories, about the memorable main character, Eva Thorvald.

A TALE FOR THE TIME BEING, A Novel

This amazing book has what is perhaps one of the most memorable and clever constructs of any novel that I’ve read.  Ruth, a contemporary writer living on a remote island in the Pacific Northwest, discovers a lunchbox among the trash that washes up on her local beach.  Inside she finds the diary of a sixteen-year-old Japanese girl named Nao, who is contemplating suicide.  Ruth believes the lunchbox and diary are debris from the 2011 tsunami in Japan. 

LAW OF SIMILARS

This is a throwback, classic Bohjalian from 1999 that I picked up at a library book sale. I always love his Northern Kingdom settings and the slow unraveling of the very human mysteries. This book follows a recently widowed state’s attorney raising his young daughter alone in rural Vermont.