STAY WITH ME, A Novel

This was a fascinating book to read while eight months pregnant, though I can’t imagine anyone who wouldn’t be captivated by such a compact and beautiful narrative.  The central topic is a young woman desperate for a child, and all that ensues as she struggles to conceive.

WALKING TO LISTEN: 4,000 Miles Across America, One Story At A Time

I saw Andrew Forsthoefel speak at Wellesley College last year at one of their semi-annual Authors on Stage presentations – where three authors talk about their latest books – always a treat!  He held me captivated as he explained the genesis of the idea of walking across the US (and then writing his book): a combination of graduating from college without being sure what direction he wanted to take in life and looking for more meaning in the life he led. 

SWING TIME

This was my first Zadie Smith experience, and I plan to read as much of her as I can as soon as possible!  Her books are split almost evenly between fiction and essays which is unusual, and makes me even more eager to get inside her mind.

THE SELLOUT

The Sellout has been on my reading list for a while now, not only by recommendation, but also because it won Beatty the Man Booker Prize, the first time an American had done so.  I began with high expectations and was nearly stopped in my tracks by the prologue.  Here Beatty’s roots as a slam poet are on full display, and without much plot to grab onto, the reader is thrown hundreds of references in a giant swirl of politics.

THE TEA GIRL OF HUMMINGBIRD LANE

The Tea Girl of Hummingbird Lane will transport you to another place and time.  The novel opens in a remote, tiny village in a mountainous part of China, where extended families live in community with their neighbors, all of whom pick, dry and sell tea just as their ancestors did. Li-yan, our adolescent main character, introduces us to her people’s way of life – their customs, rituals and beliefs. 

LITTLE FIRES EVERYWHERE, A Novel

After reading Little Fires Everywhere, Celeste Ng's second novel, I have officially added her to my "must read any new book" list.  I so enjoyed her first novel, Everything I Never Told You, that I was excited to see if her sophomore work could measure up.  And it does!  This book is wonderful!

ALL THE UGLY AND WONDERFUL THINGS

This book is disturbing, I am not going to sugar-coat it.  That said, I highly recommend it. Told from an ever-changing perspective, All The Ugly And Wonderful Things drops you into life in the rural southwest, and introduces you to a world where morals, rules and even laws depend on who is speaking and to whom.

THE BURNING GIRL

What goodness for Claire Messud, who consistently writes fabulous novels.  Her latest, The Burning Girl, is no exception. In fact, I’m not sure how I managed to omit her from my list in December’s L & L Review of authors who I race to read whenever they publish new books.

MANHATTAN BEACH, A Novel

I loved this book and am so grateful to my friend Jane for recommending it!  Described as having the atmosphere of a “noir thriller,” Manhattan Beach follows the life of Anna Kerrigan, from when she is a little girl and tagging along with her beloved father on some questionable business deals, through his disappearance when she is 12-years-old. 

THE IMMORTALISTS, A Novel

The Immortalists is another fabulous book – this one recommended to me by my friend Linda.  I agree with her endorsement.  The story begins in the summer of 1969 in New York City.  Four siblings, ranging in age from 9 to 13, are trying to escape boredom and decide to visit a mystic who claims she can tell each of them the date on which they will die.  To say they are spooked as each meets with the woman individually, would be an understatement. 

THE JANE AUSTEN BOOK CLUB

In a previous issue, I reviewed We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves by Karen Joy Fowler.  I loved that book so much, that I gave it as a Christmas gift and found myself exploring what else Fowler had written.  Happily, I found The Jane Austen Book Club, written nine years before We Are All Completely… Although very different from her other book, The Jane Austen Book Club is similarly innovative both in its story and in the way that Fowler tells it. 

TOWNIE, A Memoir

I read this book for two reasons:  it had been recommended to me by a friend and I loved The House of Sand and Fog, Dubus’ breakout novel.  To say I enjoyed this memoir would be an exaggeration.  But it has stayed with me far longer than most books.  I have thought about it and talked to other people about it many times since I finished reading it.  For me, that’s proof of its power and perhaps even its value.

THE CIRCLE

Full Disclosure: This is the first Dave Eggers book I’ve ever read, so that fact that it is essentially a beach read is probably weird. The book opens with protagonist Mae Holland heading to The Circle for her first day at a new job.  She is thrilled because this is the most important and respected company in the country, and probably the world. 

TO THE BACK OF BEYOND

To The Back of Beyond was recommended to me by a friend and I whole-heartedly recommend this beautiful book to all of you.  As I reflect on what makes it so compelling, I feel it’s not only that it's a poignant story about a young husband who suddenly and unexpectedly walks away from his happy marriage and two small children, but also the manner in which Stamm writes.