RaveBooklistAccompanied by John Burgoyne’s vibrant line drawings, Kimmerer’s deeply rooted, wise, and inspiring reflections coalesce into a fresh approach to connecting ecology, economics, and ethics, beginning with achievable grassroots endeavors in the hope of gradually widening the circle.
Lili Anolik
RaveBooklistTheir legacies will be forever shaped by Anolik’s double portrait forged in inquisitiveness, empathy, intellectual firepower, and love.
Sarah Labrie
RaveBooklistLaBrie’s intimate and vivid chronicle is haunting in its sorrow and beautiful in its daring and hope.
Susan Minot
RaveBooklistMinot exquisitely explores desire and denial, intimacy and illusion in a ravishing, haunting, and insightful tale of sexual ecstasy and emotional torment, integrity and creativity, self and motherhood.
Dava Sobel
RaveBooklistA vital portrait ... As Sobel vividly tells their tales of valor, diligence, and brilliance, she fuses elements human and scientific to create a dramatic group portrait encompassing passion, struggle, poignancy, and triumph.
Wright Thompson
RaveBooklistCarefully weighing each word as though it’s being set on the scales of justice, Thompson presents a deeply felt and vitally written history of conscience with infinite consequence.
Louise Erdrich
RaveBooklistWith irresistible characters, dramatic predicaments, crisp wit, gorgeously rendered settings, striking ecological facts, and a cosmic dimension, Erdrich’s latest tale of the plains reverberates with arresting revelations.
Jesse Ball
PositiveBooklistBall’s vision is chilling, his writing flawless in this stark, grueling tale of humans bereft of care and compassion, of love denied, sanity endangered, and judgement weaponized.
Richard Powers
RaveBooklistRhapsodic with wonder, electric with cautionary facts and insights, Powers’ profound and involving novel illuminates the conundrums of human nature and the gravely endangered ocean deep.
Rachel Kushner
RaveBooklistKushner’s long fascination with underground rebels and their uprisings attains new depths and resonance in this bravura improvisation on the secret-agent trope; this brain-spinning tale of lies, greed, surveillance, crimes against nature, and ecowarriors; this searing look at our perilous estrangement from nature.
Honor Moore
PositiveBooklistAn evocative and candid reflection on the complexities of femaleness and social strictures.
Ian Frazier
RaveBooklistA profound portrait of this storied place ... The culmination of many years of passionate inquiry, Frazier’s deep history—grandly detailed, vibrant, and caring—does right by the resilient, ever-morphing Bronx.
Elif Shafak
RaveBooklistIn this captivating and provocative saga, Shafak presents a beautifully braided plot, entrancing settings, and soulful characters while dramatizing the complex power of stories, the wonders of water, and the terrible paradoxes of humankind.
Jane Alison
PositiveBooklistAlison incisively evokes artistic genius and angst, while infusing a historic scandal with profound heartache and resolve.
Helen Phillips
PositiveBooklistPhillips keenly dramatizes the love and terror of parenthood in a poisoned, high-tech, yet not utterly hopeless world.
Kimberly McCreight
PositiveBooklist[A] keenly plotted and magnetizing tale of strong women seeking truth and justice and the demands and joys of mother-daughter relationships.
Ben Shattuck
RaveBooklistSterling ... Shattuck’s numinous stories shimmer with longing and loss, fate and beauty.
Laura Van Den Berg
RaveBooklistVan den Berg takes measure of the pandemic’s hidden impacts, escalating ecothreats, family traumas, and the nature of stories and our profound reliance on them.
Rachel Cusk
RaveBooklistShifting from first person to second and third in narrations of poetic nuance and forthright assertions, Cusk’s haunted characters grapple with arresting and provocative conundrums pertaining to creativity, self, recognition, gender, motherhood, love, and death.
Nicola Yoon
RaveBooklistYoon presents a riveting tale spiked with surprises, laced with compassion, and designed for discussion as it raises unsettling questions about class, Blackness, parenthood, social responsibility, justice, and the hidden repercussions of deep, centuries-spanning trauma.
Jill Ciment
RaveBooklistIn this sharply candid anatomy of a relationship and spellcasting remembrance, Ciment reflects on the dubious start to their union and how their roles switched over time. By turns stinging, hilarious, and poignant, this is rare and luminous testimony to creativity, commitment, and love over all.
Sebastian Junger
RaveBooklistArdently researched, consummately written, and boldly forthright, this an intensely moving and deeply provocative immersion.
Joyce Carol Oates
RaveBooklistOates’ daring tale of grotesque medical experiments and other injustices is unnerving, illuminating, suspenseful, mythic, and, thankfully, tempered by transcendence and love.
Claire Messud
RaveBooklistMessud renders each inner and outer life in finely detailed, scintillating prose ... Messud captures life’s wheels-within-wheels on every incandescent page.
Zoë Schlanger
RaveBooklistGrounded in the history of botany, [Schlanger] lucidly and vividly explains startling findings about plant communication, memory, decision-making, motion, sense (touch, hearing, vision), defenses, kin recognition, altruism, and many other forms of green intelligence ... The discoveries Schlanger shares in this involving, vibrant, and affecting dispatch from the vanguard of plant research profoundly expands our appreciation for plants, their essential role in the great web of life, and how recognition of plant intelligence can help us reverse environmental decimation.
Jane Smiley
RaveBooklistSmiley has fun writing her protagonist’s smart song lyrics, but it is the lingering, poetic, all-but excessively detailed descriptions of every setting and turn of mind that make this slow-brewing, meditative tale of temperament, choice, and creativity spellbinding ... Then, just as the curtain is about to fall on this musing, compassionate, gently rueful, and melancholy artist, Smiley orchestrates a seismic twist of staggering magnitude.
Sonny Rollins, ed. Sam V. H. Reese
PositiveBooklistRollins’ thoughtful notebooks chart the discipline and evolution of a deeply spiritual and enduring artist.
Nell Freudenberger
RaveBooklistFreudenberger is fluent in every realm, social conundrum, and crime against the earth she brings into focus, keenly attuned to science and emotion, tradition and high-tech, race and gender, greed and conscience, irony and tragedy. Each character’s challenges are significant on scales intimate and global and their wrestling with secrets, anger, and fear grows increasingly suspenseful in this lambent, deeply sympathetic, and thought-provoking novel.
James Kaplan
RaveBooklistKaplan seamlessly combines vibrant biography... with insightful music history, all set within a sharply drawn social context ... Writing with acumen and lyricism, Kaplan conjures the moods and milieus, breakthroughs and performances, temperaments and drama that generated this endlessly enthralling music.
Lydia Millet
RaveBooklistIn a recalibrating mix of memoir, facts, critique, and passages of elegiac beauty, Millet reflects on our dangerous muddlement and pins hope on the growing impact of one digital advance.
Hanif Abdurraqib
RaveBooklist[A] unique, memoir-propelled, far-ranging, and affecting inquiry ... Abdurraqib keeps multiple balls in the air as he swerves, spins, and scores, and every thoughtfully considered and vividly described element and emotion, action and moment, ultimately, connects. An exhilarating, heartfelt, virtuoso, and profound performance.
Jonathan Buckley
PositiveBooklistA finely honed and richly pleasurable illumination not only of the privileges and pitfalls of elites but also of universally human quirks and longings.
Marie Mutsuki Mockett
RaveBooklistMockett has written a ravishing and astute tale of solitude and family bonds, distance and intimacy, disruption and healing.
Lauren Oyler
RaveBooklistOyler is frank, fierce, funny, and brilliant; her brainy, passionate criticism exhilarating.
Marilynne Robinson
PositiveBooklistThroughout this deeply involving and enlightening exegesis, Robinson links Genesis to the profound dilemmas of our time.
Cristina Henriquez
RaveBooklist\"Though carrying heavy historical cargo, Henríquez’s tale is beguiling and bright with love, humor, and magic.\
Vinson Cunningham
RaveBooklistCunningham...has written an electrifying first novel and bildungsroman of consummate artistry and sensitivity, honed vision and wit.
Paul Alexander
RaveBooklistIn fluent command of an enormous amount of detail both enraging and awe-inspiring, Alexander vividly recounts Holiday’s valiant and ravishing last recordings and performances as her health deteriorated but her conviction stayed strong. A portrait as affecting and indelible as Holiday’s exquisite performances.
Helen Humphreys
RaveBooklistUniquely lyrical, empathic, and transporting ... Steeped in Thoreau’s writing, Humphreys gracefully and perceptively imagines the inner life of a singular earth ecstatic more comfortable with bluebirds than humans, attuned to the seasons and the lay of the land, and blissful in solitude and communion with the page.
PositiveBooklistIn each ardently researched, fluent, and intriguing inquiry, Acocella thinks through persistent conundrums and marvels over human complexity and creativity.
Amitav Ghosh
RaveBooklistDramatic ... Ghosh’s literary prowess supercharges this eye-opening excavation of the full extent of the opium-industrial complex.
Téa Obreht
RaveBooklistThis is a bewitchingly atmospheric, psychologically lush, and deeply knowing tale of ancient sorrows and coalescing crises, courage and fortitude.
Paul Theroux
RaveBooklistTheroux’s engrossing, suspenseful novel incisively maps the start of Eric’s metamorphosis into George Orwell, resounding critic of malevolent power.
Leslie Jamison
PositiveBooklistJamison is a ravenous observer and a writer of razor-sharp precision and pinwheeling creativity ... A necessary work for Jamison and her readers; hopefully she’ll widen her scope in the next.
Anne Michaels
RaveBooklistSublime, meditative, and gracefully episodic ... Michaels brings her poet’s finesse and soulfulness to this exquisite, deeply moving paean to love and life’s insistence and beauty.
Kaveh Akbar
RaveBooklistAkbar creates scenes of psychedelic opulence and mystery, emotional precision, edgy hilarity, and heart-ringing poignancy as his characters endure war, grief, addiction, and sacrifice, and find refuge in art and love. Bedazzling and profound.
Bonnie Jo Campbell
RaveBooklistThis is a verdant, gripping, and clarion saga of home, family, and womanhood, of meaningful work and metamorphosis, of poisons and antidotes, and the urgent need for us to heal and sustain the imperiled living world that heals and sustains us.
Christian Wiman
RaveBooklistThe shift in forms and tone throughout this incandescent mosaic keeps the reader alert and curious; each piece is an adventure, provocation, meditation, lesson, or attempted proof. A passionate literary religious thinker in the mode of Marilynne Robinson, Wiman is magnetizing and revelatory.
Kate Christensen
RaveBooklistFrom gasp-inducing absurdities and betrayals to a profound sense of our paralysis in the glare of climate change to a full-on embrace of family, love, home, and decency, Christensen’s whirligig tale leaves readers dizzy with fresh and provocative insights.
Judith Tick
RaveBooklistTick’s chronicling of Fitzgerald’s genius for intuiting what an audience wanted to hear, her \'courage and independence,\' the sharp criticism she endured for her daringly innovative choices, and the ardent acclaim she earned as a pioneering Black woman artist and civil rights advocate coalesces in a defining, revelatory, and invaluable biography.
Paul Lynch
RaveBooklist\"Irish writer Lynch conveys the creeping horror of a fascist catastrophe in a gorgeous and relentless stream of consciousness illuminating the terrible vulnerability of our loved ones, our daily lives, and social coherence. Eilish muses over the fragility of the body, its rhythms and flows, diseases and defenses. The body politic is just as assailable. A Booker Prize finalist, Lynch\'s hypnotic and crushing novel tracks the malignant decimation of an open society, a bleak and tragic process we enact and suffer from over and over again.”
Alice McDermott
RaveBooklistSublime ... McDermott is a resplendent writer of lacerating insights, gorgeous lyricism, and subtle yet exacting moral reckoning, here illuminating shades of good and evil within a bubble of Western privilege and prejudice in a country on the brink of war, concentrating the inane and cruel misogyny women faced in Barbie, that freshly energized icon of female paradox and power.
Dwight Garner
RaveBooklistGarner raids his to serve up a feast of vivid recollections personal and literary ... The ravenously well-read Garner is witty, confiding, provocative, and adept in his considerations of fast food (including a stint working at Domino’s), high-tech modernist cuisine, dinner parties, martinis, his cookbook-writer wife, Cree LeFavour, and her foodie family, and his life as a book critic stoked and sustained by food and story.
Jhumpa Lahiri, trans. by Todd Portnowitz
RaveBooklistFinely calibrated ... Rome with its echoing past and mercurial present is a potently evocative setting for Lahiri’s exquisitely incisive, richly empathetic, and profoundly resonant stories.
Lydia Davis
RaveBooklistDavis is a maestro of concision, yet her very short stories are alive with extraordinary nuances of feelings and thoughts. Some are very funny; others are provocative or deeply moving ... Some stories are poems. Davis’ tales are concentrated, insightful, intriguing, and resonant.
Viet Thanh Nguyen
RaveBooklistMany-faceted, stylistically complex, eviscerating, and tender montage of memoir, facts, dissent, and clarification ... A uniquely intricate, clarion, and far-reaching inquiry into what we disparage and what we value, asserting the bedrock necessity of history, story, and remembrance.
Katherine Spillar
RaveBooklistThoughtfully curated and zestful ... This \"best of\" collection proceeds decade-by-decade, showcasing the magazine’s arresting covers, page layouts, and a treasury of rigorous, vibrant, insightful, witty, and powerful reporting, analysis, opinion, profiles, advice, poems, short stories, and those all-important letters.
Nathan Hill
RaveBooklistJack and Elizabeth’s staggering hidden traumas are suspensefully revealed. In astutely observed, hilariously satirical passages, Hill also weighs the sublime, the absurd, and the malevolent as he considers family and self, art and academia...with exhilarating insights and fluent compassion. Hill’s prose is radiant and ravishing throughout this saturated, intricately honeycombed novel of delving cogitation as he evokes the wonders of the prairie and the city, and the ever-perplexing folly, anguish, and beauty of the human condition.
Chris Bachelder and Jennifer Habel
RaveBooklistBachelder and Habel have created a curious, heady cocktail of a quarantine novel that feels like a buoyant literary memoir, a surprising and exhilarating inquiry into the pleasures and pitfalls of literature, obsession, collaboration, and love, all relayed with piquant wit and thrilling insight.
Jill Lepore
RaveBooklistLepore’s galvanized readers will acquire new perspectives and new knowledge as she addresses complex matters with vigor, wit, and clarity.
John Szwed
RaveBooklistMusic writer and biographer Szwed confronted both a mammoth and chaotic trove of materials and an even larger void of tragically lost artworks and collections as he assiduously and passionately constructed this engrossing, revelatory, often beyond-belief portrait of a reckless, maddening, cosmic, and transformational genius.
Zadie Smith
RaveBooklistWielding delectably honed language in pithy chapters spiked with surprising revelations, needling observations, and lacerating truths, Smith, in her most commanding novel to date, dramatizes with all-too relevant insights crucial questions of veracity and mendacity, privilege and tyranny, survival and self, trust and betrayal.
Anna Funder
RaveBooklistA provocative mix of facts and \'a fiction that tries not to lie,\' using her remarkable subject’s vivid letters as prompts for imagined scenes that fill the maddening gaps in Orwell’s autobiographical accounts and those of his biographers ... Laced with personal reflections and charged with a searing critique of the patriarchy and its smothering of women’s lives and legacies, Funder’s gripping and insightful portrait of the hidden Eileen Orwell is incandescent.
Alice Hoffman
PositiveBooklistHoffman summons all of her extraordinary storytelling magic to whisk us back to Hawthorne’s world, turning our ardor for books into a force that transcends time, our love for authors into something truly erotic. As she contrasts women’s lives past and present and considers the mysterious compulsions to write and read, Hoffman’s fresh and evocative time-travel tale becomes a lush and suspenseful homage to the transporting and lifesaving power of books.
RaveBooklistFunny, tender, knockabout, gritty, and suspenseful, McBride’s microcosmic, socially critiquing, and empathic novel dynamically celebrates difference, kindness, ingenuity, and the force that compels us to move heaven and earth to help each other.
Ann Patchett
RaveBooklistAs this spellbinding and incisive novel unspools, Patchett brings every turn of mind and every setting to glorious, vibrant life, gracefully contrasting the dazzle of the ephemeral with the gravitas of the timeless, perceiving in cherries sweet and tart reflections of love and loss.
Jane Smiley
PositiveBooklistSmiley’s agile, seemingly blithe inquiries are wryly incisive, ethically rigorous, and propelled by her profound passion for literature as an endless source of illumination and liberation.
Joyce Carol Oates
PositiveBooklistMacabre ... Oates is fascinated by how the \'lurid-freakish\' becomes normal both in households and, more apocalyptically, in society at-large as climate change begins to decimate earthly life. High-pitched, unnerving, and incisive.
Colson Whitehead
RaveBooklistWhitehead captures the menace and the beauty of the city in exhilarating detail within the many-faceted, rollicking plot that propels his second, magnificently vibrant and transcendent Ray Carney novel.
J C Hallman
RaveBooklist\"Though Hallman goes overboard in this graphic, exhaustive, tangent-prone exposé, his righteous passion and galvanizing prose are commanding and affecting; the realities he reveals are harrowing, tragic, and grimly relevant.\
Lorrie Moore
RaveBooklistMoore’s sterling literary reputation is anchored most firmly to her short stories, but in her long-awaited fourth novel, her prose is just as breathtakingly crystalline, her humor wily and piquant. What’s surprising is her illumination of surpassingly strange and provocative dimensions of being ... Moore’s unnerving, gothic, acutely funny, lyrically metaphysical, and bittersweet tale is an audacious, mind-bending plunge into the mysteries of illness, aberration, death, grief, memory, and love.
Hannah Pick-Goslar and Dina Kraft
PositiveBooklistVivid ... Clarifying and resounding ... There is always more to tell about the Holocaust.
Isabel Allende, trans. by Frances Riddle
PositiveBooklistAllende is a tirelessly imaginative and enthralling storyteller acutely attuned to the confounding universality of crimes against humanity and the traumas and tragedies they engender. She dramatizes the interconnectivity of suffering and succor in an ocean- and century-spanning tale ... One of Allende’s many powers is creating intriguing, deeply sympathetic characters which she accomplishes with exceptional empathy in this incisive, gripping, and intricately plotted tale of genocide, femicide, exile, survival, compassion, and love.
David Remnick
PositiveBooklistExceptionally vivid and melodic profiles of musicians late in life ... These are keenly observed, deeply felt, and judiciously detailed encounters of genuine communion mixing interviews, biography, and analysis, all lyrically and radiantly composed.
Melissa L. Sevigny
RaveBooklistAs she brings both intriguing botanists vividly to life, Sevigny also captures the intensity of the expedition’s dangers and the seemingly miraculous ability of the scientists to collect and preserve 500 plant specimens, some new to science, under nearly impossible conditions while also doing all the cooking. A breath-catching, enlightening, and significant work of scientific, environmental, and women’s history.
Jorie Graham
PositiveBooklistThese gorgeous, dismaying, and piercing cautionary lyrics are tragic dispatches from a grim possible future spawned by our distraction and hunger for the wrong things ... These poems must be heard.
Robert Greenfield
RaveBooklistThe nexus between playwright, actor, and fiction writer Sam Shepard’s life and art is intricate. His dozens of radical, unnerving, wildly imaginative, raging, sorrowful, and mordantly funny plays and stories are spiked with family trauma, autobiography, and mythologizing. Previous biographies have tracked this dynamic, but seasoned biographer Greenfield is the first to fully chronicle Shepard’s entire, tempestuous, endlessly creative life ... Sardonic, haunted, brilliant, and elusive, Shepard needed to be free and loved, while his dramatic quest was at once personal, reflective of the times, and steeped in humankind’s ceaseless paradoxes.
Benjamin Balint
RaveBooklistBalint vividly, insightfully, and affectingly casts light on long-shadowed Schulz and his startlingly original work, composing a freshly enlightening, harrowing, and invaluable chapter in the perpetual history of genocide and the courage and transcendence of artists.
Jeannette Walls
RaveBooklistWith courage, backbone, and wit, Sallie navigates painful disclosures, fierce opposition, and tragic disasters, all while protesting the unending injustices inflicted on women. With its fireworks illumination of the bootlegging world and irresistible characters, Hang the Moon is vital, provocative, and intoxicating.
Madelaine Lucas
PositiveBooklistLucas’ rolling, gleaming, beguiling prose is saturated with desire, sensuous bliss, worry, fear, and anger as her narrator looks back at her mother’s life, her own childhood, and the highs and lows of her profoundly erotic, ultimately shipwrecked romance.
Richard Bausch
RaveBooklist... psychologically lush and situationally entangled tale ... With Shakespearean moments of confusion, regret, and dissemblance, sharp-witted banter and all-out showdowns, Bausch’s enthralling, tempestuous, empathic drama illuminates with lightning strikes paradoxes of family, loyalty, and love.
Patrick Bringley
PositiveBooklistGraced with a list of all the artworks he was enraptured by and an excellent bibliography, this is a profound homage to the marvels of a world-class museum and a radiant chronicle of grief, perception, and a renewed embrace of life.
Priscilla Gilman
RaveBooklist\"Gilman writes with resplendent clarity, meticulous candor, and incandescent love forged in the fire of extraordinarily demanding family dynamics ... Gilman incisively charts her remarkable father’s intense ups-and-downs and lucidly analyzes her own struggles in a richly involving chronicle gracefully laced with literary allusions, compassion, and wisdom.\
Salman Rushdie
RaveBooklistSpellbinding and provocative ... With sly and incisive asides from the narrator about the vicissitudes of human nature and the tides of conquest and insurrection, tyranny and freedom, Rushdie’s bewitching and suspenseful, romantic and funny, tragic and incisive tale, rooted in the history of Vijayanagar, the fallen capital of a vanquished empire in southern India, is resplendent in its celebration of women and the age-old magic of storytelling.
Aleksandar Hemon
RaveBooklistHemon, always electrifying, returns to fiction...plunging readers into the horrors and grim absurdities of war in prose molten with caustic irony, furious wit, bitter rage, and transcendent beauty ... Hemon’s unflinching, riveting, funny, worldly-wise, and soulful magnum opus wrestles with humanity’s shocking depravity and incandescent courage and love.
Dan Kois
PositiveBooklistharing the vibe of Emma Straub and Jean Thompson, Kois’ delectably smart, witty, caring, and radiating read channels an amusing and admirable woman’s evolving perspective and experiences.
Paul Auster
RaveBooklistA refined and electrifying writer, Auster presents memories, facts, and commentary with stunning clarity ... A rigorous and evocative grappling with mass tragedies.
Pico Iyer
RaveBooklistThe latest chapter in Iyer’s...profound, ongoing conversation with the world, a numinous blend of deeply attentive travel writing, history, memoir, and reflection, chronicles his piquant quest for paradise, a concept rife with paradox ... There is much wonder here.
Janet Malcolm
PositiveBooklistThis posthumous, delectably personal volume is a gift to all who have been happily provoked by her cutting observations, refusal to play nice, and mordant wit and a boon for every reader in search of superbly precise memoiristic essays ... Piquing.
Allegra Goodman
PositiveBooklistShe deftly explores fractured family dynamics and jagged questions of class and vocation with a far more focused approach, creating a mesmerizing first person narration in which language and syntax subtly evolve along with the narrator, Sam ... Goodman has forged an intimate, nimble, witty, and transfixing drama of skill and effort, responsibility and freedom.
Francine Prose
RaveBooklistWith her signature wit, incisiveness, and command, Prose (The Vixen, 2021) traces the origin of this reductive depiction to the sexism and racism intrinsic to the dazzling array of sources she so keenly critiques ... Dynamic analysis ... Prose elucidates historical and cultural complexities, separates facts from fantasy, shares vivid and arresting intimate details, and brings humor and \'human warmth\' to her corrective portrait of this extraordinarily brilliant and heroic ruler.
Aidan Levy
RaveBooklistEngrossing, often deeply affecting detail ... Levy provides precise and ravishing descriptions of Rollins’ music, \'tireless work ethic,\' inspirations, frustrations with the record industry, social and environmental activism, and surprising collaborations.
Douglas Brinkley
RaveBooklistAssiduously detailed yet flowing narrative ... Brinkley profiles an array of intriguing individuals ... Rich in facts, anecdotes, and analysis, Brinkley’s comprehensive and vivid history of crucial environmental battles and advances is profoundly enlightening as we struggle to conceive of a similarly constructive way forward in a time of worsening climate crisis and political gridlock.
Joe Meno
RaveBooklistDay after day, Aleks, a stubborn angel in a cruel world, a ragtag philosopher, recounts the spinning-in-place round of his endless daily battles, making for an exhausting if purposeful narrative spiral. Yet for all their sorrows and epic bad luck, Meno’s characters are imaginative, funny, and tough and their wretched predicaments attain cosmic absurdity. As in all his tender and edgy fiction, Meno’s poetic prose is infused with sweet compassion and sharp protest as he marvels over \'the beautiful failure of all human beings struggling against their own glorious mistakes\' while, somehow, finding a way forward.
Patti Smith
RaveBooklistSmith poignantly mixes pictures from her Chicago childhood, early New York years, family life with Fred \'Sonic\' Smith, and various pilgrimages with new images, some chronicling the pandemic. Detecting the sacred everywhere she looks, Smith photographs her \'desk talismans\' and personal shrines ... Her images of coffee cups and gravestones, beaches and gardens are intimate and poetic; her captions are tender, imaginative, funny, and elegiac. Laced with gratitude and wonder, this is a transporting and affecting tour of Smith’s influences and aesthetics, an evocative celebration of her devotion to creativity and \'the blessed task of remembrance.\'
Quentin Tarantino
RaveBooklistTarantino brings the heat and exuberance of his movie expertise, storytelling artistry, and sharp humor to a dynamic mix of eyebrow-raising personal stories, zesty film history, and kickass film criticism. With chapters devoted to 1970s films he has seen many times over...Tarantino offers sizzling behind-the-production tales and exacting, speculative critiques. In some of the most intriguing passages, he remembers the responses of movie-theater audiences when he was young, especially in Black neighborhoods, where he accompanied Floyd Ray Wilson, a thirtysomething cinephile who showed him the screenplays he was writing ... Tarantino illuminates formative moments during a lifetime of watching, researching, evaluating, and creating in this rollicking cinematic celebration.
Neil Baldwin
RaveBooklistBaldwin...mined a trove of archival treasures to construct this enlightening, engrossing, and richly illustrated portrait ... By bringing down the curtain in this vital and defining biography as Graham faces age’s first cruel salvo, Baldwin keeps the spotlight on her soulful, arresting, and indelible masterpieces, and rightly so.
Barbara Kingsolver
RaveBooklistKingsolver’s capacious, ingenious, wrenching, and funny survivor’s tale is a virtuoso present-day variation on Charles Dickens’ David Copperfield, and she revels in creating wicked and sensitive character variations, dramatic trials-by-fire, and resounding social critiques, all told from Damon’s frank and piercing point of view in vibrantly inventive language. Every detail stings or sings as he reflects on nature, Appalachia, family, responsibility, love, and endemic social injustice. Kingsolver’s tour de force is a serpentine, hard-striking tale of profound dimension and resonance.
Louise Glück
RaveBooklist... a stunningly imaginative, incisive, sly, and hilarious leap of imagination ... Concentrating the depth, rigor, and complexity of her poems into a delectably renegade, mordant, and bravura prose performance, Glück tracks the love and rivalry between these little philosophers as they ponder the nature of family, gender roles, how children are underestimated, the body-mind problem, time, and even death as they reach their one-year birthday. While Marigold’s urge to narrate, to write, to transmute life into story, is a wily exploration of the perpetual compulsiveness of artists, Glück’s breathtakingly disarming double portrait also succinctly and provocatively illuminates the vagaries of human consciousness, the bewitchment of language, and the mysterious assertion of the self.
George Saunders
RaveBooklistBoldly imagined tales are catalyzed by outright and insidious assaults on our most basic rights, including freedom of mind ... Saunders is also caustically funny, mischievously romantic, and profoundly compassionate, and each of these flawless fables inspires reflection on the fragility of freedom and the valor of the human spirit.
Lydia Millet
RaveBooklistAn intriguing portrait of a lonesome man trying to do good in a grim world ... Anguish and tenderness mesh with piquant humor as Millet, empathic and imaginative, reveals her humble hero’s Batman-like backstory. Birds, bats, humans, and many other creatures may be facing extinction, but the desert is an ongoing marvel and love still thrives.
Elizabeth McCracken
RaveBooklistMcCracken navigates a literary tightrope stretched between fiction and memoir and makes darn sure we know it in a hilarious, bravura, and complexly resonant performance ... Transcending categories, McCracken’s novel-as-eulogy and meditation on writing and truth is mischievous, funny, canny, and deeply affecting.
Sandra Cisneros
RaveBooklistCisneros...writes with irresistible intimacy, especially in her poetry. We feel confided in, teased, moved, and jolted as she explores matters earthy and spiritual. Cisneros is funny and lacerating, caring and mischievous ... She also offers stinging social critiques and frank and hilarious riffs on sex. This is a delectably saucy and incisive, righteous and resonant collection.
Annie Proulx
PositiveBooklistNational Book Award– and Pulitzer Prize–winning Proulx’s attunement to the intricacies and vulnerabilities of nature and humankind’s reckless exploitation of the living world shapes her celebrated fiction ... Proulx’s concern for the future of life on earth as the planet warms is acute, while her inquiry into the watery places where peat is found balances alarm and despair with wonder and affirmation of nature’s ability to rebound.
George Prochnik
PositiveBooklist... a many-faceted intellectual and moral inquiry rooted in his exceptional erudition, philosophical cast of mind, and family history ... As he delves into \'apocalyptic capitalism,\' \'explorations of the unconscious,\' Titian, the Surrealists, and Spider-Man, Prochnik traces the nexus between self and civilization with exacting and electrifying rigor, insight, and emotion.
Stacey D'Erasmo
RaveBooklistAs in all her finely wrought, shrewdly piercing novels, D’Erasmo keeps us recalibrating our perceptions. The details about the whale are dramatic and deeply affecting. Every human exchange is fraught, and our feelings about Suzanne rise and fall like the tides. An arresting and intricately spun inquiry into talent, resentment, and risk, love and betrayal, self and community, guilt and retribution.
Steve Stern
RaveBooklistIn an act of resounding creative alchemy, audaciously imaginative Stern combines his fascination with Jewish folktales and mysticism with the life and work of painter Chaim Soutine, forging saturated, gleaming, and tumultuous prose that captures the vision and vehemence of Soutine’s thickly textured, writhing, nearly hallucinatory paintings ... Stern tracks the morphing of Paris’ art world over the decades, culminating in the German occupation. Stern’s kinetically inventive and insightful homage is incandescent, riveting, and revelatory in its wrestling with the mysteries of creativity and the scourge of antisemitism.
Andrea Barrett
RaveBooklistReaders new to Barrett will be entranced by the intricate beauty of her prose, her acute sense of place, and the vibrant inner lives and daring decisions of her intriguing and unusual characters ... Barrett transforms deep knowledge of history, science, and human nature into gorgeously vital and insightful stories in which every element is richly brewed, mulled, and redolent.
Iuliia Mendel
PositiveBooklistUkrainian journalist Mendel, former press secretary for President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, illuminates the complexity of Ukraine and its long struggle for independence by telling the story of her village childhood, during which she spoke Ukrainian; her studious youth in Kherson, where she learned Russian and English; her earning of academic awards and a PhD, and varied international professional experiences. Her invaluable perspective enables her to deftly analyze the lies Russia deployed about Ukrainian \'Nazis\' as it launched its atrocious 2022 invasion. She also recounts Zelenskyy’s remarkable life ... Vivid and clarifying, Mendel’s chronicle profoundly deepens our understanding of Ukraine and the current crisis and why it matters worldwide.
Andrea Wulf
RaveBooklistWulf anchors every evolving aspect of this new paradigm to exceptionally well-informed and vital profiles of the \'First Romantics\' ... Wulf is particularly attuned to Caroline Böhmer-Schlegel-Schelling ... An extensively researched, gorgeously written, vibrant, multifaceted, and richly elucidative portrait of a group that \'changed our world\'.
Jill Bialosky
RaveBooklistWith the violent myth of Leda and Zeus, who takes the form of a swan to commit rape, as a harrowing template for this classics-steeped, intricately constructed drama, Bialosky has her increasingly distraught narrator seek daily refuge in the halls of ancient Greek, Roman, and Egyptian art at the Metropolitan Museum...Photographs of artworks add dimension and wonder to this stunning tale of entitlement, betrayal, creativity, and true power.
A. M. Homes
RaveBooklistWith her imitable command of fast-breaking dialogue, pinpoint description, caustic wit, keen psychological perception, and wise attunement to the zeitgeist, Homes channels the reckless rage fueling the right-wing backlash now threatening the very foundation of our democracy ... Homes’ incisive satire is galvanizing in its insights, sharply hilarious, and thoughtfully, even hopefully compassionate.
Alice Sedgwick Wohl
PositiveBooklistIn this sensitive, deeply considered chronicle, Wohl offers a fresh and incisive look at Edie’s headline-grabbing adventures with Warhol, her superstar power, and their symbiotic relationship while also musing on Warhol’s prescient anticipation of our obsession with images.
Adam Levin
MixedBooklist... massive, meandering, meta ... Levin’s extravagant off-the-trackness also encompasses the mayor’s vision for turning the gigantic cone of wreckage into a memorial called Mount Chicago and an immersion in an avian-ruled Kingdom of Chicago involving a duck-centered variation on the tale of Moses. If only this novel’s too-muchness didn’t threaten to capsize Levin’s bravura dramatization of grief and the paradoxes of storytelling, his incandescent passages of philosophical inquiry, arresting insight, pathos, and hilarity.
Adam Langer
PositiveBooklist... [a] zestfully portrayed and irresistible cast ... [a] fast-paced novel of appalling behavior, bad choices, and floundering attempts at redemption. After two entertaining, biblio-themed mysteries, Chicagoan Langer returns to his home turf and gift for creating intricate and resonant ensembles ... Langer’s cycloramic tale of dirty tricks, moral reasoning, and learning to love is smart, captivating, funny, appalling, and tender.
Marianne Wiggins
RaveBooklist[A] grand novel ... Expansive, gloriously symphonic, intricately patterned ... Loss, desire, moral dilemmas, reflection, and zesty dialogue with the do-good energy of Frank Capra films generate a WWII home front tale of profound and far-ranging inquiry and imagination, scintillating humor, intrepid romance, and conscience.
Natasha Pulley
RaveBooklistGalvanizing ... Pulley’s brilliantly conceived, vibrantly realized, and complexly suspenseful tale is all the more resounding in the glare of Russia’s recklessness at Chernobyl during its latest, horrific invasion of Ukraine.
Elaine Castillo
RaveBooklistProvocative, deeply analytical, and powerfully expressed ... From reading Jane Austen to the fear and hatred fueling book challenges, Castillo’s investigations are incisive, reorienting, sometimes funny, and truly revolutionary.
Jean Thompson
RaveBooklistEver insightful, imaginative, compassionate, and funny, Thompson ... is a virtuoso of thorny interactions between wholly realized characters rife with contradictions. And she is so in her element, bringing this richly dimensional book-anchored mise-en-scène to life with lacerating wit and rueful tenderness while adeptly interleaving a poet’s long, covert battle against sexism and regret with the verdant tale of a young woman taking root in an unexpectedly sustaining realm.
CJ Hauser
RaveBooklistStaccato, funny, barbed, metaphor-laced, and thought-provoking ... No matter her focus, Hauser’s deductions about human nature are always arresting, delving, fresh, and exhilarating.
Alice Elliott Dark
RaveBooklistEach of Dark’s captivating narrators is more than she seems, while the history of Fellowship Point is a microcosm of the conflict between human desires versus ecological viability. Capacious, psychologically fluent, funny, and intricately and meaningfully plotted, Dark’s novel of love, trauma, guilt, and justice explores women’s struggles, the devaluing of nature, and how stories are told and by whom.
Miranda Seymour
RaveBooklistSeymour chronicles the heroic generosity of Rhys’ friends and family, the devastating criticism that kept Rhys from publishing her work for nearly 30 years, and her late-in-life fame, sensitively portraying Rhys in all her fury and brilliance.
Toya Wolfe
RaveBooklistFirst-time novelist Wolfe writes with lacerating precision and authenticity, building her reverberating tale on bedrock Black Chicago history and her own experiences growing up in this besieged community ... Wolfe’s deeply compelling characters, sharply wrought settings, and tightly choreographed plot create a concentrated, significant, and unforgettable tale of family, home, racism, trauma, compassion, and transcendence.
Ada Calhoun
RaveBooklistFluidly morphing, magnetically candid ... Ultimately, Calhoun offers an arresting and provocative carousel of family dynamics, creative paradoxes, literary history, unnerving dilemmas, thorny questions of inheritance and legacy, wry humor, and love.
David Duchovny
PositiveBooklistThis swift and unnerving fever-dream of a novella, Duchovny’s fifth work of fiction, is saturated with mythic and literary allusions and shaped by resonant riffs on Poe and Mann. At once philosophical and suspenseful, grandly imaginative and sharply funny, this mind-bending story of delusion and longing is a dark reflection of New York’s countless crimes and tragedies and much-tested resilience, emblematic of the suffering and tenacity of all of humanity.
Bill McKibben
RaveBooklistA clarifying discussion of why racism is systemic in American society and what remedies can be pursued ... Adept at factual storytelling and connecting the dots, earnest, caring, and funny, McKibben dovetails personal reckonings with an astute elucidation of our social justice and environmental crises, arguing wisely that facing the truth about our past is the only way forward to a more just and sustainable future.
Barry Lopez
RaveBooklistLopez observed the world with ardent and inquisitive concentration and shared his findings and musings in works of tensile strength, lambent beauty, and descriptive and moral precision ... In this precious posthumous collection of recent and previously unpublished essays, he reveals many more dimensions of his quests and discoveries. His intimacy with place brings buried history to full life; his immersions in art deepen understanding of our species and our planet. Lopez remembers mentors and friends; recounts with courage, generosity, and artistry how nature helped him survive prolonged boyhood sexual abuse ... Readers will treasure this hearth of a collection from a crucial and profound writer of spirit, commitment, benevolence, and reverence.
Ali Smith
RaveBooklist... dialogue-driven, deeply imagined, hilarious, and affecting tale of unexpected companionship during a plague ... Smith follows her award-winning Seasonal Quartet with a bristling yet tender, richly layered, brilliant, and dynamic novel of connections forged and love affirmed.
Sy Montgomery
PositiveBooklist... a succinct, intimate, and captivating chronicle graced with color photographs ... Montgomery’s rapture in the presence of hawks and their \'fierce, wild glory\' is gorgeously illuminating and deeply affecting.
John Waters
PositiveBooklistNasty, violent, and obscene? Over-the-top, ricocheting, and hilarious? All of the above describe the self-described Pope of Trash and Filth Elder’s first novel ... an uproariously explicit tale about a smart and vicious serial liar and criminal mastermind with a silly name ... Waters revels in misfits, including a tickle maniac, a dog inciter, Daryl’s talking bisexual penis, and Marsha’s perpetual-motion-freak daughter and her bouncing-and-shimmying followers. Their misadventures are absurd, vulgar, bloody, comic, and weirdly sweet as devilish Waters keeps the pedal to the metal, toys with the possibility of anyone opening psychopath Marsha’s hard-clenched heart, and slyly advocates for acceptance and love.
Julia Glass
RaveBooklistIn finely detailed yet translucent descriptions of Vigil Harbor, an old coastal Massachusetts town, Glass summons a near-future ravaged by environmental devastation and \'political extremes\' ... A novelist of fluid compassion adept at creating plots anchored in the ordinary but driven into disaster, Glass adds a drop of mythology to the whirl of this intricately suspenseful story. With sorrow and humor, beauty and fury rendered in prose as exquisitely nuanced and mutable as the seacoast setting, Glass dramatizes the psychic toll of climate change.
Elif Batuman
RaveBooklistBatuman’s brainy, attentive, outspoken narrator grapples with the absurd (literary pretension, academics, sex) and the sublime (literature, music, sex) ... Through it all, valiant Selin reads and ponders the human condition, culminating in a breath-catching ending that will leave spellbound readers hoping for more from Batuman’s bright and witty adventurer of conscience.
Ben Shattuck
RaveBooklistAs Shattuck chronicles the six ambitious walks he takes over the years in warmly confiding prose and expressive, richly textured drawings, he also recounts passages in Thoreau’s life and quotes from his writings, notes how invaluable Thoreau’s meticulous documentation of the living world is to scientists, and marks how dramatically human endeavors and climate change have altered the land since Thoreau took its measure. Shattuck’s involving and poignant chronicle of immersions in nature, misadventures, family history, and a love story is shaped by his preternatural gift for discerning the essence of each moment and each place.
William R. Cross
RaveBooklistThis low-key radical was overdue for a thorough, historically anchored reconsideration, which Cross provides with skill, insight, and precision ... Cross reveals how Homer’s radiant and dramatic paintings are also shaped by profound questions about humankind’s place in the glory of nature. As Cross chronicles Homer’s sojourns in New York, England, the Caribbean, the Adirondacks, and Maine, he provides deep readings of Homer’s ever-evolving, daring works and tracks their often-insensitive reception. With plentiful color reproductions, Cross’s meticulous, vivid, and revelatory biography transforms our appreciation for this quietly steadfast and subtly trailblazing artist.
Anna Quindlen
PositiveBooklistBrimming with insights into writers’ practices, reasons why writing by hand is best, tales from her life, and upbeat advice...this is a generous work of permission and encouragement.
Betsy Prioleau
RaveBooklistEye-widening ... Prioleau tells Miriam’s roller-coaster tale with thrilling precision within the finely rendered context of evolving newspaper and magazine publishing, the struggles for worker and women’s rights, and historical events propelled by outrageous charlatans that are disturbingly relevant to the present ... High praise to Prioleau for so vividly and incisively telling the whole dramatic story of this \'titanic vanguard figure.\'
Mary Jo Salter
RaveBooklistSalter pairs her exceptional formal deftness with arch insouciance, bringing both rigor and wit to subtly provocative poems that revel in human ingenuity and parse fear, loss, and sorrow ... Wryly illuminating suite of sonnets about life on the screen ... Salter, who can feel Audenesque, is a supremely incisive ekphrastic poet ... These are poems of piquant insight and artistry.
Kate Folk
RaveBooklistTightly constructed and spectacularly mind-bending stories that ingeniously pair everyday challenges and outlandish predicaments, ranging from hilarious to terrifying ... Folk...pairs the prosaic...with the catastrophic, crisply dramatizing the self-destructive side of humanity’s extraordinary adaptability ... Folk’s shocking, grim, funny, and tender stories deliver astringently incisive perceptions of human longing and contradictions.
Peng Shepherd
PositiveBooklistCleverly imagined ... With an elaborately realized plot, fanatic cartographers, maps with surreal powers generated by phantom settlements (intentional errors), and many-faceted suspense, Shepherd contrasts science and art, obsession and love in a bedazzling metaphysical tale of lost and found.
John W. Reid and Thomas E. Lovejoy
RaveBooklistThe authors expertly and enthusiastically illuminate the intricately webbed fecundity of these vast forests ... They vividly describe tree species and the myriad life forms they sustain ... With stunning photographs, lively anecdotes, fresh perspectives, spirited prose, and realistic and just solutions, this is deeply informative and inspiring forest advocacy.
Scott Carney and Jason Miklian
RaveBooklistCarney and conflict and crisis researcher Miklian reveal a long-concealed and profoundly shocking confluence of geopolitical crimes and crises ... Dramatic ... With propulsive narrative drive and intense specificity, the authors circle among a cast of riveting real-life characters, from a soccer star and a humble fisherman turned revolutionary heroes to a valiant humanitarian American couple to Yahya and his fascist generals and political rivals. Deeply involving and harrowing, this commanding work of reclaimed and clarified history is of urgent relevance.
Anne Tyler
RaveBooklistIn the Garrett family, each person is an island, mysterious and self-contained, yet, as Tyler reveals so deftly, all are inextricably connected. Her latest Baltimore-anchored, lushly imagined, psychologically intricate, virtually inhalable novel is a stepping-stone tale, with each finely composed section (after the opening scene) jumping forward in time, generation by generation ... At every leap, Tyler balances gracefully between tenderness and piquant humor, her insights into human nature luminous ... Tyler is a phenomenon, each of her novels fresh and incisive, and this charming family tale will be honey for her fans.
Lee Kravetz
PositiveBooklistThese fictionalized real-life characters could have inspired a deep inquiry into creativity and madness, poetry and survival. Instead, Kravetz, a magnetizing storyteller with a satiric wit, has crafted an incisive, suspenseful, and head-spinning tale of the perils of artistic obsession, coveted objects, ferocious ambition, and tragic betrayal.
Ruth Brandon
RaveBooklistBrandon...takes an unusual approach to the famously enigmatic Marcel Duchamp by focusing on his relationships ... With clarifying details, Brandon places Duchamp’s art in the context of his affairs and marriages; exhaustively chronicles Roché’s obsession with conducting simultaneous love affairs, and tracks Wood’s nightmare marriage to a heartless con man and ultimate triumph as a renowned ceramicist. With singular characters and rare sexual specificity and candor, this is fresh and revelatory art history.
Kathryn Davis
PositiveBooklist... [an] exquisite, lightning-bolt bright, zigzagging, and striking musing on the self, life, death, and the endlessly provocative jumble of the sublime and the absurd, the comic and the tragic.
Marie Benedict
PositiveBooklistBenedict adeptly brings forward another accomplished, intriguing, and unjustly overlooked or oversimplified real-life woman in a welcoming and involving historical novel ... Benedict so vividly elucidates, makes groundbreaking discoveries of the molecular structure of viruses and DNA, only to have Francis Crick and James Watson take credit for her work. Benedict subtly foreshadows Rosalind’s death at 37 from ovarian cancer while conveying her vitality, conviction, and passion as she designs and conducts exacting experiments, writes and presents numerous significant papers, travels, and climbs mountains.
Jackie Higgins
RaveBooklistHiggins highlights intriguing animals with remarkable sensory receptors that offer new perspectives on human senses, which, she explains, number far more than the traditional five ... Each of these fascinating reveals, elucidated with scientific fluency and narrative verve, revolve around the central mystery of \'how neural matter gives rise to sensation and sentience.\' Higgins’ in-depth tour of the senses recalibrates our sense of ourselves, other species, and the singular miracle of life.
Adam Nicolson
RaveBooklistf you intend to share wonderment over a place of complex, ever-in-flux beauty, your language had best be as dynamic as what you’re seeking to celebrate ... Nicolson succeeds gloriously in conveying the marvels of a stretch of Scottish tidal coast, mixing history, science, and precise descriptions bright with inventive metaphors and profound revelations ... Nicolson also chronicles human life on this precarious land, delving into myths, rituals, clans, poverty, and war, and portraying scientists who zealously studied this realm of oceanic churn. Ultimately and inevitably, Nicolson explains how our fossil-fuel habit threatens the grand complexity of life he so vibrantly evokes.
Rebecca Mead
RaveBooklist... at once deep and far-roaming ... Mead, a writer of exacting observation, penetrating curiosity, and exhilarating clarity, thoughtfully meshes personal stories, cultural musings, investigations, history, and analysis in a candid chronicle alive with arresting perceptions and emotion ... Mead has created an enveloping, enlightening, and buoyant memoir of pulling up roots and transplantation.
Clarence Major
RaveBooklistMajor, a poet, novelist, and editor of such fine anthologies as The Garden Thrives, has been a quietly influential force in African American literature. No more. With this gorgeously bluesy tale of love, hate, and doing right, Major will take center stage ... As Major traces his hero’s struggle to understand himself and control his demons, he thrills us with some of the wittiest, most melodious inner dialogue ever written and moves us with dramatic confrontations between loved ones that are remarkable for their sensitivity, authenticity, and significance.
Tory Henwood Hoen
PositiveBooklistFirst-time novelist Hoen draws on her experiences at glossy magazines and a women’s workwear start-up to perform her agile trend-skewering as she details their romance and the complications that threaten it at an indulgently hypnotic length, until the twist, or arc, arrives. With giddy hilarity and stabs to the heart, Hoen’s heady cocktail of satire and celebration is a delectable addition to the dating-app and matchmaking rom-com list.
Hugo Hamilton
RaveBooklistHamilton performs a provocative feat: the narrator of his new book is a book ... By astutely combining a suspenseful quest, a sharply relevant homage to Roth, and intricate stories of persecution, exile, war, censorship, love, and anguish, Hamilton has created a tale of deep resonance.
Dana Stevens
RaveBooklistFilm critic Stevens astutely aligns Buster Keaton’s kinetic cinematic artistry with the velocity of innovation and change in the twentieth century ... Steven’s incisive, encompassing, and invigorating portrait will deepen and revitalize appreciation for his genius.
Glory Edim
PositiveBooklist15 striking tales about girlhood, a theme of deep and universal resonance given profoundly illuminating specificity by the Black women writers Edim showcases ... Here are established and incandescent writers Toni Cade Bambara, Jamaica Kincaid, Alice Walker, and Toni Morrison, whose only published short story is a revelation, along with thrillingly eruptive, scorching, and hilarious stories by Camille Acker, Alexia Arthurs, and Shay Youngblood. Replete with lively author profiles, Further Reading, and Discussion Questions, this is a remarkably vital, revealing, and sustaining literary gathering.
Questlove
RaveBooklistQuestlove argues with ardor, unabashedly nerdy expertise, and percussive narrative power in this provocative 50-year investigation ... He also presents intriguing musical lists and excellent indexes. Questlove’s in-depth, witty, creative, personal, and authoritative musical history will keep people reading, listening, questioning, and musing for many years to come.
Imani Perry
RaveBooklistThe South has been stereotyped and corralled, its vibrant complexity and profound influence due for renewed and rigorous attention. Perry...accomplishes exactly that in this saturated, gorgeously written, and keenly revelatory travelogue ... By sharing her own family history, including her parents’ activism, she emphasizes the essential role of southerners in the Black Power movement. Perry’s southern tour is intimate and encompassing, finely laced and steely, affecting and transformative.
Gish Jen
RaveBooklist... 11 gorgeously comedic and heartbreaking stories cleverly linked through family and friends ... the connections Jen finesses among her entrancing characters are surprising and piquing, her painterly descriptions compassionate and amusing, her summoning of ambiguity and hard truths uniquely illuminating.
Siri Hustvedt
RaveBooklistHustvedt is a transporting storyteller ... [a] richly stirring and resonant collection... Steeped in literature, art, and science, Hustvedt...is a mind-revving investigative thinker and a commanding essayist who stirs the waters, overturns stones, opens curtains, and lifts veils with authority, refinement, and cogency.
Edward Sorel
RaveBooklist... irresistible ... Breezy, funny, and self-deprecating, Sorel tells tales of starting the Push Pin Studios with Milton Glaser and Seymour Chwast, getting jobs and getting fired, living on a shoe string, attending Quaker meetings, falling in love, and committing himself to political dissent. So entwined for him are his experiences and the state of the nation, he offers arresting assessments of the covert abominations of each of the presidential administrations he zapped with his pen. Sorel has also created an exuberant on-the-page retrospective exhibition of his imaginative, vital, mischievous, and daring magazine work. Sorel is refreshingly candid about his amazement over and gratitude for his happy, productive life combating greed, corruption, lies, hubris, and crimes against humanity with wit and artistic vigor, righteous outrage and ebullient creativity.
Claire-Louise Bennett
RaveBooklistBennett’s kaleidoscopically imaginative, word-enthralled, working-class English narrator reenters the consciousness of her younger selves and tracks how books, reading, and writing shaped each phase of her life, with her syntax, vocabulary, and tone evolving as she matures ...Incandescent, surreal, mordantly funny, wrenching, and exhilarating, Bennett’s enrapturing paean to literature echoes Jorge Luis Borges, Clarice Lispector, Lynne Tillman, and Lucy Ellmann, pays direct homage to myriad writers, traces the nexus of literature and life, and maps a book-besotted woman’s search for meaning.
Elise Engler
RaveBooklistEngler pairs vibrant images with handwritten text in the dynamic paintings that fill this complexly engrossing visual plague diary ... Engler adeptly shifts point-of-view and scale, and expressive portraits abound ... Engler’s unique and moving chronicle-in-paintings captures, with a global perspective, the year’s fears and sorrows, outrages and struggles, encapsulating a profound amount of information, reminding us of how crucial journalism is and affirming life’s intricate interconnections.
Lydia Davis
PositiveBooklist... a collection of exacting, entertaining, and instructive reflections on [Davis\'s] lifelong preoccupation with other languages. Her passion for words and syntax charges her candid and probing inquiries into the cascading challenges and revelations of translation ... With a closing essay about her fascination with the French city of Arles, Davis’ articulation of her literary pursuits and processes will set kindred minds alight.
John Richardson
RaveBooklistThis is the fourth volume in art historian Richardson’s phenomenally detailed and unfailingly perceptive biography of a protean artist he knew personally. This granted him unique access to invaluable material, including diaries and magnetizing photographs, many documenting Picasso’s key involvement with surrealist photographer Dora Maar ... Richardson, who died in 2019, has given the world a magnificently illuminating, vital, and invaluable biography covering two-thirds of the complex life of a perpetually rejuvenating titan of art.
Nikole Hannah-Jones
RaveBooklistReaders will discover something new and redefining on every page as long-concealed incidents and individuals, causes and effects are brought to light by Hannah-Jones and 17 other vital thinkers and clarion writers, including Carol Anderson, Ibram X. Kendi, Tiya Miles, and Bryan Stevenson, each of whom sharpens our understanding of the dire influence of anti-Black racism on everything from the American Revolution to the Black church, Motown, health care, Trumpism, how infrastructure enforces racial inequality, the unrelenting financial struggle in Black families and communities, and how Black Americans fighting for equality decade after decade have preserved our democracy. The revelations are horrific and empowering ... This visionary, meticulously produced, profound, and bedrock-shifting testament belongs in every library and on every reading list.
Cathy Curtis
RaveBooklist\"Curtis skillfully tracks how the Southerner became a consummate New Yorker ... Curtis recounts in resonant detail Hardwick’s demanding life in New York, Europe, and Maine, charting each phase in her passionately intellectual and artistic life, and adeptly lacing her involving and invaluable chronicle with exquisite passages from her subject’s letters and published works, ensuring that Hardwick’s etched crystal voice radiates in all its resplendent beauty, valor, and knowingness.
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Edith Schloss ed. Mary Venturini
RaveBooklist... zestfully precise and deeply knowledgeable ... With preternatural recall, a discerning eye, keen ear, and hard-won insights, Schloss shares spirited, funny, wry, and poignant tales about Elaine and Bill de Kooning, Fairfield Porter, John Cage, Cy Twombly, and many others ... Thriving creatively in Italy after her divorce, she found love and new aesthetic revelations with experimental composer Alvin Curran. Intrepid, attentive, judicious, and radiantly expressive, Schloss presents an exhilarating perspective on a salient chapter in art history.
Ann Patchett
RaveBooklistPatchett...is an exhilarating and provocative essayist ... Mischievously funny and nimbly incisive, Patchett celebrates her close friendship with a nun; pays tribute to an unlikely muse, Snoopy; explains why she doesn’t have children ... Breathtakingly candid, Patchett attains graceful velocity and tilt, her vibrant sentences serving as divining rods for piquant life lessons.
Charles Finch
RaveBooklistFinch’s precise and stunning day-by-day chronicle of the COVID-19 pandemic brings back all the shock and bewilderment, fear and outrage, grim humor and stark revelations ... this award-winning critic and author of a best-selling Victorian mystery series is nimbly incisive, scathing, and hilarious; his political analysis keen and prescient ... this edgy in-the-moment account is bracing in its connectivity and clarification ... Resounding indictments alternate with personal disclosures as Finch listens to and critiques music, smokes pot, and shares the experiences of friends, including an ER doctor in New York. In radiant gratitude, Finch remembers his grandmother, the artist Annie Truitt. A forthright, sharp-witted, caring, and essential record of living through a tragic, transformative year.
Elif Shafak
RaveBooklist... imaginative, provocative, witty, and profound ... As the full, heartbreaking tale of Kostas and Defne flowers in flashbacks, Shafak, alternating between bracing matter-of-factness and glorious metaphorical descriptions, casts light on the atrocities of ethnic violence, the valor of those who search for and excavate mass graves, the inheritance of trauma, and the wonders of trees and nature’s interconnectivity ... Shafak propagates an enthralling, historically revelatory, ecologically radiant, and emotionally lush tale of loss and renewal.
Patti Smith
RaveBooklistSmith is well attuned to the otherworldly dimension of dreams and cosmic visions ... Intimiate and vaulting ... [Smith\'s] dark spell yielded poems of radiant wonder that can now be read as a lyrical companion to her National Book Award–winning memoir, Just Kids ... Smith looks to family history for sources of her artistic impulses and portrays herself in adulthood as a roaming mystic, journal in hand, heart and mind open. Exultations of concentrated beauty and mystery ignite Smith’s soulful poems about the making of an artist.
Paul Auster
RaveBooklist\"Auster now proves to be an incandescent literary biographer. Deeply inspired and openly awed by the feverish genius... Auster offers \'nuts-and-bolts\' analysis of and affectingly emotional appreciation for Crane’s genre-twisting newspaper sketches, audacious and indelible novels, \'infinitely strange\' poems, and riveting short stories ... Auster writes with such enrapturing vibrancy, expertise, and empathy that his biography serves as an intensive course in attentive, inquisitive reading as well as a thrillingly insightful and resonant portrait of a young artist who wrestled with the endless perplexities of life and death.
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Dave Eggers
RaveBooklistAn astutely creative satirist, Eggers presents a galvanizing vision of the potentially horrifying extremes weaponized social media and e-commerce could be capable of by deftly amplifying the already malignant impact tech giants are having on privacy and freedom ... He also daringly explodes cherished assumptions and asks if an Every-like megacorporation might be the only entity capable of combating climate change. A riveting, astute, darkly hilarious, and deeply unnerving speculative saga.
Douglas Abrams and Jane Goodall
RaveBooklistAbrams sets the scene for each encounter, ensuring that Goodall’s unique personality, poise, and inner strength shine forth. Their jousting discussions are passionate, candid, and very moving as Abrams asks difficult questions and Goodall responds with enthralling real-life stories shaped by her extensive knowledge, extraordinary experiences, and hard-forged wisdom. Without minimizing the daunting challenges we face as the climate crisis takes hold, Goodall explains that hope is a \'human survival trait\' that requires \'action and engagement\' ... Bright with photographs, supported by an excellent Further Reading section, and, vibrant with wry humor, scientific fact, grassroots advances, compassion, and spiritual depth, this compelling and enlightening dialogue of hope amplifies Goodall’s mantra: \'Together we can. Together we will.\'
Claire Vaye Watkins
RaveBooklistWatkins’ angry, grieving, wild-at-heart narrator shares Watkins’ name, home ground, parentage, and literary calling, creating a wily fusion of autobiography and imagination ... She’s reckless, infuriating, ribald, incisive, and hilarious. In the spirit of Edward Abbey, Hunter Thompson, and Joy Williams, Watkins has forged a desert tale of howling pain and a chaotic quest for healing mythic in its summoning of female power in a realm of double-wides, loaded dice, broken glass, and hot springs.
Susan Orlean
RaveBooklist[An] ebulliently descriptive, robustly factual, occasionally alarming collection ... Orlean’s deep pleasure in learning startling facts, her often wry tales about her personal life, her omnivorous attention to detail, and her juggler’s skill with words yield vivid, provocative, amusing, and wondrous stories ... Orlean thoughtfully and piquantly contrasts the marvels of animals and the damage humans do to them and their habitats, threatening their very survival ... A revelry for readers wild for animals and/or enamored of vibrant essays.
David Sedaris
RaveBooklistSedaris’ shrewdly sketched world travelogue, hilarious anecdotes, and frank reflections on loved ones, and life’s myriad absurdities and cruelties major and minor, make for a delectably sardonic, rueful, and provocative chronicle.
Maureen Gibbon
RaveBooklistEmulating in words what Manet expressed in paint with his deft yet deeply evocative touch, Gibbon’s empathic portrait reaches to the bruised heart of creativity to elucidate how art sustains the soul and redeems a life.
Phillip Lopate
RaveBooklistEssay expert and advocate Lopate completes his invaluable trilogy of powerhouse anthologies...showcasing the best of American essays in all their radiant and stormy voices, styles, and subject matter with a suitably kinetic twenty-first-century gathering reflecting a time \'of rupture and anxiety\' ... dynamic ... Lopate’s astutely selected trilogy zestfully celebrates the splendid prowess and provocation of the American essay.
Rebecca Solnit
RaveBooklistOrwell will always be relied on for his astute understanding of the threat of totalitarianism and its malignant lies; Solnit also ensures that we’ll value Orwell’s profound understanding of how love, pleasure, and awe for nature can be powerful forms of resistance.
Louise Erdrich
RaveBooklistThe many-hued, finely patterned weave of Erdrich’s funny, evocative, painful, and redemptive ghost story includes strands of autobiography and even cameo appearance ... The story of Tookie’s body-snatching caper and subsequent horrifically long sentence is hilariously ludicrous and heartbreaking; the tale of how reading saved her life in prison is deeply affirming ... Erdrich’s insights into what her city experienced in 2020 are piercing; all her characters are enthralling, and her dramatization of why books are essential to our well-being is resounding.
Anderson Cooper and Katherine Howe
RaveBooklistWith resplendent detail, the authors capture the gasp-eliciting extravagance of the Vanderbilt Gilded Age mansions and lifestyles, which rarely made them happy ... With its intrinsic empathy and in-depth profiles of women, this is a distinctly intimate, insightful, and engrossing chronicle of an archetypal, self-consuming American dynasty ... Cooper’s magnetism, Howe’s fan base, and an irresistible subject add up to a nonfiction blockbuster.
Sandra Cisneros tr. Liliana Valenzuela
PositiveBooklist... [a] welcome and vital return to fiction ... Every heart-revving scene is sensuously and incisively rendered, cohering into a vivid, tender, funny, bittersweet, and haunting episodic tale of peril, courage, concession, selfhood, and friendship. Cisneros’ intricately multidimensional and beautifully enveloping novella is presented in both English and Spanish.
Winfred Rembert
RaveBooklistThis is a book like no other, from Winfred Rembert’s unique and uniquely powerful autobiographical paintings to his disturbing and courageous life story, frankly told to philosophy professor Kelly ... With a foreword by Bryan Stevenson and superb color reproductions, Rembert’s self-portrait in word and image belongs in every library.
Robert Olen Butler
RaveBooklistWith two dozen remarkably imaginative and empathic fiction titles to his credit, Butler brings preternatural attunement to the spiraling of the mind and ardently honed artistry to this exceptionally nuanced, tender, funny, tragic, and utterly transfixing portrait of a man reflecting on more than a century’s worth of horror and wonder.
Ruth Ozeki
RaveBooklistOzeki draws on her Zen Buddhist attentiveness as she writes with bountiful insight, exuberant imagination, and levitating grace about psychic diversity, our complicated attitude toward our possessions, street protests, climate change, and such wonders as crows, the moon, and snow globes. Most inventively, Ozeki celebrates the profound relationship between reader and writer. This enthralling, poignant, funny, and mysterious saga, thrumming with grief and tenderness, beauty and compassion, offers much wisdom.
Joy Williams
RaveBooklistBalancing creeping despair with mordant humor and piquant strangeness pegged to Jeffery’s fascination with a Franz Kafka story, Williams asks if hope and compassion, reason and responsibility can survive once the wonders of wild and flourishing nature have been utterly destroyed. Brilliantly and exquisitely shrewd and unnerving.
Hilma Wolitzer
RaveBooklistNow in her nineties, this author of nine celebrated novels is an artist with a deceptively light touch, creating stories of psychological and social incisiveness that are at once poised and lacerating. Wolitzer deftly reveals how women are harshly judged and how women judge, how children are trapped in their parents’ snares and snarls and how they escape. Delectably funny and radically insightful linked stories featuring Paulie and Howard reveal how marriage can be oppressive and freeing, and how a woman’s love can move mountains. Writing with startling candor about pregnancy and birth, what it takes to keep oneself and one’s family together, and role reversals ... A striking and enlightening gathering of polestar short stories.
John Lurie
RaveBooklistLurie writes that he has \'witnessed the inexplicable.\' He has also embodied the inexplicable many times over. Drawing on his unruly genius, persistent subversiveness, habitual courting of risk, and mordant humor, he recounts wild tales of his spiritual quests, drug-stoked New York City misadventures, bond with the saxophone, tormented relationships, and nightmarish tours with his band ... A passionately innovative musician, a painter of exquisite nuance and teasing wit, and a survivor of a recklessly improvised life of chance, poverty, violence, addiction, betrayals, and debilitating illness, Lurie proves to also be a wry, sly, furious, and vivid storyteller. His raucously frank, sardonic, sex-saturated, compulsively detailed, and hard-charging memoir is incandescent.
Maria Hummel
RaveBooklistDrawing even more deeply on her astute insights into the shadow side of the art world, Hummel exposes the toxic competition at a top art school ... The cutthroat arts milieu, precisely and knowingly rendered, is magnetizing, while the intricately knotted plot and the characters’ nuanced psychology are stoked by Hummel’s evisceration of privilege, greed, exploitation, and criminality. Scathing, sexy, suspenseful, and righteous.
Jonathan Santlofer
RaveBooklist... provocative ... As the story switches between Luke’s increasingly bloody investigation and Vincent’s heart-wrenching story, Santlofer brings unique expertise to this vigorously detailed story ... Suspenseful, lush with Florence’s glorious art and architecture, sexy, and emotionally complex, Santlofer’s multifaceted tale of how a passion for art can turn criminal contrasts the genuine with the fake and asks if beauty and love can truly be transcendent.
Rita Dove
RaveBooklist... a potent and many-chambered volume showcasing the highly awarded former U.S. Poet Laureate’s signature gift for historical illumination, especially in sharp and poignant portraits of marginalized figures ... Here, too, are poems of pirouetting wit and jujitsu power about family, food, nature, memory, complacency, protest, and her own valiant battle for health. Dove is a poet of profound perspective, genius, and grace.
Sandra M Gilbert
RaveBooklist... these prolific and versatile women writers return to the field with incisive and redefining inquiries into the lives and work of diverse North American literary women who faced \'dizzying contradictions\' and seemingly insurmountable opposition to propel feminism through the advances and backlashes of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries ... Gilbert and Gubar set their pinpoint elucidations within a richly dimensional context, widening the lens to focus on Naomi Wolf, Alison Bechdel, Beyoncé, Claudia Rankine, and N. K. Jemisin. Given humanity’s ongoing battles for equality and justice on numerous fronts, Shulamith Firestone’s warning is keenly on point: \'Power, however it has evolved, whatever its origins, will not be given up without a struggle.”\'
Alice McDermott
RaveBooklistSpiked with exacting observations and shrewdly amusing anecdotes about the mysterious and arduous art of fiction ... She offers a consummate, fresh, and delving look at why we crave fiction ... At once assertive and subtle, rigorous and funny ... Exceptionally knowledgeable and passionate, prickly and witty, utterly committed and quite frank about how every novel-in-progress is a “shipwreck,” McDermott recalculates and reinvigorates our appreciation for the high demands and deep resonance of fiction at its most profound.
Virginia Feito
PositiveBooklistFeito locks the reader up inside the fracturing psyche of a woman of privilege who, through excruciatingly precise renderings of grotesque delusions, is revealed to be profoundly and perilously damaged. Feito masterfully orchestrates the bewildering horrors of Mrs. March’s breakdown as she is assailed by memories of her loveless childhood and, playing sleuth, convinces herself that her husband is a rapist and a murderer. Each sharply realized and diabolical aspect of Mrs. March’s life, hallucinations, and actions are spiked with chilling insights into the dark aspects of family, marriage, and wealth. Feito’s bravura gothic thriller brilliantly exposes monstrous consequences of covert neglect and cruelty.
Edith Widder
RaveBooklistA superbly captivating writer, Widder fluently elucidates complex scientific inquiries and findings pertaining to how bioluminescence helps marine species thrive in the watery realm where \'there’s nothing to hide behind.\' She also renders the ludicrous, the terrifying, and the enthralling with equal vim and vigor. As Widder dazzles readers with dramatic tales of expeditions frustrating and revelatory, describing such astonishments as seeing an \'enormous squid\' that was \'completely new to science,\' she calls for an effort to explore the deep seas on par with the space program, passionately and expertly arguing that it is urgently important for us to understand the oceans, which are severely imperiled and essential to our survival. \'We need to launch a new age of exploration, one that is focused on our greatest treasure, life.\'
Ha Jin
RaveBooklist... scrupulously narrated and deeply enmeshing ... Ha Jin’s intimately precise, questioning, and quietly dramatic portrait of a devoted, ever-evolving artist committed to songs that are \'ecstatic and mysterious and solitary\' has far-reaching and profound resonance.
Judy Chicago
PositiveBooklist... candidly analytical ... Courageous, audacious, outspoken, indefatigable, and creative, Chicago has addressed such tragic realities as the Holocaust and extinction in monumental series meant to awaken, provoke, and inspire. Her dramatic life and extensive and intrepid body of work deserve close attention
Fiona Sampson
RaveBooklistSampson overturns old misogynist assumptions, establishing that it was Barrett Browning’s tremendous literary success that brought her and nascent poet Robert Browning together ... Sampson sensitively elucidates how Barrett Browning’s unusual life shaped her imagination and social consciousness. As she tracks the creation and reception of each of her groundbreaking books, including Sonnets from the Portuguese, she astutely uses Barrett Browning’s revolutionary masterpiece, Aurora Leigh, a novel-in-verse about a woman poet claiming artistic and personal freedom to frame this gleaming two-way mirror reflecting Barrett Browning and her profound and extraordinary oeuvre.
Michael Pollan
PositiveBooklist... briskly enlightening if intermittently cursory ... Our mind on Pollan revels in his exceptional narrative lucidity and command of complex and intriguing facts and concepts.
Quentin Tarantino
PositiveBooklistWhile the book’s publication as a 1970s-style mass-market paperback emulates that subgenre, Tarantino goes far beyond its usual parameters in this vividly interiorized, ardently researched, and far-reaching portrayal of individuals spellbound and endangered by Hollywood’s dream factory ... When Rick lands a part in a promising new Western series, Tarantino links the show’s story of a besieged rancher and his fractured family to the archetypal tragedies of the Greeks and Shakespeare with gritty humor and striking insights. Scenes on the set also deliver the novel’s bright and hopeful guiding light, eight-year-old acting prodigy Trudi Frazer. Provoking, wily, controversial, and revered Tarantino, celebrated for his screenplays, truly is a literary force, stepping forward as a novelist adept at using an omniscient point of view to powerful effect in a novel driven by its characters’ inner lives and smart, witty, and salty dialogue of propulsion and nuance, hilarity and heartbreak. Departing from the movie in intriguing ways, this is a send-up of the old-school yet still kicking heterosexual, white-male mindset rife with desire, resentment, entitlement, fear, and misogyny. It will also offer a stereoscopic experience for most readers as they envision the characters as played by the movie’s cast, especially Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio, and picture the settings from the movie, a doubling that will inspire fanatic comparisons between film and page. But this is a work of literary art in its own right, a novel that, if the movie didn’t exist, would captivate readers with its own knowing vision and zestful power.
Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray
RaveBooklistEvery element of this blockbuster historical novel is compelling and revelatory, beginning with the bedazzling protagonist based with awestruck care on Belle da Costa Greene ... a novel of enthralling drama, humor, sensuality, and insight. Belle’s abiding belief in the radiance of books and art; her passionate and tragic relationship with renowned art historian Bernard Berenson, who is also hiding his true identity; and her longing for her father, Richard Greener, the first Black man to graduate from Harvard, deepen this resounding tale of a brilliant and resilient woman defying sexism, classism, and racism during the brutality of Jim Crow. Benedict and Murray do splendidly right by Belle in this captivating and profoundly enlightening portrayal.
Ed. by Tracy K. Smith and John Freeman
RaveBooklistForty BIPOC writers and members of other marginalized groups present galvanizing poems and essays, most of which first appeared in Literary Hub ... A potent and momentous in-the-moment response to an urgent and indelible time.
Hayden Herrera
PositiveBooklist\"Herrera’s incisive portraits of her parents and their volatile world subtly forecast her future calling as a superb biographer of artists Frida Kahlo, Isamu Noguchi, and Arshile Gorky (whose widow became Herrera’s stepmother and godmother) ... Herrera seems to have cultivated her keen powers of observation to survive neglect, upheaval, and worse. But she also recounts the joy she found in nature and other exhilarating experiences as she reveals a little-known realm of insistent liberation, romance, restlessness, recklessness, and the pursuit of beauty.
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Francine Prose
RaveBooklistOne of this bravura performance’s many piquant delights is Prose’s clever use of Simon’s fluency in ancient sagas as he struggles to comprehend just how malignant the scheme he’s bogged down in truly is. Mordant, incisive, and tenderhearted, Prose presents an intricately realized tale of a treacherous, democracy-threatening time of lies, demagoguery, and prejudice that is as wildly exhilarating as the Cyclone, Simon’s beloved Coney Island roller coaster.
Michelle Orange
PositiveBooklistIn a weave of memoir, history, and reflection, Orange judiciously considers the lives of her mother and her mother’s mother within the larger context of women’s ongoing battles for equality and liberation ... In gleaming prose of tensile strength, Orange considers the painful paradoxes of women’s lives and mother-daughter relationships, drawing on the writings of Simone de Beauvoir, Susan Sontag, and Adrienne Rich, while tracking her seemingly indomitable mother’s long-brewing lung disease and her ultimate battle between mind and body.
Salman Rushdie
PositiveBooklistRavenous for life, stories, freedom, and justice, he is propelled on intellectual journeys between East and West, past and present, fact and fiction, words and image ... plunging into a grand array of subjects and fashioning ensnaring prose that is, by turns, erudite, caustic, and funny. Rushdie shares vivid family stories, celebrates \'wonder tales,\' and argues for boldly imaginative fiction ... Engrossing and provocative testimony to our need for the \'languages of truth.\'
John Green
RaveBooklist... his first nonfiction book and first book for adults, though YAs will avidly read and revel in it, too ... there is something of the sermon in his essays as he mixes curiosity and erudition with confession, compassion, and wit, searching for illuminating life lessons amid life’s dark chaos. His particular mix of irony and sincerity enables him to embrace both the sublime and the ridiculous.
Jim Shepard
RaveBooklist... incisive, unsettling ... riveting and tragic ... Shepard writes with drilling authority about Greenland, epidemiology, the challenges women doctors and scientists face, and the confounding complexities of the microbial world. With word-by-word artistry, fluid compassion, and deep insights, Shepard emphatically dramatizes epic failures, self-sacrificing dedication, desolation, and love.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
PositiveBooklist... deeply etched testimony ... Shock, rage, and pain—physical and psychic—are built into the stronghold of her syntax ... Adichie’s exquisitely forthright chronicle of grief generously articulates the harrowing amplification of sorrow, helplessness, and loss during the COVID-19 pandemic, making this an intimate and essential illumination of a tragic time.
Philip Hoare
PositiveBooklist... evocatively associative ... Hoare’s deep and illuminating responses to Dürer’s iconic self-portraits and empathic portraits of animals inspire questions of sexuality and of our use and abuse of other species, especially whales. His narrative swerves also deliver incisive profiles of writers influenced by Dürer, including art historian Erwin Panofsky and Nobel laureate Thomas Mann, both refugees from Nazi Germany, and poet Marianne Moore. Hoare also vividly celebrates Dürer’s standing as the first international art star due to his revolutionary, \'almost uncanny,\' mass-produced woodcuts and engravings. In contemplating Dürer’s virtuoso skills and gripping \'vision of the dark, the beautiful, and the strange\' and sharing his own immersive appreciation of nature and art, Hoare forges a new, reorienting, and exhilarating perspective.
Larissa Pham
RaveBooklistPham is valiantly candid and philosophical about her \'displacement\' as the American-born daughter of Vietnamese parents, her eating disorder and sexuality, pain and trauma, and racism public, private, and entangled with misogyny ... Pham brings intellectual power, sensuousness, and psychological astuteness to her encounters with art ... A thrillingly frank and incisive self-portrait of an exceptional young writer coming into her own.
Olivia Laing
RaveBooklistIntrepid cultural critic Laing (The Lonely City, 2016) conducts incisive inquiries into complex subjects by assembling a galaxy of innovators with whom to commune. Here she takes a tangible approach to freedom by focusing on how our bodies ... Laing’s finely crafted blend of incisive memoir and biography vitalize this unique chronicle of the endless struggle \'to be free of oppression based on the kind of body\' one inhabits, a work of fresh and dynamic analysis and revelation.
Francisco Goldman
RaveBooklistThis is a journalist’s notebook and an artist’s sketchbook—every detail vivid and meaningful, every captivating character a portal into the struggle for freedom and dignity. Although steeped in trauma and loneliness, prejudice and brutality, secrets and lies, Goldman’s ravishing, multidirectional novel is also iridescent with tenderness, comedic absurdity, sensual infatuation, reclaimed love, the life-sustaining desire to \'remember every single second,\' and the redemption of getting every element just right.
Suzanne Simard
RaveBooklistForest ecologist Simard has been studying intricate, mutually sustaining forms of communication and interconnectivity among trees and fungi for decades, initially as a determined and controversial researcher for the Canadian Forest Service, then as a professor who attained TED Talk fame ... As Simard elucidates her revolutionary experiments, replete with gorgeous descriptions and moments of fear and wonder, a vision of the forest as an \'intelligent system, perceptive and responsive,\' comes into focus, leading to her revelation of how \'mother trees\' not only nourish and protect seedlings but also \'continuously gauge, adjust, and regulate\' their support of the entire forest through a finely calibrated web that mirrors our own neural network and cardiovascular system ... A masterwork of planetary significance.
Michaela Carter
RaveBooklistWith a tantalizing cast that includes the women artists Leonor Fini, Lee Miller, and Remedios Varo; ravishing descriptions cued by her subjects’ provocative art; and her exquisite attunement to the shock and agony of war and madness, Carter has written a refulgent and deeply involving historical tale of tragic lost love, determined survival, the sanctuary of art, and the evolution of a muse into an artist of powerfully provocative feminist expression.
Lisa Napoli
RaveBooklist[Napoli] brings all her biographical and expository skills, along with her passion for reporting and fluency in the social, political, and financial challenges facing the press, to this vivid and engrossing group biography of the women who built National Public Radio ... Napoli revels in the powerful personalities and talents of the founding mothers as she chronicles how each confronted misogyny, juggled personal lives and demanding careers, and established enormously influential cultural, legal, and political beats. Along the way, Napoli tells the instructive story of NPR’s growth, from a shoestring operation to an inspired but nearly bankrupt juggernaut to today’s avidly supported media jewel. NPR fans will find every detail compelling, while readers interested in media will discover a new and essential facet of broadcast history.
Cynthia Ozick
RaveBooklistOzick, whose artistry, erudition, and renown as a fiction writer and critic span decades, is a consummate stylist and a virtuoso of subtlety with a Jamesian streak ... a work of delectable wit, astute imagination, and piercing insight ...Ozick sagaciously traces anti-Semitism’s perpetual, toxic reach across centuries and continents.
Rachel Kushner
RaveBooklistMuch is revealed in this vitalizing essay collection. Kushner’s autobiographical pieces illuminate complicated aspects of her adventurous life and why and how she developed the skills to write about it with such breath-catching clarity and polished rigor, the literary equivalent of the fine-tuned mechanics of the motorcycles and classic cars she treasures. Here are riveting accounts ... Kushner is also an astute and vigorous literary essayist, parsing with distinct insights works by Marguerite Duras, Denis Johnson, and Clarice Lispector. She also incisively profiles artists and visionary prison abolitionist Ruth Wilson Gilmore ... tell she does, steering her way through perilous curves with steely agility and purpose, leaving her passengers exultant and enlightened.
Jhumpa Lahiri
RaveBooklist[Lahiri wrote] this novel in Italian, then translate[d] it into English. The result of this process is language that seems to have been sieved through a fine mesh, each word a gleaming gemstone. Such expressive refinement perfectly embodies Lahiri’s unnamed, solitary narrator, a woman in her forties who teaches at a university and lives alone in an unnamed Italian city ... There is melancholy here, but these concentrated, exquisitely detailed, poignant, and rueful episodes also pulse with the narrator’s devotion to observation and her pushing through depression to live on her terms ... With a painterly interplay of light and shadows, Lahiri creates an incisive and captivating evocation of the nature and nexus of place and self.
Richard Wright
RaveBooklistWright wrote this mythic, crescendo odyssey, this molten tragedy of tyranny and the destruction of a life, at the start of WWII, 10 years before Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man appeared. But despite the resounding success of Native Son , Wright’s publisher rejected this lacerating tale. Now, finally, this devastating inquiry into oppression and delusion, this timeless tour de force, emerges in full, the work Wright was most passionate about, as he explains in the profoundly illuminating essay, Memories of My Grandmother,” also published here for the first time. This blazing literary meteor should land in every collection.
Thomas Dyja
RaveBooklistDyja portrays cities with verve ... he boldly anatomizes New York in a phenomenally intricate and revelatory web of provocative juxtapositions ... Along the way, he vividly, often caustically, portrays mayors Ed Koch, David Dinkins, Rudy Giuliani, and Mike Bloomberg (with a swipe at Bill de Blasio), and brings forward many intriguing champions of the public good ... Writing energetically in a jabbing, inflected, bemused, and satirical style that conveys New York’s propulsion and contradictions—and spotlighting the likes of Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat, Diana Vreeland and Jay-Z, Tina Brown and Al Sharpton—Dyja encompasses the scope and complexity of the city’s ferment ... A dynamic, passionately knowledgeable, surprising, and gutsy chronicle of a world-shaping city and humanity itself in all its paradoxical wonder.
Nadine Matheson
PositiveBooklist... a startlingly fresh and compelling sleuth ... Henley, Salim Ramouter, the rookie she resents being saddled with, Dr. Linh Choi, and many others connected to an expertly depicted southeast London neighborhood along the Thames are vital characters of color with complex and resonant back stories ... Matheson’s insights into both the procedures and the stress at the underfunded Serial Crime Unit, the extreme pressures a Black woman detective inspector faces, various psychological maladies, and sexual passion and perversion stoke a many-faceted, at times grotesque, nonetheless sensitive, witty, and heart-pounding work of suspense. The perfectly orchestrated cliffhanger ending primes readers for the next installment in Matheson’s promising, optioned-for-TV Henley series.
Jo Ann Beard
PositiveBooklistBeard writes about pain, cancer, death, divorce, violence, and bizarre alignments, subjects one may prefer to avoid, but Beard’s cascades of breathtaking detail are irresistible as she evokes the tangible world, the inner realm, and life’s welter of the unexpected and the inevitable ... The title essay recounts indelible, beautiful, absurd, and sorrowful experiences from Beard’s life, including a trip to India and a detonated marriage. There is extraordinary energy and force in Beard’s refined, penetrating, darkly rhapsodic prose as she writes of family, dogs, love, friendship, chaos, and danger in zigzagging associations, spiraling juxtapositions, and sudden switchbacks, seeking to \'make art out of life\' and succeeding brilliantly and profoundly.
Michelle Nijhuis
RaveBooklistNijhuis parses thorny social and ethical issues, while anchoring this exceptionally comprehensive and enlightening history of conservation to incisive profiles of many ardent and intrepid individuals devoted to protecting animals and their habitats ... Nijhuis spotlights key moments in the evolution of ecological thought and practice inspired by the likes of biodiversity defender Edward O. Wilson, Nobel Prize–winning political economist Elinor Ostrom, and pioneering conservation biologist Michael Soulé. Along the way, she exposes the racism inherent in environmental decimation, chronicles the struggle to establish community-based conservation initiatives, and explains efforts to protect common species before they decline, introducing heroic contemporary innovators. Nijhuis has created a defining and invaluable chronicle of an increasingly urgent lifesaving effort.
Marguerite Duras, Tr. Kelsey L. Haskett
PositiveBooklistMost notable is the psychological intensity of the central figure, mercilessly observant Maud, who boldly refuses to comply with familial or social expectations, and Duras’ ravishingly descriptive passages contrasting the stifling monotony of human struggles versus the glory and freedom of nature. With affairs, suicide, rivalry, gossip, desolation, betrayal, and dysfunction, rendered with touches of Flaubert, the Brontës, and Woolf, and illuminated via invaluable essays by translator Haskett and Duras’ biographer, Jean Vallier, this flawed yet intriguing novel is revealed to be the proving ground on which Duras taught herself how to cast her provocative spell.
Blake Bailey
RaveBooklistThe rapport between Philip Roth and award-winning literary biographer Bailey is immediately apparent in this fully authorized, comprehensive, and engrossing chronicle of a driven, complicated, and contentious artistic life. Roth’s voice, by turns funny, furious, anguished, erudite, and reconciled, is heard throughout Bailey’s flowing, vivid, and precise account ... a consummate and unforgettable biography of a controversial, virtuoso, and indelible American writer.
Paulina Bren
RaveBooklist... [a] scintillating, many-faceted history ... Varying delectably in cadence, from high-heel tapping and typewriter clacking to sinuous and reflective passages analyzing the complex forms of adversity Barbizon women faced over the decades, Bren’s engrossing and illuminating inquiry portrays the original Barbizon as a vital microcosm of the long quest for women’s equality.
Russell Banks
RaveBooklistBanks, a conduit for the confounded and the unlucky, a writer acutely attuned to place and ambiance, is at his most magnetic and provocative in this portrait of a celebrated documentary filmmaker on the brink of death ... In this masterful depiction of a psyche under siege by disease, age, and guilt, Banks considers with profound intent the verity of memory, the mercurial nature of the self, and how little we actually know about ourselves and others.
Alexander Nemerov
RaveBooklistArt historian Nemerov chose not to write a full biography of abstract expressionist painter Helen Frankenthaler, a student of his father’s at Bennington College, but rather to follow her footsteps as she created her uniquely fluid, liberated, personal, and animated visual language and techniques and attained prominence in her twenties ... Pairing vivid anecdotal biography with energetic descriptive analysis, the author recalibrates our perception of Frankenthaler’s undulating and entrancing canvases, on which she channeled in-the-moment feelings and celebrated the \'beauty and power and glory\' of life. With reverence and irreverent wit, nimble narration, pertinent art history, and a vibrant cast of characters, Nemerov chronicles the first round in Frankenthaler’s extraordinary artistic adventure.
Liz Heinecke
RaveBooklistHeinecke, previously an author of science books for kids, draws on her art and science degrees in this vividly elucidating and enthralling double portrait which reads like a biographical novel rather than a dual biography as she boldly imagines the thoughts and feelings of her two magnetic subjects and invents dialogue. Some readers may object to these creative-nonfiction techniques, but extensive bibliographic notes attest to the factual foundation supporting this irresistible, dramatic, many-faceted, and, yes, illuminating tale of two extraordinary geniuses and their friendship. Heinecke’s fresh take on Curie is welcome, and her portrayal of the too-little-known Fuller is revelatory.
John Matteson
RaveBooklistMatteson immerses readers ... Equally compelling is Matteson’s tracking of difficult family relationships, literary breakthroughs, and how Holmes’ war experiences influenced his thinking as a U.S. Supreme Court justice. Here, too, are dramatic scenes of Abraham Lincoln’s political and moral quandaries—the book’s title is his phrase—in the aftermath of the horrific Battle of Fredericksburg, a touchstone for the exceptional and influential individuals Matteson incisively portrays in this masterful and distinctive inquiry.
Catherine Hewitt
RaveBooklistIn Hewitt’s third commanding biography of an overlooked French woman...she nearly purrs as she recounts with enriching detail and narrative drive Bonheur’s absolute dedication to her work and her independence, vividly establishing the tumultuous social and political contexts in which Bonheur overcame entrenched misogyny and negative views of lesbianism ... Hewitt’s rousing biography will propel a resurgence of appreciation for Bonheur and her achievements.
Will Staples
RaveBooklistWith the encouragement of Leonardo DiCaprio, Jane Goodall, and other wildlife activists, screenwriter Staples wrote this first novel to reveal the gruesome truths about the trafficking of endangered animals for allegedly medicinal and certainly decadent purposes, a little-known yet catastrophic realm of organized crime. Staples’ gutsy in-the-field research shapes this webby ecothriller and its intriguing characters gone rogue in pursuit of justice ... With hard-edge cinematic action and psychological depth, Staples dramatizes with jolting specificity horrific crimes against wondrous, precious animals as cartels and their craven customers \'cash in on the end of the wild\' and threaten the \'death of life itself.\' Staples’ gripping and awakening tale should have a resounding impact.
Elizabeth Kolbert
RaveBooklistScience writer extraordinaire Kolbert reports on man-made natural disasters and less-than-reassuring attempts and plans to ameliorate them. Writing with trenchant wit and stinging matter-of-factness, Kolbert observes \'how much easier it is to ruin an ecosystem than to run one.\' ... A master elucidator, Kolbert is gratifyingly direct as she assesses our predicament between a rock and a hard place, creating a clarion and invaluable \'book about people trying to solve problems created by people trying to solve problems.\'
Andromeda Romano-Lax
RaveBooklistDaring and imaginative Romano-Lax...puts another provocative spin on historical fiction ... [a] highly original time-warping tale ... As she illuminates Oakley’s extraordinary life, Romano-Lax conjures supernatural dimensions in pursuit of psychological revelations, grapples with the sexual predation of \'wolves\' and the muzzle of shame, and dramatizes the slipperiness of memory and history, creating a compassionate, heady, and witty whirl of fact and insight, mesmerizing characters and suspenseful predicaments.
Vendela Vida
RaveBooklistIntently observant, acidly funny, stoic, and smart, Eulabee is an incandescent creation, and Vida, whose polished and incisive prose is in the Didion mode, inflects this droll and sensitive coming-of-age tale, a cool match for Claire Messud’s The Burning Girl , with eviscerating social commentary. A nimble and arresting drama about the spell cast by beauty, the compulsion to lie, the valor of forthrightness, and the inevitability of the inexplicable.
Chang-Rae Lee
RaveBooklistProfoundly imaginative and thrillingly virtuosic, Lee...has created an audaciously satiric, harrowing, witty, and tender variation on the archetypal hero’s journey and a fathoms-deep exploration of self, family, culture, and power ... Lee is supreme, and this high-velocity, shocking, and wise novel, avidly promoted, is emitting an irresistible magnetic force.
Bette Howland
PositiveBooklist... [Howland\'s] first book resurfaces with all its epigrammatic, disconcerting, and incandescent firepower intact ...[a] clinically observed yet compassionate, drolly and bravely matter-of-fact memoir ... The descriptions are breathtaking ... And how crisply she charts the desperate dramas, penetrating strangeness, mordant humor, and transcendent alliances. Among the many chronicles of depression and psych wards, Howland’s is uniquely arresting in its omniscient attention, radiant artistry, zealously pursued insights, and abiding respect for those who share her struggle.
Joan Didion
RaveBooklistDidion in an essence, elegantly dismantling assumptions and stating discomfiting truths. In Why I Write, another of the dozen arresting, mind-tuning, previously uncollected essays in this exhilarating and instructive gathering spanning several decades, she states that writing is \'an aggressive, even a hostile act.\' It is also a voyage of discovery for Didion, conducted via meticulous observation and assiduous questioning of what she thinks and how her investigations make her feel ... an illuminating and inspiring addition to the influential Didion canon.
George Saunders
RaveBooklistAdmirers of Lincoln in the Bardo (2017) and Saunders’ equally imaginative short story collections will discover the full scope of his passion for and knowledge of literature in his deeply inquisitive, candid, funny, and philosophical analysis of seven stories, each included here, by his Russian mentors ... An invaluable and uniquely pleasurable master course and a generous celebration of reading, writing, and all the ways literature enriches our lives.
Jonathan Franzen
RaveBooklist... [Franzen\'s] signature qualities converge in a new, commanding fluidity, from his inquiry into damaged families to his awed respect for nature, brainy drollery, and precise, resonant detail ... [a] masterfully plotted tale populated by exceptionally complex characters caught in an ever-expanding web of startling connections and consequences ... Franzen has created a spectacularly engrossing and provocative twenty-first-century improvisation on Charles Dickens’ masterpiece, Great Expectations.
Gretel Ehrlich
RaveBooklistThis gripping episodic memoir of ranch life and Arctic travels, visionaries and lovers, environmental destruction and loss is a callback, after a dozen titles, to her first book, The Solace of Open Spaces ... Ehrlich chronicles with enthralling precision the to-the-brink physicality of hard work and daring expeditions and the meditative states nature summons. She vividly recounts sojourns on a Channel Island off the California coast ... Writing with fire and ice of beauty, risk, and devastation, Ehrlich shares wonder, wisdom, candor, and concern to soul-ringing effect.
Kevin Young
RaveBooklista defining, glorious, and invaluable anthology of African American poetry that reaches back to 1770 and concludes with today’s artistic flourishing in sync with Black Lives Matter. Vitality, beauty, anger, sorrow, humor, and hope all find original, resonant, and consummate expression throughout this expert gathering of works by both celebrated poets and many who will be new to readers, especially women and LGBTQ poets from earlier eras, and all 250 poets are succinctly profiled. Young provides a historical and literary framework in eight chronological sections, each discussed in substantial and enlightening detail in his elegantly composed and dynamic introduction.
Jane Smiley
RaveBooklistHow boy, horse, dog, ducks, raven, and rat join forces and bring wonder and joy to lonely humans makes for a tenderly clever, charming, and spirit-nourishing tale of freedom and responsibility, acceptance and friendship, generosity and love ... Readers will flock to the first adult novel from Smiley in five years, especially since this smart and enchanting tale is a guaranteed antidote to stress.
Phillip Lopate
PositiveBooklist... dynamically curated ... spectacularly varied and powerful works ... Expected writers are matched by those who will be new to reader ... With reflection, dissent, wit, poignancy, and finesse at every turn, this vibrant and illuminating pairing of social and literary histories is a vital resource. In two forthcoming volumes, Lopate will deepen coverage of the postwar era and the twenty-first century.
Margaret Atwood
RaveBooklistSpiked with surprising juxtapositions and wily delight in language, at times mordant, frequently hilarious, and always unflinching, Atwood’s poems are rooted in nature, with spotlights on spiders, cicadas, and slug sex.
Charles Baxter
RaveBooklistFiction virtuoso Baxter’s artistry and merciless insights are in full, intoxicating flower in this sinuous, dark, and dramatic tale ... As abrupt mental shifts strike like lightning, pitching Baxter’s intricately portrayed characters dangerously off course, the country convulses under the authoritarian rule of an unhinged president. Baxter has brilliantly choreographed a wholly unnerving plunge into alarming aberrations private and public, festering political catastrophe, and woefully warped love.
Samira Leakey, with Meave Leakey
RaveBooklist... an exciting and richly informative scientist’s autobiography, covering personal matters briskly, no matter how dramatic, and passionately sharing her driving fascination with our hominin ancestors and their environments. Chronicling with vivid detail the diligence and fortitude fieldwork demands, the exhilaration of major finds, and the controversies these discoveries engendered, Meave elucidates how fossils inform her compelling theories about our ancestors’ ability to outrun prey (thanks to sweat glands), making \'persistence hunting\' possible; hominin social bonding and caregiving; and the crucial family role filled by older females. Ultimately, this major work of scientific dedication and original insight illuminates both our distant past and our current, serious, human-caused planetary challenges.
Philip Gefter
RaveBooklistGefter’s expert, comprehensive, and sensitive biography embodies the electricity and complexity of Avedon’s work as he centers Avedon within the crossfire of both the battle to legitimize photography as a fine art form and the struggle for gay rights. Gefter’s engrossing portrait of a master portraitist vividly proves his claim that Avedon is “one of the most consequential artists of the twentieth century.”
Don Delillo
RaveBooklist\"A much-honored master renowned for his prescience and attunement to the zeitgeist’s deepest vibrations, DeLillo says that he began writing this taut novel \'long before the current pandemic.\' As virus-imperiled readers take in this razor-sharp, yet tenderly forlorn, witty, nearly ritualized, and quietly unnerving tale, they will gingerly discern just how catastrophic this magnitude of silence and isolation would be.\
Claire Messud
RaveBooklistExceptionally astute, artistic, and eviscerating ... Messud’s personal essays are, by turns, mischievously funny, emotionally wrenching, and elegantly intellectual ... Messud steers us to the light of forthright inquiry, truth, and beauty.
David Michaelis
RaveBooklistMichaelis clarifies and repositions Eleanor Roosevelt’s extensively scrutinized, unique, and exceptional life in ways that emphasize just how profoundly relevant her epic struggles and achievements are in this time of political reckoning and quest for genuine social justice. With judicious use of newly accessible sources, sure command of the complexities of the Roosevelt clan, and acute sensitivity to the contrast between Eleanor’s public persona and inner self, Michaelis provides a fresh and heart-wrenching perspective on her anguished childhood; her husband’s betrayals; her mother-in-law’s dominance; her six pregnancies in rapid succession and the death of an infant son; her reluctant but ultimately passionate embrace of the demands of political life; her transformation and elevation of the role of First Lady; her blind spots; and her frequently self-wounding love for women and men. Michaelis meticulously chronicles Eleanor’s failings and triumphs within the gripping context of her overt and covert advocacy on behalf of the overlooked and the oppressed during the Great Depression, both world wars, the Cold War, and the civil rights movement. Solid details and astute distillation ensure that readers absorb and appreciate the full impact of Eleanor’s suffering, prodigious work, and gender-leaping, world-altering accomplishments as an activist, adviser, world-traveling investigator and envoy of mercy, human-rights commissioner, syndicated columnist and writer, radio and TV host, and global conscience.
Jo Marchant
PositiveBooklistMarchant elucidates key moments of mathematical, technological, artistic, and scientific ingenuity, and profiles intriguing visionaries. Ultimately, Marchant considers the mysteries of consciousness and expresses concern over the implications of our separation from the stars. In a tour de force on par with Sapiens (2015), by Yuval Noah Harari, Marchant argues that we need to experience the awe evoked by the unveiled night sky so that we, once again, feel profoundly connected to the cosmos and, more crucially, to earthly life, which is precious, vulnerable, and in our care.
Shirley Hazzard
RaveBooklist\'Harold,\' the first short story written by Australian American Hazzard, was enthusiastically accepted by the New Yorker in 1959. It is a gem still, as are the other 27 faceted and beaming stories ... Cosmopolitan in location, exquisitely executed, and glinting with the sort of keen wit and perception found in the fiction of Margaret Drabble and Elizabeth Bowen, Hazzard’s stories are startlingly fresh and revealing in their poise, sting, and compassion.
Wade Davis
RaveBooklistIn this deeply inquisitive, dazzlingly fluent scientific, cultural, and spiritual investigation, Davis illuminates the natural and human history of Río Magdalena ... Always with a discerning eye to the symbolic and metaphorical, Davis tells the river’s saga of fecundity and horror through the lives of remarkable individuals past and present.
Susanna Clarke
RaveBooklistIn her highly distilled and rarefied first novel since her Hugo Award–winning debut, Jonathan Strange & Mr NorrellClarke posits another dynamic between a seeming mentor and mentee. But the realm in which their increasingly suspect relationship unspools is a bizarre and baffling one ... As questions multiply and suspense mounts in this spellbinding, occult puzzle of a fable, one begins to wonder if perhaps the reverence, kindness, and gratitude practiced by Clarke’s enchanting and resilient hero aren’t all the wisdom one truly needs.
Marilynne Robinson
RaveBooklist... [a] glorious work of metaphysical and moral inquiry, nuanced feelings, intricate imagination, and exquisite sensuousness ... Myriad manifestations of pain are evoked, but here, too, are beauty, humor, mystery, and joy as Robinson holds us rapt with the exactitude of her perceptions and the exhilaration of her hymnal cadence, and so gracefully elucidates the complex sorrows and wonders of life and spirit.
Sudhir Hazareesingh
RaveBooklist... deeply researched, energetic, and comprehensively re-envisioned ... As conversant as Hazareesingh is in the dramatic and snarled political and military history at play in this treacherous and righteous war for liberty, it is Toussaint’s character and abilities, gleaned from overlooked archival sources, including Toussaint’s own writings, that shine here ... here, vividly and invaluably, is Toussaint Louverture in full.
David Heska Wanbli Weiden
PositiveBooklistWeiden’s cantering, engrossing, and culturally revelatory debut crime novel is propelled by vital and affecting Native American characters facing the endless repercussions of the genocidal past, ongoing racism and injustice, and cruel betrayals within their besieged community. Suspenseful, gritty, gruffly endearing, and resonant, Weiden’s thriller, with its illumination of Lakota spiritual traditions and hopes raised for Virgil’s evolution from thug to sleuth, launches a promising and meaningful series.
Helen MacDonald
RaveBooklist... gorgeously composed, complexly affecting, and stunningly revelatory. Macdonald is both exacting and enthralled as she describes glowworms, hares, ants, swans, migrating birds seen at night from the top of the Empire State Building, the paradoxes of nature reserves, tree disease, storms, the lessons in denial and prediction embedded in migraines, how wild mushrooms signal a hidden larger whole, and the shock felt by every living entity during a total solar eclipse ... There is abundant wonder and beauty here, but they are shadowed by concern and grief because the north to which Macdonald’s compass points is climate change and its ravaging of life’s intricate web, from the monumental to the microbial ... Best-selling Macdonald’s fans will rush to embrace this, as should all readers passionate about nature.
Diane Cook
RaveBooklistIn her gripping and provoking debut novel, Cook extends the shrewd and implacable dramatization of our catastrophic assault on the biosphere that she so boldly launched in her short story collection, Man v. Nature (2014) ... As fiercely precise and intimate as Cook’s physical descriptions are, the novel’s edgy bewitchment is generated by her characters’ elaborately elucidated psychological struggles ... Violence, death, tribalism, lust, love, betrayals, wonder, genius, and courage—all are enacted in this stunningly incisive and complexly suspenseful tale akin to dystopian novels by Margaret Atwood and Claire Vaye Watkins. When Cook finally widens the lens on her characters’ increasingly desperate predicament, the exposure of malignant greed, deceit, and injustice resonates with devastating impact.
Kathleen Rooney
RaveBooklist[Rooney is] an imaginative and audacious biographically inspired storyteller ... Here Rooney brings forward with bravura empathy and preternatural detail two WWI heroes, two battered survivors of a horrific military debacle ... Fluent in the most gruesome of facts, the most subtle of feelings, and the most compassionate of speculations, Rooney gives voice to bird and man, each a misfit ... Rooney uses Cher Ami’s bird’s-eye view and curious afterlife to exhilarating, comic, and terrifying effect, while Whit’s tragic fate is exquisitely rendered. An unforgettable maelstrom of emotion and bloodshed, this is a plangent antiwar novel, call for sexual equality, celebration of animal intelligence, and tribute to altruism and courage.
Joni Murphy
PositiveBooklist... precisely imagined ... [a] vivid and funny cautionary allegory, an appropriately provocative, twenty-first-century, urban variation on George Orwell’s Animal Farm ... Murphy’s astute perceptions social, political, and emotional; ingenious inventiveness, fluid empathy, and mischievous wit coalesce in an irresistible fable of ringing impact.
Charlotte McConaghy
RaveBooklistMcConaghy’s transfixing, gorgeously precise novel is propelled by Franny’s desperate effort to follow what may be the last flock of Arctic terns on their perilous migration from Greenland, where she finesses her way onto a fishing boat, to Antarctica ... The scenes on board the Saghani, with its intriguing outcast crew, are psychologically intense and physically harrowing. McConaghy’s evocation of a world bereft of wildlife is piercing; Franny’s otherworldliness is captivating, and her extreme misadventures and anguished secrets are gripping. Some may find this darkly enrapturing work of ecofiction too heavily plotted, but all the violence, shock, and loss Franny navigates do aptly, and unnervingly, foreshadow a possible environmental apocalypse.
Michael D'Antonio
PositiveBooklistPortraying Clinton with all due complexity, D’Antonio chronicles every public ordeal she endured as First Lady of Arkansas and the United States, U.S. senator, secretary of state, and popular-vote-winning presidential candidate in pinpoint detail, then reveals with equal meticulousness the vicious machinations of the Right as their hostile tactics grew ever more diabolical and perversely profitable, their hypocrisy epic. He calls out a veritable army of character assassins, including Newt Gingrich, Roger Ailes, Kenneth Starr, Brett Kavanaugh, Rush Limbaugh, and Donald Trump, contrasting their venomous and ludicrous accusations and outright threats with Clinton’s poise, stamina, and dignity under fire. This galvanizing exposé will stand as a key resource in the study of sexism and politics.
Daniel Mason
RaveBooklistPinpoint physical details and precisely articulated emotions collide with the mystical, while scientific quests drive characters to extremes ... With transporting empathy and feverish intensity, Mason portrays the brilliant naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, who trustingly shared his theory of evolution with Darwin. Sheer wonder shapes the title story ... With touches of Borges and Calvino, Mason’s fabulist stories are works of tenderness and awe for human curiosity, passion, mad valor, and profound resiliency.
Laura Lippman
RaveBooklistFor all of Lippman’s success as a best-selling novelist and crime writer, she examines her life in pithy personal essays with a strong shot of ruefulness and not a shred of self-congratulation. In her first nonfiction title, she is confiding, sharply funny, and disarmingly candid about both her struggles and her privilege ... She revels in confession and connection, surprise and provocation, and she performs all with panache, wisdom, wit, and courage. Lippman asserts: \'I’m a tough old bird,\' and readers will declare: and one helluva true-tale teller.
Rebecca Giggs
RaveBooklist... delving and lyrically precise ... With fresh perceptions and cascades of facts, Giggs considers our ancient and persistent whale wonderment, high-tech whale hunting, the 1970s Save the Whales movement, global warming, mass extinction, and pollution, including the oceanic plastic plague. She offers a startling assessment of how smart phones pose new perils for the wild, and ponders the loss to our inner lives if we destroy the mystery of the sea. There is much to marvel at here ... Deeply researched and deeply felt, Giggs’ intricate investigation, beautifully revelatory and haunting, urges us to save the whales once again, and the oceans, and ourselves.
Barbara Demick
PositiveBooklistDemick anchors her Tibetan chronicle to Ngaba, a town on the Tibetan Plateau in the former kingdom of Mei. Gonpo, a daughter of the last Mei king, who was deposed by the Chinese in 1958, is at the center of the group portrait Demick meticulously composes, weaving in defining details of everyday life as she recounts harrowing stories of brutality, loss, sacrifice, and love that embody the larger story of Tibet’s long fight for freedom ... Writing with pristine clarity made possible by complete fluency in her complex material, Demick provides the missing human dimension in coverage of twenty-first-century Tibet, including the legacy of resistance that has engendered tragic protests by self-immolation, and all the anguish and paradoxes of lives heavily surveilled by the Chinese government, yet largely invisible to the greater world.
Christopher Buckley
PositiveBooklistBuckley sets aside historical farce to return to his mainstay, cutting-edge political satire, with this rambunctious roman à clef in the form of a memoir written in federal prison by President Trump’s seventh chief of staff ... As Buckley orchestrates Nutterman’s rapid rise and fall, he skewers key figures in the criminally dysfunctional Trump World with such characters as Seamus Colonnity at Fox News, spokesperson Katie Borgia-O’Reilly, and Senator Squigg Lee Biskitt. Buckley’s keenly informed, caustically ironic, and cheerfully raunchy comedy is both rollicking and hard-hitting in its outrage, a bold indictment perfectly targeted for this intensely polarized election year even though that battle is overshadowed by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Gail Tsukiyama
RaveBooklistWriting with supple and entrancing grace, Tsukiyama...has each of her charismatic, caring characters share their memories and heartaches, reaching back several decades ... Tsukiyama also evokes the wild, opulent beauty of the island, the harsh lives of migrant workers, racist and domestic violence, mystical connections, the repercussions of a love triangle, and the tolls of age. As the volcano erupts, long-buried secrets and guilt surge to seismic effect. Tsukiyama’s dramatic yet discerningly congenial novel confronts the precariousness of existence and celebrates the healing power of generosity and love.
Natasha Trethewey
RaveBooklistAs a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and former U.S. poet laureate, Trethewey...has conducted profound excavations into African American history and her own life. In her memoir, a work of exquisitely distilled anguish and elegiac drama ... Through finely honed, evermore harrowing memories, dreams, visions, and musings, Trethewey maps the inexorable path to her mother’s murder ... [a] yrical, courageous, and resounding remembrance.
Miles Harvey
RaveBooklistWriting with electrifying pleasure in discovery, Harvey zestfully captures \'the carnivalesque atmosphere\' of antebellum America ... vividly portrayed ... Deftly performing a fresh and telling analysis of the timeless power of the con man over Americans who worship those who invent their own rules and \'their own truths,\' Harvey brings to galloping life a forgotten, enlightening, and resounding chapter in America’s tumultuous history of searchers and charlatans.
Daphne Merkin
RaveBooklist... a wily tale of carnal obsession ... Acclaimed and audacious essayist, novelist, and memoirist...Merkin is at her sly and provocative best as her brainy, candid, and witty protagonist intermittently interrupts the erotic spell of her addiction to address the reader and question everything from gender roles to therapy to the very nature of fiction. With psychological acuity, sexual heat, and now sadly nostalgic scenes of a pre-pandemic city...Merkin’s incisive novel of a woman piloting herself through the wildfire of sexual obsession is as boldly canny as it is cleverly diverting.
Mary Morris
PositiveBooklist... quick-gliding ... Morris is frank, funny, and incisive as she revisits her \'free ranging\' Chicago childhood, single motherhood, and her start as writer, and expounds on tigers in the world and in the imagination ... Morris’ epigrammatic memoir is a finely wrought mosaic of unexpected and provocative pieces cunningly fit together.
John Freeman
RaveBooklistMariana Enriquez tells the story of Riachuelo, a poisoned river in Argentina. Mohammed Hanif contemplates the millions of overlooked Pakistanis displaced by floods. Eritrean refugee Sulaiman Addonia observes: \'Refugees and the earth face the same marginalization, the same neglect, the same abuse.\'Andri Snær Magnason charts the disappearance of glaciers in Iceland; Anuradha Roy considers the shrinking ice in the Himalayas, the source of water for millions. Futuristic tales by Pitchaya Sudbanthad and Sayaka Murata envision the elite cocooned from environmental ravages. Lauren Groff’s Florida story reckons with wastefulness and the vulnerability of the wild. Edwidge Danticat writes of toxic governmental corruption and a trash-fouled Haitian beach. Joy Williams protests ecocidal big-game hunting; Gaël Faye mourns lost forests and fireflies in Burundi. Yoked environmental and humanitarian crises in Egypt, Mexico, Hawaii, New Zealand, Bangladesh, Nigeria, and beyond are brought forward in masterful works elegiac, angry, and ironic in Freeman’s clarion global chorus.
Maggie Doherty
PositiveBooklistDoherty sets all of her magnetic subjects within a fresh assessment of the sexism of postwar and Cold War America, and celebrates the Equivalents for breaking ground for “innovative, intimate” creations by women. Doherty’s vibrant curiosity and many-faceted expertise infuse this dynamic group biography with light and warmth.
Francesca Serritella
RaveBooklist... a many-faceted first novel ... Serritella makes keen use of quantum theories about time and simultaneity in this busily plotted, emotionally astute, thoughtfully paranormal, witty, and suspenseful drama involving historical figures, academic ruthlessness, and the tragic riddles of mental illness. Serritella has also created a sensitive and searching tale about the courage and fortitude of a smart young woman in mourning and in peril.
Kate Zambreno
PositiveBooklistMuch transpires here, from the frightening to the ludicrous to the profound. Zambreno is perceptive, funny, and spellbinding as she reflects on and dramatizes the infinite complexities of womanhood and creativity.
Gail Godwin
RaveBooklistGodwin, a word-perfect novelist of exceptional psychological refinement who has published a memoir about her struggles as a writer, infuses this tale of intrepid women with a profound inquiry into the ethics of storytelling and how literature can chart a way through tragedies ... The women remain connected in delectably plotted ways and maintain a suspenseful, decades-long correspondence. Secret traumas are slowly revealed, adjacent characters are magnetizing, and Godwin, as fluent in humor as in sorrow, sagely illuminates matters of faith, art, ambition, and generosity while celebrating change and steadfastness, friendship and love ... Godwin’s mastery and following grow with each book, and literary fiction lovers will seek out this intricately structured and emotionally rich tale.
Curtis Sittenfeld
RaveBooklist... more daring, seductive, and provocative [than its predecesor]. Commandingly narrated by one Hillary Rodham, and laced with true-to-life figures and facts, this exhilaratingly trenchant, funny, and affecting tale nonetheless pivots smartly away from reality ... With this split, Sittenfeld creates a vibrant and consequential alternative life for Hillary, rendered with shrewd and magnetizing specificity as the author dramatizes the sexism petty and threatening that Hillary confronts at every turn, while also offering unusual insights into the difficult-to-balance quests for racial and gender equality. As she envisions her Hillary’s demanding and ascendant career, crucial relationships, and political quests that reel Bill back into her sphere, Sittenfeld orchestrates a gloriously cathartic antidote to the actual struggles women presidential candidates face in a caustically divided America.
Richard Ford
RaveBooklist... nine deeply internalized stories ... Ford himself is in splendid command of these pristine, emotionally intricate, stealthily unnerving, and mordantly funny tales of rupture, loss, and fathoms-deep loneliness. The setups seem predictable, then pitch into surprising and provocative directions. Lawyers abound; New Orleans, Chicago, and New York are the settings; houses embody longings and loss; and conflicts between Irish and American characters are fresh and intriguing. Ford masterminds unforeseen encounters and power shifts to complexly resonant effect ... Once again, virtuoso Ford deftly sails the seas and storms of consciousness.
Muhammad H. Zaman
PositiveBooklistZaman, an award-winning professor of biomedical engineering and international health and a New York Times columnist, dramatically recounts the history of microbial research ... Passionate about the science, the social implications, and the complex personalities of the scientists he so sharply portrays, Zaman reveals how the antibiotic saga of human ingenuity and greed is pegged to military conflicts, from WWI forward ... Like those about global warming, warnings about the risk of antibiotic resistance and superbugs have been issued for decades with little action taken. Now the evidence, so vividly presented here, is overwhelming, and Zaman urges us to speak up.
Lydia Millet
RaveBooklist...[an] increasingly horrifying climate-change fable ... As bewitching, unflinching, wry, and profoundly attuned to the state of the planet as ever, supremely gifted Millet tells a commanding and wrenching tale of cataclysmic change and what it will take to survive.
Jed Perl
RaveBooklistPerl completes his zestfully expert two-book biography of exuberantly radical sculptor Calder in a volume every bit as scintillating and substantial as the first ... Perl’s unlimited access to primary materials and phenomenal artistic perception and narrative vitality cohere into a luxuriously detailed, photo-rich, and spirited illumination of Calder’s complex temperament.
Sallie Bingham
PositiveBooklistBingham chronicles the adventures and heartbreaks of the tabloid-hounded \'richest girl in the world,\' from her childhood in the family’s opulent Fifth Avenue mansion to her lavish Hawaiian sanctuary, Shangri La, now a museum housing her pioneering Islamic art collection ... Fiercely private and skilled in conducting her extraordinary philanthropic work, Duke, Bingham asserts, hasn’t received the respect she deserves, an omission roundly corrected by this vivid and sensitive portrait-in-full.
Lauren Redniss
RaveBooklistIn her fourth work of visual nonfiction...[Redniss] forges an enthralling convergence of oral history and narrative to tell with precision and empathy the dramatic story of the still unresolved battle over Oak Flat. She reaches back to the region’s history of conquest and economic booms and busts; illuminates Apache culture, highlighting the arduous, traditional coming-of-age ceremony for young women that Naelyn performs on Oak Flat; and elucidates the damage copper mining does to the land and human health. By letting facts and perceptions reverberate in sync with her similarly distilled, lustrously colorful drawings, Redniss creates a stunningly holistic and deeply moving tale of how we value and live on the earth for better and for worse.
Jane Hirshfield
RaveBooklist... intimate poems of being ... Ledger perfectly embodies Hirshfield’s carefully weighted tone as she reckons with our constant subtraction of Earth’s life forces and incessant addition of carbon to our atmosphere, acid to our seas ... Hirshfield is tender, witty, philosophical, and clarion, knowing us to be creatures of yes and no, credits and debits.
Louis Begley
PositiveBooklistWily and adept, Begley continued to conduct his signature droll and exacting dissection of the privileges and torments of the wealthy ... With discerning, amusing, and cutting commentary on everything from food and wine to politics, sex, and the right to die with dignity, Begley seduces and provokes with fiercely urbane wit.
Greta Thunberg, Malena Ernman, Svante Thunberg
RaveBooklist...this blazingly candid family memoir reveals the grueling and bewildering struggles that propelled Greta onto the world stage ... Narrated primarily by her mother, opera singer Malena Ernman, with passages from Greta, her sister, and their father, and written in brief, hard-hitting \'scenes,\' this is an unnerving and profoundly enlightening chronicle of the symbiosis between human and planetary health as manifest within one remarkable family whose painful awakening to our \'acute sustainability crisis\' should embolden us all.
David Farrier
RaveBooklistHis in-the-moment descriptions are precise and vital, but he renders them uniquely evocative and haunting by paralleling current dilemmas with ancient myths, Greek tragedies, literature, and art. Farrier further guides us to new and wrenching environmental perceptions by tracking the long lives of a plastic bottle and nuclear waste, increasing jellyfish blooms, and the toxic markings of mines, drugs, roads, and the carbon-burning servers powering our consuming digital lives. Farrier sees Earth as a vast library, and encourages us to recognize and think deeply about the indelible stories of destruction and catastrophic loss we’re adding to the planet’s archive.
Celia Stahr
PositiveBooklistStahr establishes the foundation of Kahlo’s aesthetics––her extensive reading, work with her photographer father, and fascination with nature’s interconnectivity, the Aztec embrace of duality, and alchemy––then elucidates the profound impact her sojourns in San Francisco, Detroit, and New York had on the arc of her creativity. By mining Kahlo’s letters and the invaluable diary of her friend, artist Lucienne Bloch, Stahr establishes remarkably precise and incisive contexts for many of Kahlo’s most shocking and revolutionary works, while also chronicling her complex relationships, including her involvement with Georgia O’Keeffe. Stahr brings new clarity to Kahlo’s life and genius for creating audacious autobiographical tableaux which pose resounding questions about history, justice, gender, spirituality, and freedom.
Anne Tyler
RaveBooklistIf Tyler’s large-cast, many-faceted novels...are symphonies, this portrait of a man imprisoned by his routines is a concerto ... Tyler’s perfectly modulated, instantly enmeshing, heartrending, funny, and redemptive tale sweetly dramatizes the absurdities of flawed perception and the risks of rigidity ... Tyler’s warmly comedic, quickly read tale, a perfect stress antidote, will delight her fans and provides an excellent \'first\' for readers new to this master of subtle and sublime brilliance.
Hilary Mantel
RaveBooklistThe longed-for final volume in Mantel’s magnificent trilogy is...a stupendously knowledgeable, empathic, witty, harrowing, and provocative novel of power and its distortions ... Cromwell rules these vivid pages, yet every character and setting resonates, and Mantel’s virtuoso, jousting dialogue is exhilarating. Gossip, insults, bribes, lies, threats, jealousy, revenge, all propel this delectably shrewd and transfixing Tudor tragedy, this timeless saga of the burden of rule, social treacheries, and the catastrophic cost of indulging a raving despot.
Katie Roiphe
RaveBooklistIn this arrestingly intimate and cathartic work, drawn from notebooks she kept during a recent \'time of upheaval,\' she reveals her struggles with doubt, confusion, pain, and anxiety, forging an audaciously articulate, prodigiously candid, and thought-provoking blend of memoir, literary biography, confession, and dissection ... Roiphe delves into the lives of women writers...praising Simone de Beauvoir as a \'brilliant elucidator,\' which Roiphe is, too, to deeply clarifying and affirming effect.
Stephanie Gorton
PositiveBooklistIn her finely sourced and lively first book, Gorton tells the complex, entwined stories of these two ardent innovators and their temperamental differences, symbiotic friendship, and reverberating achievements ... Including incisive portraits of other McClure’s journalists, Gorton’s fresh and vivid biographical history ultimately affirms the essential role an independent press of conscience plays in our democracy.
Deb Olin Unferth
RaveBooklistA daring writer of wit, imagination, and conscience, Unferth has transformed her foray into hen hell into an adroitly narrated, fast-paced, yet complexly dimensional novel about emotional and environmental devastation ... Unferth sharply illuminates the contrariness of human nature, celebrates the evolutionary marvels of chickens, and exposes the horrors of the egg industry. Unferth’s vividly provoking and revelatory work of ecofiction spiked with mordant humor and powered by love joins the ranks of Annie Proulx’s That Old Ace in the Hole (2002), Sara Gruen’s Ape House (2010), Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behavior (2012), and Abby Geni’s The Wildlands (2018).
Naomi Klein
RaveBooklist...an enormous, complex, compelling, and, by turns, distressing and rallying analysis of the dysfunctional symbiotic relationships between free-market capitalism, the fossil fuels industry, and global warming ... Within this mammoth mosaic of assiduously collected facts and bold analysis, Klein addresses every aspect of the causes and threats of climate change and the paradox of why we behave as though we value the mythical free-market more than real life itself ... This comprehensive, sure-to-be controversial inquiry, one of the most thorough, eloquent, and enlightening books yet on this urgent and overwhelming subject—alongside works by Bill McKibben, Elizabeth Kolbert, and Diane Ackerman—provides the evidence and the reasoning we need to help us shift to a \'worldview based on regeneration and renewal rather than domination and depletion.\'
William T. Vollmann
PositiveBooklistVollmann pours his signature fascination with outcasts, women’s sexuality, violence, and injustice into this gargantuan, omnivorously explicit, ravening orgy of trauma and resilience. Rooted in interviews with women survivors, this is a molten amalgam of cynicism and compassion, horror and beauty ... Audacious and tireless writer-of-conscience Vollmann returns to the scene of his earliest works in this bound-to-be-controversial novel.
Jeff Sharlet
RaveBooklistSharlet’s most in-depth accounts tell...crushing stories ... With shimmers of Robert Frank and James Agee, Sharlet’s images and words, hypnotic and haunting flares in the dark, coalesce into a trenchant work of witness and empathy.
Gish Jen
RaveBooklistJen’s stealthy wit lures us into contemplation of our worst failings and our saving graces ... In this astutely realized and unnervingly possible depiction of a near-future world, Jen masterfully entwines shrewd mischief, knowing compassion, and profound social critique in a suspenseful tale encompassing baseball ardor, family love, newly insidious forms of racism and tyranny, and a wily and righteous resistance movement that declares \'RIGHT MAKES MIGHT.\'
Rebecca Solnit
RaveBooklistSolnit has created an unconventional and galvanizing memoir-in-essays that shares key, often terrifying, formative moments in her valiant writing life ... She...illuminates with piercing lyricism the body-and-soul dangers women face in our complexly, violently misogynist world ... This is an incandescent addition to the literature of dissent and creativity.
Louise Erdrich
RaveBooklist... [a] spellbinding, reverent, and resplendent drama ... a work of distinct luminosity ... Through the personalities and predicaments of her many charismatic characters, and through rapturous descriptions of winter landscapes and steaming meals, sustaining humor and spiritual visitations, Erdrich traces the indelible traumas of racism and sexual violence and celebrates the vitality and depth of Chippewa life.
John Sayles
RaveBooklistSayles animates a vibrant and complex cast of diverse individuals caught in an extraction boom driven by greed and hope ... Sayles’ alternating narrators propel a busy, engrossing, and purposeful plot steered by both suspenseful action and intricate emotion. Aligned with T. C. Boyle in his penetrating perception of our place in nature and Tom Wolfe in his rambunctious satire, Sayles is adept at vital detail and dialogue, guided by a keen social perspective, centered by an edgy sense of humor, and inspired by empathy.
Adrienne Miller
PositiveBooklistMiller’s description of New York City as perceived by her young, fresh-from-Ohio self is funny and shrewd ... Miller offers a keen and caustic take on the literary universe at a crossroads as the reigning giants, all male, were challenged by newcomers Dave Eggers and David Foster Wallace, and as magazines began to be undermined by the first exploratory trickles of the impending digital flood ... her passages recounting blatant and insidious sexism are bracing, and her disclosures about her relationship with Wallace are cathartic. Miller’s love for language and faith in the power of art deepen this finely composed, forthright, witty, and involving memoir of one woman’s triumph in the competitive literary cosmos.
Amina Cain
RaveBooklistCain’s bewitching first novel is so deeply internalized that the reader knows neither what city the solitude-loving narrator lives in nor the time frame, though candles and carriages are mentioned, nor her age and appearance ... Cain’s concentrated, subtle, and intriguing portrait of an evolving artist resolutely rejecting gender and class roles, with its subtle nods to Jean Rhys, Clarice Lispector, and Octavia Butler, explores the risks and rewards of a call to create and self-liberate.
Isabel Allende, Trans. by Nick Caistor and Amanda Hopkinson
RaveBooklistAllende deftly addresses war, displacement, violence, and loss in a novel of survival and love under siege, a tale that is seductively intimate and strategically charming with valor, perseverance, transcendent romance, and wondrous reunions providing narrative sweeteners to lure readers into contemplation of past atrocities and, covertly, of the disturbingly similar outrages of the present, in which refugees and immigrants are treated with appalling cruelty and fascist threats escalate around the warming world.
Jenny Offill
RaveBooklist... another crisply revelatory portrait of a marriage and family in flux ... Offill, who will delight fans of Lydia Davis and Joy Williams, performs breathtaking emotional and social distillation in this pithy and stealthily resonant tale of a woman trying to keep others, and herself, from \'tipping into the abyss.\'
David Shields
RaveBooklistShields is a balance-beam critic, taking his critiques of life and art to the edge and executing breath-catching leaps and flips. He doesn’t always stick the landing, but he’s always entrancing ... provocateur Shields constructs just the sort of mash-up he audaciously and brilliantly celebrates as the new art paradigm for the participant-driven Internet zeitgeist, where art and life entwine in one big, loud reality show.
Colum McCann
RaveBooklist... tragic and transporting ... McCann meshes the actual and the imagined in concise, numbered passages totaling 1,001 in homage to the Arabian Nights. Each is exquisite and haunting, many are harrowing, and together they form an entrancing and unnerving associative collage of fact, memory, observation, and invention. He discovers startling connections while pondering weaponry and poetry, migrating birds and explorers, torture and checkpoints, the music of John Cage and Phillip Petit walking for peace on a tightrope over Jerusalem. McCann performs his own epic balancing act between life and art, writing with stunning lyricism and fluent empathy as he traces the ripple effects of violence and grief, beauty, and the miraculous power of friendship and love, valor and truth.
Dave Eggers
PositiveBooklistWith hilariously identifiable characters, chillingly brazen criminality, and burgeoning totalitarianism conveyed in a mesmerizing, fairy-tale cadence, Eggers, in concert with nimble and expressive illustrator Russell, presents an ingenious, incisive, grimly entrancing fable reflecting our nation’s ever more alarming predicament.
Elizabeth Hardwick and Robert Lowell, Ed. by Saskia Hamilton
PositiveBooklistHardwick is elegantly exacting even as the situation worsens and she pounds out letters of fury and resolve. Lowell’s responses are apologetic and dogged ... With graceful authority, poet and editor Saskia Hamilton defines the emotional and literary issues raised by this controversial Pulitzer Prize-winning book, reissued to reveal Lowell’s revisions as The Dolphin: Two Versions, 1972–1973 in conjunction with these ensnaring and affecting transatlantic letters between two poets who, in spite of epic hurt, never ceased loving each other.
Ed. by John F. Callahan and Marc C. Conner
PositiveBooklist... startling, and so vivid, muscular, frank, lengthy, and involving are [Ellison\'s] missives, it’s clear that writing was his sustenance ... Ellison’s letters to family, friends (especially Albert Murray and Saul Bellow), colleagues, agents, editors, and fans have the agility, wit, and spectrum of the moods, tones, and pace found in jazz, which he loved. Editor John F. Callahan provides a chronology, a richly dimensional general introduction, and enlightening overviews of Ellison’s preoccupations, endeavors, and travels during each decade. Ellison’s supremely well-crafted, captivating, often caustic letters chronicle his personal life, experiences teaching and lecturing, replies to endless queries about his masterpiece, and research into his family history for his uncompleted novel. Ellison also delivers probing inquiries into the complexities of race, identity, Americanness, and creativity.
Christine Coulson
RaveBooklistCoulson’s 25 years on staff at the Metropolitan Museum of Art inspired this vivid, comedic, tender, and episodic debut about the unexpected forms life and consciousness take in that vast trove ... Coulson is emotionally keen, acerbically witty, fleetly imaginative, and lyrically resonant, her love for the Met, for humanness, and for beauty radiant on each surprising page.
Flannery O'Connor, Ed. by Benjamin Alexander
PositiveBooklistThese letters by O’Connor and her circle bring to light the impact her genius had on other writers ... O’Connor acknowledges her \'rootedness in Dante\' as the collection’s editor, Benjamin Alexander, puts it, and describes her adventures raising peacocks, her response to reading Henry James, her thoughts on prayer, and how crucial letters are as her illness isolates her. This edifying and entertaining gathering offers a new portal onto a playful, spiritual, courageous, and indelible American master.
John Freeman
RaveBooklist[An] incisive, bold, and passionate reclamation of language ... Each entry in his dictionary of 26 resonant words—among them agitate, body, decency, environment, giving, norms, spirit, teachers, usurp, and vote—is a perceptive and rousing assessment of various aspects of the raging \'information war\' ... The result, gracefully punctuated with an afterword by MacArthur fellow Valeria Luiselli, is an incandescent and galvanizing protest and call for awareness and action.
Deirdre Bair
RaveBooklistIn this gripping \'bio-memoir,\' Bair candidly, dramatically, and sometimes bemusedly recounts the shocking adversity, both devious and outright vicious, that she encountered throughout the seven long years she worked diligently on her groundbreaking book ... Bubbling with piquant profiles, astounding anecdotes, and illuminating insights into the ethics of and obstacles to biography, Bair’s look-back makes all the more remarkable her subsequent and exceptional biographies of Anaïs Nin, Carl Jung, Saul Steinberg, and Al Capone. A zippy biographer’s tale [.]
Meryle Secrest
RaveBooklistSecrest brings the extraordinary Olivetti clan vividly to life, reports on highly suspicious deaths, and dramatically illuminates their legendary company’s shocking downfall via long-hidden, deeply sordid conspiracies among fascists, Mafiosi, the CIA, IBM, GE, and Fiat to obliterate Olivetti’s crowning achievement and marvel of ingenuity, Programma 101, the first desktop computer. Deftly seeded with clues and lavish in intriguing detail, Secrest’s many-faceted exposé intensifies with dark surprise as it reveals Cold War acts of sinister politics, ruthless espionage, and covert crimes, and traces the long, grasping tentacles of the American military-industrial complex.
Louis Begley
MixedBooklistThis installment begins with the insanely gruesome torture and killing of a wealthy couple ... Jack takes ridiculous chances whenever he isn’t savoring Feng’s elaborate gourmet meals and pricey whiskey and wine. A preposterous, if neatly rendered and readily consumed, tale of suspense in which elegance counterbalances horror.
Lydia Davis
PositiveBooklistThis sizable and scintillating collection is the first to showcase Davis’ nonfiction. Much of the pleasure in these agile and illuminating literary inquiries is found in her tales of how she came to write ... Davis’ readers relish the quick feints and thrusts of her concise stories, and here we discover just how much revision is involved in their composition.
Rebecca Makkai
RaveWBEZ ChicagoLiterary call-outs abound in The Borrower. Huckleberry Finn is a guiding light. The Oz books are avidly recommended for any kid who feels as though his or her entire being is the equivalent of coloring outside the lines. Makkai also works in some jittery allusions to Nabokov’s Lolita as Lucy tries to figure out what the heck she thinks she’s doing, crossing state lines with a 10-year-old boy whose family must be frantic about him. Is she borrowing the boy because she’s lonely and confused? ... Charming, funny, original, thought-provoking, and moving, Rebecca Makkai’s The Borrower embraces outsiders and dissenters, and celebrates the power of our imagination and our empathy. This warmly entertaining, picaresque novel in praise of personal freedom and books leaves us marveling over literature’s magnificent paradox: that in fiction dwells profound truth.
Nancy Princenthal
PositiveBooklistIn this uniquely focused and vitally analytical history, Princenthal recognizes an underappreciated facet of revolutionary art, and dramatically captures the bravura, shocking, at times media-savvy, in other cases stunningly covert performances of Yoko Ono, Suzanne Lacy, Lynn Hershman Leeson, Ana Mendieta, Adrian Piper, and Marina Abramović, as well as the ferocious pictorial work of Nancy Spero. The risks they took, the anger aroused by their exposure of society’s indifference toward or complicity in sexual crimes against women, and the intellectual underpinnings of their work are all expertly elucidated in Princenthal’s unprecedented and searing inquiry.
Julie Andrews and Emma Walton Hamilton
PositiveBooklist... warm, graceful, and candid ... Andrews, along with her steadfast coauthor, tells captivating, sweetly self-deprecating, funny, and painful behind-the-scenes tales about her many movie adventures and frankly recounts the end of her first marriage and the high drama of her second as she and renowned director Blake Edwards collaborated cinematically and in creating a complicated extended family often beset with traumas. This deeply pleasurable and forthright chronicle illuminates the myriad reasons \'home work\' has such profound meaning for artist and humanitarian Andrews.
C. D. Wright
RaveBooklistMacArthur fellow Wright is known for her social consciousness and improvisational style, and she takes both qualities up a notch in this dramatically investigative and looping portrait of V ... Wright’s sharply fractured, polyphonic, and suspenseful book-length poem is both a searing dissection of hate crimes and their malignant legacy and a lyric, droll, and fiery elegy to a woman of radiant resistance.
Carol Anshaw
RaveBooklistAnshaw’s compassionate novels are propelled by her preternatural gift for close observation, so it was a stroke of genius to create a hyper-attentive set-designer narrator. Not only does Cate take in every detail of every scene, she also has strong opinions about all that she surveys, making her inner monologue stingingly precise and often hilarious ... With sharply drawn characters, an ensnaring plot, and a look back at closeted gay lives, Anshaw, acutely attuned to the shifting weather of emotions and relationships, insightfully dramatizes the insistence of desire over convention and expediency and the endless reverberations of violence.
Helena Janeczek, trans. by Ann Goldstein
RaveBooklistHelen Janeczek joins an illustrious group of novelists who have found a deep wellspring for fiction in the Spanish Civil War ... Rather than tell Gerda’s riveting story in a straight-ahead work of biographical fiction, Janeczek has created the exceptionally intricate The Girl with the Leica, translated by Ann Goldstein and winner of the prestigious Strega Prize, in which she portrays Gerda through the eyes of three people who loved her, true-life individuals with extraordinary stories of their own ... Janeczek’s demanding, allusion-saturated, multiperspective novel portrays a circle of valiant dissidents and ventures into many spheres, but the focus always swings back to resplendently determined, courageous, and creative Gerda.
Terry Tempest Williams
RaveBooklistAn apostle of life and earth and a soul-revving teller of true stories, Williams brings lyricism, candor, mystery, and factual exactitude to the deeply affecting essays collected here ... [Williams] traces the nexus between beauty and spirit and explains lucidly and passionately why it’s essential for humanity to conserve nature on our warming planet ... Williams reports on enlightening forays in the Arctic, Galápagos Islands, Rwanda, and China, and shares, with profound resonance, her brother’s suicide and the harsh consequences of her and her husband’s protest purchase of oil and gas leases. Williams takes readers far beyond the expected, illuminates unforeseen connections, and rejects despair, embracing, instead, attentiveness and action ... Williams’ exquisite testimony of wonder and wisdom is vitalizing and crucial.
Jesse Ball
PositiveBooklistBall, a writer of exceptional and pensive imagination, adds another trenchant fable to his distinctively disquieting oeuvre ... Writing with blood-freezing sparseness, Ball illuminates this calamitously immoral place in loosely linked episodes.
Samantha Power
RaveBooklistIn this gripping and revelatory memoir, Power chronicles, with vibrant precision and stunning candor, her best and worst moments navigating the obstacle courses within the White House and the UN, daunting global crises, and personal struggles. She is utterly compelling in her eye-witness accounts of violence and political standoffs and shrewdly witty in her tales about balancing diplomacy and motherhood. Ultimately, Power affirms the possibility for positive change and asserts that America’s power resides in its respect for human rights.
Margaret Atwood
RaveBooklist...a shrewdly suspenseful tale of survival and resistance. And Atwood’s wit is phosphorescent ... Finding that subversive female energy flowing molten beneath the surface of chilling Gilead is positively therapeutic ... For all the wrenching violence and heart-pounding action in The Testaments...it is the droll and righteous commentary that sets this novel alight. Both Gilead novels face head-on the horrors of tyranny and find some glimmer of hope in the redemptive act of bearing witness, a courageous expression of dissent and declaration of freedom in all its hectic and essential splendor.
Benjamin Moser
RaveBooklist... breaks new ground by virtue of his access to private archives, sagacious close-readings of Sontag’s radical writings, and conducting of hundreds of interviews. Moser discerns fresh significance in Sontag’s venturesome life and troubled psyche, from her precocious ardor for books and her youth in Hollywood to her sadomasochistic relationship with her alcoholic mother, her disassociation from her body, her lifelong reluctance to fully acknowledge her lesbianism, and her deep insecurity behind the glamorous façade of her renown. In clear-cut and supple prose, Moser avidly presents provocative facts and insights ... Moser also offers thrillingly clarifying analysis of the fiction of which Sontag was so proud, and her culture-altering criticism in which she broke down the barrier between popular and fine arts, interrogated the ethics of photography, scrutinized the implications of fame, metaphor, and pain, and declared that \'literature is freedom.\'
Zadie Smith
RaveBooklist... cunning and mordant ... Smith, an empathic and sardonic global writer, inhabits the psyches of radically different characters in varied settings as she orchestrates stealthily cutting dramas of generational and societal power struggles complicated by gender and race ... Adept at sudden psychological pivots ... Fury, heartbreak, and drollery collide in masterfully crafted prose that ranges in effect from the exquisitely tragic lyricism of Katherine Mansfield to the precisely calibrated acid bath of Jamaica Kincaid as Smith demonstrates her unique prowess for elegant disquiet.
Leslie Jamison
PositiveBooklistAn edgy spirit of inquiry, a fascination with obsession, a penchant for sharing personal experiences, and incandescent writing skills make Jamison an exciting premier essayist ... Magnetizing and thought-provoking.
F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Eds. Cathy W. Barks and Jackson R. Bryer
RaveBooklist...[an] invaluable collection of letters, most previously unpublished or long unavailable, a compilation that enables readers to witness firsthand the profound and sorely tested love of these two \'gifted and troubled human beings.\' Eloquently introduced by Eleanor Lanahan...this exceptionally moving correspondence reveals two ardent and creative souls struggling with the ruthless demands of the artistic imperative as well as two terrible diseases ... The majority of the letters are Zelda’s, and they’re dazzling in their vividness, metaphorical richness, and humor, and unfailing in their affection. Adoring, forgiving, and hardworking, Scott and Zelda were steadfastly committed to each other, and to art.
Salman Rushdie
RaveBooklist...an exuberantly imagined and lacerating homage to the revered satire, Don Quixote ... This spellbinding, many-limbed saga of lives derailing in the \'Age of Anything-Can-Happen\' is a wily frolic and a seismic denunciation. Rushdie meshes shrewd, parodic humor with intensifying suspense and pervasive sympathy, seeding this picaresque doomsday adventure with literary and television allusions and philosophical musings. As his vivid, passionate, and imperiled characters are confronted with racism, sexism, displacement, family ruptures, opioid addiction, disease, cyber warfare, and planetary convulsions, they valiantly seek the transcendence of love ... Rushdie’s dazzling and provocative improvisation on an essential classic has powerful resonance in this time of weaponized lies and denials.
Ian Urbina
RaveBooklist..[a] tour de force of intrepid global inquiry ... With precision, drama, and intimacy, Urbina recounts his role in a dangerous at-sea standoff between Indonesian and Vietnamese authorities, a frightening escape from Somalia, and many other harrowing situations, and describes his tenuous network of sources, translators, fixers, and spies. His biggest fear is that his risky quest may do harm to people rather than good, but there is no doubt that the bravely gleaned and galvanizing facts about maritime savagery and brewing catastrophes, which he so vividly and cogently presents, coalesce into an exposé of immense magnitude and consequence.
Patti Smith
RaveBooklistIn her third memoir, National Book Award winner Smith writes with fresh lucidity, arch wit, bittersweet wonder, and stoic sorrow, shifting in tone from lyrical to hallucinatory to hard-boiled as she describes her meditative and investigative meanderings along the Pacific coast and in the desert ... Smith also chronicles with exquisite poignancy her last visits with her soul mate Sam Shepherd as she helps him complete his last book. Smith’s reflections on a wrenching yet grace-filled year as \'the world in its dependable folly kept spinning\' is elegiac, vital, and magical.
Eve L. Ewing
RaveBooklist...exquisitely distilled lyrics ... These clarion and haunting poems—some psalm-like, others percussive, even concussive, all technically brilliant and sure to galvanize adults and teens alike—incisively and resoundingly evoke the promise and betrayal of the Great Migration and the everyday struggles of Chicago’s Black community against vicious and violent racism. The riot a century ago, Ewing writes, \'left an indelible mark on the city,\' which she gracefully, imaginatively, and searingly illuminates with hope for a more just future.
Joy Harjo
PositiveBooklist... resplendent and reverberating ... deeply rooted in tribal and family experiences, nature, land, and tradition. Harjo places swatches of history between her entrancing lyrics like specimens of poisonous plants in a naturalist’s log ... Harjo’s bracing political perspective is matched by timeless wisdom as she reflects on her life and lessons learned, and celebrates her time-bending grandfather, saxophone-playing grandmother (Harjo does the same), Earth’s bounty, and the transcendent power of song and love. In clarion, incantatory poems that recalibrate heart and mind, Harjo conveys both the endless ripples of loss and the brightening beauty and hope of the sunrise.
Edna O'Brien
RaveBooklistWith unflinching detail, O’Brien describes barbaric murders and gang rapes and deep soul damage. The story of Maryam’s survival, escape, struggle to find any shred of love left in her assaulted heart for her baby daughter, and grueling, politicized return, upon which mother and child are stigmatized and betrayed, is galvanizing and hallucinatory in its anguish and fear. There are flashes of beauty, wit, and succor here, too, as O’Brien’s extraordinary hero begins to heal in a land beset by psychotic violence ... O’Brien’s bravely investigated novel of a young woman overcoming epic torture is profoundly empathic, unnervingly human, and darkly exquisite.
Marie Arana
RaveBooklistArana’s...fluency in Latin American history blossoms in this unique and arresting inquiry into three \'crucibles\' which have shaped Latin American life for centuries ... In this masterwork of exploration, connection, and analysis, Arana offers a fresh, gripping, and redefining perspective on a vital and magnificent region betrayed by toxic greed and vicious tyranny.
Ann Patchett
RaveBooklistPatchett is at her subtle yet shining finest in this gloriously incisive, often droll, quietly suspenseful drama of family, ambition, and home ... With echoes of F. Scott Fitzgerald and in sync with Alice McDermott, Patchett gracefully choreographs surprising revelations and reunions as her characters struggle with questions of heredity, altruism, forgiveness, social expectations, and the need to be one’s true self.
Joyce Carol Oates
PositiveBooklistBoldly explicit, Oates’ tale of criminal psychosis draws on the druggy decadence, greed, sexism, and violence of Hollywood in the Charles Manson-Roman Polanski era ... Here is more evidence of Oates’ limitless, gruesome, and sympathetic imagination.
Amitav Ghosh
RaveBooklistDeen Datta, a Bengali American rare-books and antiquities dealer, finds himself drawn into an unforeseen, bafflingly mystical, and radically transformative adventure ... Ghosh seductively combines old-fashioned storytelling with keen research and a socially conscious sensibility to enthralling and piquantly enlightening affect.
Susan Straight
RaveBooklist... a captivating mixture of family history and memoir ... With stirring details and delving perceptions, Straight chronicles the repercussions, generation after generation, of enslavement, Jim Crow, and immigration as well as rape, murder, grueling work, and single motherhood ... deeply affecting ... a ravishing and revelatory celebration of womanhood, resilience, family, community, and America’s defining diversity.
Amy Waldman
RaveBooklistWaldman is an ingenious and probing situational novelist ... In this deeply well-informed, utterly engrossing, mischievously disarming, and stealthily suspenseful tale of slow and painful realizations, Waldman hits the mark over and over again as Parveen not only plunges into the divide between her privileged life and the severe limitations Waheed’s two wives and the other village women contend with, but is also forced to recognize the tragic ironies of Crane’s influence, especially on the American military. Every aspect of this complex and caustic tale of hype and harm is saturated with insight and ruefulness as Parveen wises up and Waldman considers womanhood and choice, literacy and translation, hubris and lies, unintended consequences, and the devastating chaos of war.
Lucy Ellmann
RaveBooklist...a tale of two mothers...rendered in lyrical sentences and paragraphs that surface intermittently like stepping-stones within a deluge of consciousness ... [a] smart, hilarious, high-strung narrator ... Ellmann’s mesmerizing, witty, maximalist (think David Foster Wallace, William T. Vollmann), and maddening performance is a bravura and caring inquiry into Earth’s glory, human creativity and catastrophic recklessness, and the transcendence of love.
Svetlana Alexievich, Trans. by Keith Gessen
RaveBooklistAlexievich put her own health at risk to gather these invaluable frontline testimonies, which she has transmuted into a haunting and essential work of literature that one can only hope documents a never-to-be-repeated catastrophe.
Jon Gertner
RaveBooklist... [a] vivid and dramatic chronicle ... beyond-belief tales of daring journeys across Greenland’s immense and treacherous frozen desert by men of courage and conviction, hubris and vision, each keenly portrayed ... Gertner entrances with tales of dogsleds, cold, hunger, isolation, disasters, death, and the against-all-odds collection of invaluable scientific data ... Gertner observes that it will take a \'moral awakening\' to spur us to confront this looming threat. Hopefully, his deeply engrossing and enlightening ice epic will instigate action.
Howard Norman
PositiveBooklistA paean to married love, creative endeavors, and compassion, and a delving look at love, loss, memory, and the afterlife in accord with Anne Tyler’s The Beginner’s Goodbye, Norman’s atmospheric, wise, and witty novel has the radiance, hiss, and snap of a hearth fire on a wintry night.
Colson Whitehead
RaveBooklist... an inventive, funny, and bittersweet inquiry into the significance of folk hero John Henry ... Masterfully composed and full of myth and magic, Whitehead’s great American novel considers such dualities as nature and civilization, legend and history, black and white, and altruism and greed, while deftly skewering the absurdities of the information age.
Colson Whitehead
RaveBooklistWhitehead’s debut novel can claim a literary lineage that includes Orwell, Ellison, Vonnegut, and Pynchon, yet it is resoundingly original ... The story is mesmerizing, but it is Whitehead’s shrewd and sardonic humor and agile explications of the insidiousness of racism and the eternal conflict between the material and the spiritual that make this such a trenchant and accomplished novel.
Isha Sesay
RaveBooklistIn enthralling and unnerving passages that vary from an incisive history of Boko Haram to scenes that could be torn from a demented terrorist thriller to moments of heart-wrenching emotion, Sesay fully recounts each stage of the ordeal ... Peabody Award–winning Sesay’s narrative is not only dramatically informative, it is also brilliantly structured, commandingly eloquent, and profoundly empathic ... Sesay’s galvanizing Beneath the Tamarind Tree will recharge the global battle for women’s equality.
Manning Marable
RaveBooklist... the most thorough and incisive portrait yet of this complicated, controversial, and enormously influential spiritual and political leader. Electric with recovered facts and jolting revelations, Marable’s dramatic and penetrating portrait is set within richly configured historical and cultural settings that illuminate long-neglected facets of the civil rights movement ... clarifying insights into the private conflicts of this brilliant, eloquent, magnetic, and zealous thinker, his outlaw years, troubled marriage, ceaseless travels, political prescience, and fatalism. The most chilling facets of the book are Marable’s chronicling of the FBI’s deep infiltration into the Nation of Islam and, after his ostracism, Malcolm’s organizations and of possible FBI collusion in Malcolm’s assassination and the failure to bring his killers to justice. Marable’s paramount biography leaves readers wondering where Malcolm’s spiritual and humanitarian metamorphosis might have taken him and everyone within reach of his commanding voice.
Peter Orner
RaveBooklistOrner, the author of four previous books of fiction, is a master of the aphoristic short story. The 44 concise and stinging tales simmering here, along with a stunningly piquant novella, Walt Kaplan is Broke, express a full spectrum of caustic observations, nuanced emotions, and life-warping predicaments ... poignant and hilarious ... Orner writes with a heady blend of gravitas and wit similar to that of such kindred short-story virtuosos as Deborah Eisenberg, Andre Dubus, and Gina Berriault, while expressing his own edgy empathy and embrace of everyday absurdity.
Téa Obreht
RaveBooklistObreht...brings her extraordinarily intricate worldview, psychological and social acuity, descriptive artistry, and shrewd, witty, and zestful storytelling to another provocative inquiry into the mysteries of place, nature, and human complexities. In this audacious tale in sync with those of Rick Bass, Hannah Tinti, and Karen Russell ... As her protagonists’ lives converge, Obreht inventively and scathingly dramatizes the delirium of the West—its myths, hardships, greed, racism, sexism, and violence—in a tornadic novel of stoicism, anguish, and wonder.
Jill Ciment
RaveBooklistCiment...a virtuoso of the situational novel, has created a hypnotizing, forked tale of trust and guilt, masks and doubling, lies and desire, life and death. As she stealthily readjusts the depth of field and provokes the reader into questioning testimony personal and judicial in this intricately unsettling tale of morality and longing, Ciment dramatizes the anguish of betrayal, age, and illness and the many forms that acts of love can take.
Aleksandar Hemon
RaveBooklistHemon’s newest, most delving nonfiction work ... He also incorporates the complicated histories of Bosnia and Yugoslavia, studded with cultural touchstones, in his ardently precise and analytical portraits of his parents, while in This Does Not Belong to You, he deepens the art of the vignette with sensuous and emotional veracity as he shares scorching moments from his Sarajevo childhood ... Here, too, are bracing candor, gruff tenderness, righteous anger, and political astuteness, all conveyed with Hemon’s signature intensity, mordant wit, and creative bite.
John Matteson
RaveBooklist...Matteson so adeptly builds a riveting double portrait of two exceptional Americans and abolitionists ... Making penetrating use of primary sources, Matteson gracefully interprets an astounding family drama of compassion and creativity, folly and courage, deprivation and mental instability ... Matteson’s lucid, commanding biography casts new light on an unusual father-daughter bond and a new land at war with itself.
Stacy Schiff
PositiveBooklistSchiff, a gifted biographer...not only draws this fascinating and accomplished woman out from behind her cherished mask and celebrated husband, she illuminates the profoundly collaborative process by which Vladimir wrote his scintillatingly original and provocative works ... Schiff tracks their often precarious lives in increasingly dangerous Berlin, then in the wide-open U.S., focusing most energetically on Vera’s extraordinary involvement in Vladimir’s academic and literary careers.
Jill Lepore
RaveBooklist...an urgent and pithy book-length essay in which she argues for the viability of the nation. Readers seeking clear and relevant definitions of political concepts will appreciate this brisk yet thorough, frank, and bracing look at the ancient origins of the nation state versus the late-eighteenth-century coinage of the term \'nationalism\' and its alignment with exclusion and prejudice ... Lepore writes, placing today’s conflicts in context and calling for us to continue the struggle to deepen and protect American democracy.
Courtney Maum
RaveBooklist...discerning the real-life inspirations for the artists is part of this evocative tale’s allure. But its depth is found in how astutely Maum tracks her diarist-narrator’s intellectual and emotional coming-of-age through her evolving eloquence and sharpening perceptions. Wounded by her mother’s inattention, infatuated with a sculptor, burdened by her femaleness, and increasingly serious about making art, Lara is extraordinarily poignant. By internalizing and then transcending her sources, Maum has created a brilliantly arch and haunting novel of privilege and deprivation.
Jeanette Winterson
PositiveBooklistWinterson’s agile imagination prompts her to bridge distant times and improvise on oft-told tales with impish and serious intent ... he keeps readers off-kilter in a complex, two-track homage to Mary Shelley and the ever-relevant questions raised by her masterpiece, Frankenstein ... gracefully brooding, rain-drenched scenes set along Lake Geneva ... Winterson shimmers and sparks in this at once sensitive and caustic, philosophical and funny inquiry into the body-mind conundrum, what we consider monstrous and what we think makes us human, the rainbow spectrum of gender and sexuality, and how our technologically enhanced fears and desires might impact the planet’s future.
Megan Marshall
RaveBooklist... profoundly simpatico portrait of this path-breaking feminist and courageous journalist and writer ... inhabits Fuller’s dramatic, oft-told story with unique intimacy by virtue of her fluency in and judicious quoting of Fuller’s extraordinarily vivid letters ... Marshall brings stirring historical and psychological insights ... How spectacularly detailed and compassionate Marshall’s chronicle is of Fuller’s scandalous love for an Italian soldier, the birth of their son, her heroic coverage of the 1849 siege of Rome, and her and her family’s tragic deaths when their ship wrecks in sight of the American coast. A magnificent biography of a revolutionary thinker, witness, and writer.
Bette Howland
RaveBooklistMuch like Lucia Berlin’s A Manual for Cleaning Women ... this story collection reinstates a long-overlooked artist of live-wire incisiveness, shredding wit, and improbable beauty ... First published in the late 1970s and 1980s, Howland’s intrepidly autobiographical stories feel brand-new ... A compassionate, trenchant, and hilarious ethnographer of eccentricities and dysfunction, Howland now takes her place in Chicago’s literary pantheon...
Colson Whitehead
RaveBooklist\"...a tautly focused and gripping portrait of two African American teens during the last vicious years of Jim Crow ... Whitehead’s magnetic characters exemplify stoicism and courage, and each supremely crafted scene smolders and flares with injustice and resistance, building to a staggering revelation. Inspired by an actual school, Whitehead’s potently concentrated drama pinpoints the brutality and insidiousness of Jim Crow racism with compassion and protest.\
Claudia Rankine
PositiveBooklistIn prose poems and poetic essays as sharp and stinging as a surprise slap to the face, Rankine matter-of-factly chronicles ordinary encounters poisoned by racism ... In poems of solitary reflection, despair, and conviction, the speaker considers the eloquence of sighs and rejects the directive, \'Let it go.\' Accompanied by evocative images, Rankine’s arrestingly forthright, emotionally authentic, and artistically lithe inquiry induces us to question and protest every racial assault against our individual and collective humanity.
Jeremy Treglown
PositiveBooklistTreglown covers it all as he parses Hersey’s ability to write blazingly forthright and incisive accounts of the physical and psychological damage caused by violence and other abuses of power. Treglown’s meticulous, richly interpretative reevaluation revitalizes our appreciation for the intensity, volume, variety, daring, and “moral imagination” of Hersey’s work, and for how essential and transformative writing can be when it’s strong, brave, conscientious.
Ryan Chapman
PositiveBooklistChapman revels in literary parody as his imperiled narrator describes his editorial coups and shares eyebrow-raising tales of his past ... Chapman’s bravura performance is piquant, rollicking, and richly provoking.
Eve Ensler
RaveBooklistEnsler’s transfixing, appalling, revelatory, and cathartic performance deepens her mission of transmuting her pain into clarion stories that engender understanding, openness, healing, and liberation.
Julia Phillips
RaveBooklist...[an] atmospheric drama of shock and despair ... In fresh and unpredictable scenes...Phillips’ spellbinding prose is saturated with sensuous nuance and emotional intensity as she subtly traces the shadows of Russia’s past and illuminates today’s daunting complexities of gender and identity, expectations and longing.
Gabriel García Márquez
RaveBooklistThis ensnaring volume gathers 50 incisive and surprising articles and essays published from 1950 to 1984, a small yet mighty sampling of his extensive nonfiction corpus. Here is García Márquez’s mastery of storytelling and sardonic humor, as well as evidence of his embrace of the absurd and the inexplicable and his fluency in offering the telling detail ... García Márquez is discerning, mesmerizing, and provocative.
Elizabeth Gilbert
RaveBooklist\"Reading City of Girls is pure bliss, thanks to its spirited characters, crackling dialogue, rollicking yet affecting story lines, genuinely erotic scenes, and sexual intelligence, suspense, and incisive truths. Gilbert’s beguiling blend of comedy and gravitas brings to mind other smart, funny, nimble, and vital novels about early- or mid-twentieth-century women swimming against the tide.\
Sarah Blake
RaveBooklistBlake’s breathtaking saga...begins in full with a lush, sweeping overture, though it carries its own kind of chilling undertow. Think Gershwin, Copeland, Ellington ... Blake saturates each scene with sensuous and emotional vibrancy while astutely illuminating sensitive moral quandaries ... Blake deftly interrogates the many shades of prejudice and \'the ordinary, everyday wickedness of turning away.\'
Binnie Kirshenbaum
PositiveBooklistIn her first novel in a decade, Kirshenbaum reclaims her scepter as a shrewdly lacerating comedic writer, joining Sylvia Plath, Ken Kesey, Will Self, Ned Vizzini, Siri Hustvedt, and others in writing darkly funny and incisive fiction about life in a psychiatric hospital ward ... a veritable primer on depression.
Casey Cep
RaveBooklistWith zeal for research and a gift for linguistic precision, Cep delves into Alabama’s history, tells the striking stories of all involved in this macabre saga, and chronicles Lee’s extensive investigation, including attending Burns’ trial and speaking with Radney and others touched by the killings. Yet Lee could never bring her book to fruition. Cep has vividly and insightfully retrieved a grimly fascinating true-crime story and done Lee justice in a fresh and compelling portrait of this essential American writer.
Jenny Offill
RaveBooklist... a magnetic novel about a marriage of giddy bliss and stratospheric anxiety, bedrock alliance and wrenching tectonic shifts ... covers this shifting terrain and its stormy weather in an exquisitely fine-tuned, journal-like account ... so precisely articulate that her perfect, simple sentences vibrate like violin strings. And she is mordantly funny, a wry taxonomist of emotions and relationships. Her dispatches from the fog of new motherhood are hilarious and subversive. Her cynical pursuit of self-improvement is painfully accurate. Her Richter-scale analysis of the aftershocks of infidelity is gripping. Nothing depicted in this portrait of a family in quiet disarray is unfamiliar in life or in literature, and that is the artistic magic of Offill’s stunning performance. She has sliced life thin enough for a microscope slide and magnified it until it fills the mind’s eye and the heart.
Karen Russell
RaveBooklist...ingenious, reality-warping, darkly funny, and exquisitely composed story collection rooted in myth and horror ... Russell writes with mischievous clarity, wit, and conviction, grounding the most bizarre situations in the ordinary ... Heir to Shirley Jackson and a compatriot of T. C. Boyle, virtuoso Russell, gifted with acute insights, compassion, and a daring, free-diving imagination, explores the bewitching and bewildering dynamic between \'the voracious appetite of nature and its yawning indifference\' and humankind’s relentless profligacy and obliviousness.
Gary Shteyngart
RaveBooklistFull-tilt and fulminating satirist Shteyngart is mordant, gleeful, and embracive as he funnels today’s follies and atrocities into a devilishly hilarious, soul-shriveling, and all-too plausible vision of a ruthless and crass digital dystopia in which techno-addled humans are still humbled by love and death.
Ian McEwan
PositiveBooklistMcEwan, a master stylist, has the complex psychology of this extreme yet credible situation down pat, managing, too, to subtly transform the struggle between Joe and Jed into a life-or-death battle between reason and faith, rationality and madness. A clever, impeccable, and positively Hitchcockian psychological thriller.
Aaron Bobrow-Strain
RaveBooklist\"Bobrow-Strain... tells the dramatic true tale of a woman he calls Aida Hernandez with extraordinary clarity and power, while also providing deep background on the forces behind the tragically unjust immigration laws and procedures she battled ... Bobrow-Strain’s searing chronicle of Aida’s struggles to secure legal residency include the illuminating stories of her father, a 1960s revolutionary; social worker Rosie Mendoza; and Ema, a lesbian Ecuadoran immigrant. In this caring and unforgettable borderland saga, Bobrow-Strain reveals the profound personal toll of the immigration crisis.\
Nina Revoyr
RaveBooklistRevoyr’s latest masterfully and intimately suspenseful tale of certain disaster...is fueled by volatile social conflicts in Los Angeles ... Shrewdly delineated scenes, loaded conversations, and a delirious surge of desire caustically expose the city’s toxic ruling-class legacy of prejudice and entitlement, while stoking questions of privilege, trust, and betrayal. Wealth and power, Revoyr confirms in this taut, commanding, and delectable novel, are not shields against folly, crime, or sorrow.
Bill McKibben
RaveBooklistIn his latest warmly engaging yet exacting chronicle of the damage caused by our reliance on fossil fuels, he exposes in appalling detail the lies and cover-ups orchestrated by carbon-industry executives and the political dominance of reckless billionaires who betray \'basic human solidarity.\' In contrast, he documents the promise of solar energy. At his most provocative, McKibben shares unnerving concerns about helter-skelter, potentially ruinous deployments of artificial intelligence and the advent of bioengineered humans. Ultimately, his primary focus in this deeply caring, eloquently reasoned inquiry into environmental and techno-utopian threats is on how we are imperiling the \'human game\'—that is, \'the entirety of our ceaseless activity\' as individuals and societies. Profoundly compelling and enlightening, McKibben balances alarm with hope as he celebrates the climate-change resistance movement and \'the human love that works to feed the hungry . . . that comes together in defense of sea turtles and sea ice, and of all else around us that is good.
Colin Asher
RaveBooklistAsher, the third biographer to tackle Algren’s puzzling story, was the first to see the full documentation of the agency’s long surveillance of the outspoken writer and champion of the poor and disenfranchised, and that access enables him to bring a new perspective to the unconventional, righteously literary, and rough-and-tumble life of the author ... a vigorously detailed yet swiftly flowing narrative ... As he presents Algren as a seminal American writer focused on injustice in this captivating, redefining, and sharply relevant biography, Asher also reveals how the insidious abuse of power by the federal government destroys lives.
Stewart O'Nan
PositiveBooklist\"O’Nan elevates the routines and chores of quiet domesticity to a nearly heroic level in his lingering attention to details, from plumbing troubles to coupons, walking the dog, and all the preparations and disruptions of holiday gatherings. Like Richard Russo and Anne Tyler, O’Nan discerningly celebrates the glory of the ordinary in this pitch-perfect tale of the hidden everyday valor of a humble and good man.\
Robert A. Caro
RaveBooklistThis engrossing and unexpectedly moving essay collection fully illuminates why and how [Caro] has spent so many years working on his massive, contextually intricate, and courageous biographies of two towering figures ... In humorous, rueful, often flat-out astonishing anecdotes, he recounts his early newspaper days and the sense of mission that drove him, with the unshakable support of his historian wife and investigative partner, Ina ... As he elucidates his commitment to creating biographical history of conscience and resonance, Caro affirms the larger significance of factual precision, empathy, and expressive verve.
Barbara Demick
RaveBooklistDemick’s bracing chronicle of the horrific consequences of decades of brutality provide the context for the wrenching life stories of North Korean defectors who confided in Demick ... Strongly written and gracefully structured, Demick’s potent blend of personal narratives and piercing journalism vividly and evocatively portrays courageous individuals and a tyrannized state within a saga of unfathomable suffering punctuated by faint glimmers of hope.
Myla Goldberg
RaveBooklist\"... brilliantly structured ... This is a novel of infinite depth, of caring authenticity both intimate and societal, of mothers and daughters, art and pain, and transcendent love.\
Aleksandar Hemon
PositiveBooklistHemon chronicles with defining intensity, rueful self-critique, and piquant humor indelible revelations personal, cultural, and political ... incisive, masterfully crafted, and complexly affecting family stories ... Hemon writes with deft force, piercing observation, and commanding candor about the individual’s place within life’s web and the horrors and beauty of the human condition.
Elizabeth Kolbert
RaveBooklistTo lay the groundwork for understanding this massive die-off, Kolbert crisply tells the stories of such earlier losses as the American mastodon and the great auk and provides an orienting overview of evolutionary and ecological science. She then chronicles her adventures in the field with biologists, botanists, and geologists investigating the threats against amphibians, bats, coral, and rhinos. Intrepid and astute, Kolbert combines vivid, informed, and awestruck descriptions of natural wonders, from rain forests to the Great Barrier Reef, and wryly amusing tales about such dicey situations as nearly grabbing onto a tree branch harboring a fist-sized tarantula, swimming among poisonous jellyfish, and venturing into a bat cave; each dispatch is laced with running explanations of urgent scientific inquiries and disquieting findings. Rendered with rare, resolute, and resounding clarity, Kolbert’s compelling and enlightening report forthrightly addresses the most significant topic of our lives.
Carolyn Forché
RaveBooklistIn this galvanizing memoir, [Forché] recounts her political awakening under fire with a poet’s lyrical acuity and a storyteller’s drama ... Forché recounts her frightening and transformative encounters with scorching specificity and portrays her brilliant and courageous mentor and other resistance fighters with wonder and gratitude. This clarion work of remembrance, this indelible testimony to a horrific battle in the unending struggle for human rights, justice, and peace, stands with the dispatches of Isabel Allende, Eduardo Galeano, Pablo Neruda, and Elena Poniatowska.
Nell Freudenberger
RaveBooklistThere’s a fair amount of spookiness in physics, and the language is seductively poetic. Freudenberger (The Newlyweds, 2012) is exceptionally conversant in this heady realm, and her obvious pleasure in physics...ensures that Helen is a mesmerizing narrator ... Freudenberger is spellbinding in her imaginative use of particle physics as a mirror of human entanglement and uncertainty ... As original as this deeply involving, substantial, suspenseful, and psychologically lush novel is, Freudenberger is in good company in her venture into the curious alignments among physics, memory, sorrow, and the fate of consciousness after death ... With daring, zest, insight, wit, and compassion, Lost and Wanted and its kindred novels gracefully and thrillingly bridge the divide between science and art.
Carolyn Burke
RaveBooklistThe dynamics among these four determined and visionary individuals—and, for a spell, two married couples—are deeply intriguing in terms of gender expectations, the role of muse, the battle to establish photography as a fine art, and the quest to push painting into provocative new modes of expression. Extracting gems from vast caches of letters, Burke follows the foursome’s artistically and erotically intertwined lives in detail, revealing their distinctive temperaments and the inspiration and anguish of their supportive and competitive interactions. Burke succeeds in portraying iconic Stieglitz and O’Keeffe with fresh insight and in elucidating Strand’s elusiveness, while the least-known of the quartet, the \'daredevil\' called Beck, steals the show ... Burke’s expert and enthralling true saga illuminates key intimate and historical aspects of the lives of four extraordinarily creative, intrepid, and influential artists to profound effect.
Patti Smith
RaveBooklistPatti Smith devotees know that she writes electrifying songs and spirited and spiritual poems, yet her first narrative book, a portrait of the artist as a young searcher times two, is a revelation. In a spellbinding memoir as notable for its restraint as for its lucidity, its wit as well as its grace, Smith tells the story of how she and Robert Mapplethorpe found each other ... With appearances by Janis Joplin, Allen Ginsberg, Sam Shepard, Johnny Winter, and many other intriguing and influential figures, Smith covers a remarkable swath of cultural and personal history in this beautifully crafted, vivid, and indelible look back. Readers can only hope that Smith will continue to tell her stories and share her visions
Alex Kotlowitz
RaveBooklist\"Kotlowitz writes with masterful economy and concreteness, and from his meticulous narrative springs a rich spectrum of emotions like light reflecting off high-rise window ... Kotlowitz’s hard-hitting and powerfully clarifying dispatches bring into the light people who love their families and friends and who work hard to take care of others, yet who are undermined, betrayed, and brutalized by violence, racism, poverty, and an unconscionable lack of understanding, caring, resources, and social and political will.\
Ann Beattie
RaveBooklistGimlet-eyed Beattie has created a stunningly unnerving and provocative tale spiked with keen cultural allusions and drollery. This jarring dissection of privilege and anxiety, gender expectations, lust, ludicrous predicaments, defensive selfishness, moral confusion, and numbing loneliness projects a matrix of angst somewhat countered by the solace and sustenance found in a quiet life far from the grasping, hurried, hostile world.
Siri Hustvedt
RaveBooklistIn the present, Hustvedt’s sixtysomething narrator muses over her past, reaching back to wounding childhood moments, and ponders, with stirring lucidity, time, memory, self, and the role stories play in this quicksilver triad ... Various forms of detection, anchored to Hustvedt’s deep knowledge of neuroscience and art, propel this lusciously layered and suspenseful \'portrait of the artist as a young woman\' and rapier attack on sexism electric with wit, curiosity, and storytelling magic.
Dave Eggers
RaveBooklist\"The ever-incisive, wordly-wise, compassionate, and imaginative Eggers maintains the tension of a cocked crossbow in this magnetizing, stealthily wry, and increasingly chilling tale of First World corporate mercenaries way out of their element.\
Amy Hempel
RaveBooklistHempel reaffirms her diamond reputation as a writer of gorgeously distilled, archly witty, and daringly empathetic tales. Hempel’s forte is the inner monologue, which, in these 15 incisive stories, ranges in form from brief but reverberating prose poems to sustained tales saturated with evocative detail and evolving emotions ... Hempel is a master miniaturist, capturing in exquisitely nuanced sentences the sensuous, cerebral, and spiritual cascade of existence, homing in on pain and humor and the wisdom each can engender.
Molly Gloss
RaveBooklistIn her canny and spellbinding third novel, Gloss...combines a passion for history with a taste for fantasy and a witty assessment of sexual mores ... Not only has Gloss created an irresistible heroine, she considers our conflictful relationship with nature, misogyny, and what it really means to be alive without once compromising the heady pleasure of her suspenseful tale; and her prose is positively ambrosial.
Adina Hoffman
RaveBooklistHoffman, a superb essayist and biographer, illuminates, in this precise and lively portrait, every contradictory element of Hecht’s rogue personality, protean artistry, and impact as a whirlwind activist calling for support of Nazi-besieged European Jews and the establishment of Israel. Each phase in Hecht’s adventures is electrifying ... Hoffman’s concentrated biography is smartly entertaining and revelatory.
Leslie Jamison
RaveBooklistA tough, intrepid, scouring observer and vigilant thinker, [Jamison] generates startling and sparking extrapolations and analysis. On the prowl for truth and intimate with pain, Jamison carries forward the fierce and empathic essayistic tradition as practiced by writers she names as mentors, most resonantly James Agee and Joan Didion.
Miriam Toews
RaveBooklist...[a] sharp blade of a novel ... Toews’ eviscerating fictionalization of this incendiary reality focuses not on the violence but, rather, on the keen, subversive intelligence of the Mennonite women, their philosophical casts of mind, clashing personalities, and deep concerns about family and faith ... Toews’ knowing wit and grasp of dire subjects aligns her with Margaret Atwood, while her novel’s slicing concision and nearly Socratic dialogue has the impact of a courtroom drama or a Greek tragedy ... Toews’ clarifying novel will help further dismantle the toxic habits of sexism.
Akiko Busch
PositiveBooklistBusch writes about nature and culture with delving curiosity and fresh thinking ... Busch investigates the divide between our visible and inner selves in this zestfully perceptive \'field guide to invisibility.\' She describes wondrous strategies for concealment in the natural world, considers the role of invisibility in myths and the arts, shares personal experiences, and notes various ways in which we are rendered invisible for better or worse. Ultimately, Busch elegantly advocates for \'elective invisibility\' as a way of acquiring \'a more humanitarian view of the larger world.\' Eye-opening and inspiring.
Maria Popova
RaveBooklistExhilarating and omnivorous ... [a] passionate and erudite pursuit of truth and beauty ... Popova presents uniquely discerning and strikingly candid interpretations of her subjects’ writings, private and published, and profiles their family, lovers, and peers ... Writing with an ardor for language and musing on chance, affinity, and our fear of change, Popova constructs an intricate biographical cosmos that is intellectually scintillating, artistically wondrous, and deeply affecting.
Michael Chabon
PositiveBooklist[An] incandescently imaginative and artful author ... offers fresh and illuminating analysis of the various styles and intentions of forewords ... Chabon devotees will relish his ensnaring essays for the insights they provide into his inspirations ... Of particular tenderness and grace is the prelude to his own novel Summerland.
Devi S Laskar
RaveBooklist\"Not only does Laskar bring her honed skills as a poet and journalist to her pulse-racing first novel about otherness and prejudice, she also draws on her own experience of a shocking raid on her home. Laskar’s bravura drama of one woman pushed to the brink by racism is at once sharply relevant and tragically timeless.\
Nathan Englander
PositiveBooklistVery polished and provocative ... inevitably troublesome philosophical, moral, and spiritual complications surface and multiply. As his high-strung, stubborn protagonist undergoes surprising metamorphoses, his high-anxiety quandaries embody the practice of deep analysis and interpretation intrinsic to Judaism. Englander is mischievously hilarious, nightmarish, suspenseful, inquisitive, and deliriously tender in this concentrated tale of tradition and improvisation, faith and love.
Amanda Sthers
PositiveBooklistComedic and sorrowful ... quick-footed, perfectly choreographed, piercingly funny, and poignant ... s each articulate, conflicted, and ardent character endures life-altering experiences, Sthers incisively and provocatively questions crucial matters of religion, morality, inheritance, compassion, and love.
Barry Lopez
RaveBooklist[Lopez\'s] most encompassing, autobiographical, passionately detailed, and reflective book ... Prodigiously attentive out in the world and rigorous on the page, morally inquisitive and bracingly candid, Lopez pegs this expansive narrative to places that have special resonance for him ... Sharply attuned to the wonders and decimation of the living world, the endless assaults against indigenous people, and the daunting challenges of a changing climate, Lopez tells revelatory tales, poses tough questions, and shares wisdom, all while looking to the horizon.
Kathryn Davis
PositiveBooklistDavis is a master of mind-whirling, arabesque fiction. This puzzle of pieces of time past, present, and future is an alternately funny and wistful tale of excursions across forbidding, pandemic-afflicted landscapes ... Davis has created a spooky, slippery, provocative, and elegiac fable in which amusingly fractious and poignantly imperiled pilgrims press on in a blasted world, destination unknown.
Linn Ullmann Trans. by Thilo Reinhold
PositiveBooklistFlickers like film threaded through a projector, shifting between dark and light, past and present, autobiography and fiction ... gracefully exquisite, sharply funny, and richly poignant reminiscences ... Ullmann’s homage to family, art, beauty, and love is resplendently vital, and enchantingly evocative.
Ingrid Sischy
RaveBooklist...generous ... stellar ... Sischy’s essays are vigorous and delectable ... For Sischy admirers, this is a treasure; for everyone interested in art journalism at its crisp, inquisitive, and resonant best, this is gospel.
Lili Anolik
PositiveBooklistAnolik now presents the full jaw-dropping drama of Babitz’s on-the-edge life and complicated personality, paired with an account of Anolik’s pursuit of her wily subject. With the recent reissue of Babitz’s books, this radical American writer of stunning verve, candor, and insight is truly a phoenix rising.
Sharma Shields
RaveBooklistShields has created a dawn-of-the-nuclear-age Cassandra in this galvanizing variation on the ancient Greek tale of a seer doomed always to be right, yet never to be believed. Shields summons the spirit of the besieged land in a heron, coyote, and rattlesnake who reveal, in surreal and terrifying visions, the horrors of the radiation contaminating the region and the hell to come in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Mildred proves to be a woman of unnerving strength as she also contends with Hanford’s brutal racism, as witness, and endures sexual violence. Shields verges on overkill but offers satirically comedic scenes and satisfyingly venomous takedowns of the patriarchy, welcome flashes of light in this otherwise harrowing dive into the darkest depths of hubris and apocalyptic destruction. A uniquely audacious approach to the nuclear nightmare.
Dahr Jamail
RaveBooklistMatching awe for the majestic intricacy and beauty of nature with exacting and alarming dispatches, Jamail calls on us to respect facts, honor life, and recognize that we are facing increasingly tragic disruptions and loss. Enlightening, heartbreaking, and necessary.
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
RaveBooklistEnthralling ... Jhabvala was a spellbinding short story writer of fluid empathy, exceptional cross-cultural insight, and abiding respect for unconventional love ... a richly captivating, revelatory, and important collection.
Elizabeth McCracken
PositiveBooklistMcCracken is a beloved bard of the eccentric, the misbegotten, and the unfathomable ... McCracken writes with exuberant precision, ingenious lyricism, satirical humor, and warmhearted mischief and delight. Though some otherworldly elements feel forced, McCracken is unerring in her spirited emotional and social discernment. This compassionate and rambunctious saga about love, grief, prejudice, and the courage to be one’s self chimes with novels by John Irving, Audrey Niffenegger, and Alice Hoffman.
Tom Barbash
RaveBooklistFleet-footed...brain-whirring ... Punctuated by clever dialogue and crisp social critiques, Barbash’s incisive, funny, and poignant portrait of talented people and a city in flux illuminates the risks of celebrity and the struggle to become one’s true self.
David Kipen
RaveBooklist[An] irresistible compendium of letter and diary excerpts from an array of voices .... West Coast match to New York Diaries (2012) is lushly rewarding.
Ed. by Annick Smith and Susan O'Connor
RaveBooklist... a simmering collection of 32 provocative and stunning works, along with photographs by Sebastião Salgado ... Ultimately, this profound and radiant volume reveals that hearths take many forms, including a book.
Heather Rose
PositiveBooklistDeeply involving ... offers an illuminating perspective on the proceedings, adding to the mystery and power of Abramović’s life and performance, and engendering profound questions about the divide between artist and art, artist and audience, self and creativity, love and spirit. Rose’s emotionally rich and thought-provoking homage and inquiry should prompt readers to seek out Abramović’s dramatic memoir, Walk through Walls (2016).
Joshua Rivkin
RaveBooklistRivkin brings his sensibility and prowess as a poet and essayist to this unusually reflective, stealthily dramatic inquiry into the enigmatic life and work of artist Cy Twombly ... An extraordinarily involving, gorgeously written chronicle of art, controversy, fame, and the perils of biography.
Natasha Trethewey
RaveBooklistTrethewey’s genius for dovetailing the personal and the communal, the impressionistic and the factual...kicks off this magnificent new and selected collection ... Trethewey mines documents, scrutinizes paintings and photographs, and transforms concrete objects into engines of emotion and memories as she excavates her southern home ground and illuminates the lives of African Americans, especially women. Here are breathtaking persona poems ... For all the tragic, overlooked history Trethewey reclaims with clarion lyricism, it is her own family complexities and terrible loss that reverberate most. Monument is an essential volume of piercing wit, elegiac beauty, profound insights intimate and cultural, and the sustaining power of remembrance.
Karen E. Bender
RaveBooklistClosed spaces—elevators, offices, an airplane, classrooms—amplify the inner dramas of Bender’s watchful, anxious, feverishly expressive narrators in her second short story collection, following Refund. In the title story, in which two competitive friends abruptly part ways after a school shooting, the new order refers to the seating arrangement in a student orchestra, but the phrase takes on many shades of meaning as Bender’s characters navigate an array of unnerving situations ... With literary virtuosity, psychological authenticity, and breath-catching insight, Bender dramatizes gripping personal dilemmas compounded by a new order of social tyranny.
Glory Edim
PositiveBooklist\"Tayari Jones muses on Toni Morrison, Veronica Chambers on Jamaica Kincaid, Marita Golden on Zora Neale Hurston. Other contributors include Jesmyn Ward, Stephanie Powell Watts, and N. K. Jemisin. Well-Read Black Girl Recommends reading lists covering various themes and genres add to the reach and radiance of this empowering literary resource.\
Jonathan Franzen
PositiveBooklistFranzen begins his fourth collection of personal essays with praise for how the form invites \'honest self-examination and sustained engagement with ideas,\' qualities he masterfully demonstrates in 16 thought-provoking narratives in which he flies against the prevailing winds of common assumptions and expectations. A birder, Franzen travels the world to add to his life list, a mission that enmeshes him in environmental conundrums as he celebrates the wondrous variety and beauty of avian species and seeks to understand the myriad threats against them.
Jean Thompson
PositiveBooklistWith low-key yet piercing humor, caustic observations balanced with compassion, and entrancing storytelling mojo, Thompson masterfully uncovers the contrary emotions surging beneath the flat, orderly landscapes and tidy homes of the Midwest ... As storms, gardens, and trees punctuate and embody the richly reverberating family drama Thompson so astutely orchestrates, she unflinchingly examines desire and resignation, death and inheritance, while tracing women’s generational struggles for genuine independence ... invites reflection and discussion.
Robin Robertson
RaveBooklist...[a] hypnotic and wrenching novel in verse ... Robertson transforms the long take into an epic taking of life, liberty, reason, and hope in this saga of a good man broken by war and a city savaged by greed, an arresting and gorgeously lyrical and disquieting tale of brutal authenticity, hard-won compassion, and stygian splendor.
Rosellen Brown
RaveBooklist OnlineAn exquisite, suspenseful, and character-driven tale ... In an astute and enrapturing variation on Edith Wharton’s foundational Gilded Age novel, The House of Mirth (1905), Brown imaginatively, compassionately, and spellbindingly dramatizes timeless questions of survival and social conscience.
Sylvia Plath
RaveBooklist\"[The Letters of Sylvia Plath, Vol. 2] is a shattering chronicle of a woman’s struggle to be both a pathbreaking artist and a domestic paragon ... Together, these two volumes accentuate the wonder of all that Plath accomplished by age 30, and her poetry, fiction, journals, and letters will remain forever alive, daring, urgent, and electrifying.\
Stephen King
RaveBooklistA sharply imaginative, sweetly funny, tenderly uplifting fable. Divisive times call for unifying tales. Written in masterly King’s signature translucent style and set in one of his trademark locales, this uncharacteristically glimmering fairy tale calls unabashedly for us to rise above our differences ... Succinct, magical, timely.
Joyce Carol Oates
PositiveBooklistWhile in this clever, brain-twisting, Poe-like fable she looks to the past and the future to dramatize the vulnerability of the psyche, the fragility of freedom, and the catastrophic consequences of repressing intelligence, independence, and creativity, what Oates illuminates is the present ... Oates is always provocative, but this tensile dystopian tale will magnetize readers in a whole new mode.
Kathryn Harrison
RaveBooklistReaders familiar with novelist Harrison’s previous transfixing memoirs, from The Kiss (1997) to True Crimes (2016), may think that by now the well of stories about her Los Angeles childhood has run dry. Not so. It turns out that the lives of her maternal grandparents, who raised her as her young, profligate mother ran amok, are fairy-tale fascinating, profoundly revealing of cultural divisions, and brilliantly and wittily told as Harrison channels her young, inquisitive self.
Brian Phillips
PositiveBooklist\"When Phillips, a jazzy John McPhee, ventures out into the world in pursuit of understanding of a place, mystery, vocation, or obsession, he is attention incarnate. The resulting prismatic descriptions power his vibrant, multidimensional essays, which are built on rich veins of research and further enlivened with crisply recounted conversations and convivially self-deprecating glimpses into his state of mind.\
Wil Haygood
RaveBooklistDynamic, multidimensional, and heart-revving ... This laugh-and-cry tale of rollicking and wrenching drama set to the beat of thumping basketballs and the crack of baseball bats, fast breaks and cheerleaders’ chants, is electric with tension and conviction, and incandescent with unity and hope.
Mary Gabriel
RaveBooklistGabriel not only provides vibrantly detailed accounts of these five exceptional avant-garde artists’ friendships and rivalries, affairs and marriages, doubt and despair, conviction and resilience; she also establishes a richly dimensional context for their struggles and innovations, delving into the impact on the arts and on women’s lives of the Great Depression, WWII, the atomic bomb, and the Cold War. Gabriel has created an incandescent, engrossing, and paradigm-altering art epic.
Sally Field
RaveBooklistIn her first book, a memoir as soulful, wryly witty, and lyrical as it is candid and courageous, Field recounts the prolonged abuse she survived by creating \'a safe place where I could toss all the feelings I didn’t understand.\' Field’s stoicism was rooted in her love for her mother, and it was her mother’s death that inspired this eye-opening and deeply affecting chronicle ... Arresting in its dark disclosures, vitality, humor, and grace, Field’s deeply felt...written memoir illuminates the experiences and emotions on which she draws as an exceptionally charismatic, empathic, and powerful artist.
Benjamin Balint
PositiveBooklist\"When Max Brod, Kafka’s friend and tireless advocate, decided not to honor the writer’s request that he burn his papers upon his death in 1924, instead overseeing the publication of Kafka’s revolutionary work, he inadvertently catalyzed decades of legal skirmishes. Balint tracks them all with pinpoint detail and narrative drive, first bringing Kafka and Brod into focus as literary, German-speaking Jews in anti-Semitic Prague.
Susan Orlean
RaveBooklist\"...[a] kaleidoscopic and riveting mix of true crime, history, biography, and immersion journalism ... While her forensic account of the conflagration is eerily mesmerizing, Orlean is equally enthralling in her awestruck detailing of the spectrum of activities that fill a typical Central Library day, and in her profiles of current staff and former head librarians ... Probing, prismatic, witty, dramatic, and deeply appreciative, Orlean’s chronicle celebrates libraries as sanctuaries, community centers, and open universities run by people of commitment, compassion, creativity, and resilience.\
Deborah Baker
RaveBooklist\"...her most creatively conceived, deeply delving, and wizardly blend of biography and history to date ... Baker’s extensive research is seamlessly subsumed within the flow of her novelistic narrative as she brings to life landscapes magnificent and terrifying; volatile love affairs; seismic political turmoil; and gripping scenes of war. With a uniquely encompassing vision, command of complex information, and profound insight, Baker dramatically chronicles the seminal scientific and artistic explorations of four courageous, ingenious brothers whose achievements enrich our understanding of the still-molten, sharply relevant past.\
Anne Boyd Rioux
RaveBooklist Online...Award-winning Rioux marks the 150th anniversary of this...influential novel by telling its story whole. Noting the power of its authenticity, Rioux illuminates the parallels between the Alcotts and the fictional March family and marks just how intent war nurse and suffragette Louisa was on challenging gender roles ... Rioux’s...informed, multifaceted, ardently argued, and mind-expanding celebration of Little Women affirms its pleasures and significance as a tale ripe for reconsideration and recommendation to YA and adult readers across the gender spectrum.
Barbara Kingsolver
RaveBooklist\"...[an] exceptionally involving and rewarding novel ... Kingsolver alternates between Willa’s droll reflections on her ever-worsening predicament, and Thatcher’s on his, subtly linking their equally compelling, alternating narratives with a repeated phrase or echoed thought, a lovely poetic device that gently punctuates the parallels between these two times of uncertainty ... There is much here to delight in and think about while reveling in Kingsolver’s vital characters, quicksilver dialogue, intimate moments, dramatic showdowns, and lushly realized milieus ... Kingsolver insightfully and valiantly celebrates life’s adaptability and resilience, which includes humankind’s capacity for learning, courage, change, and progress.\
Alice Mattison
RaveBooklist...a writer of extraordinary psychological acuity and crisp wit ... [a] riveting tale of friends who protested the Vietnam War ... Mattison’s engrossing exploration of diverse matters of conscience is dynamic, precise, many-layered, funny, ambushing, and provocative as she marvels over how contradictory we are.
Abby Geni
RaveBooklist\"In this staggering tale of loss intimate and ecological, Geni joins T. C. Boyle, Barbara Kingsolver, Annie Proulx, and Hannah Tinti in portraying humankind as both the planet’s most dangerous predator and one of myriad species vulnerable to ecodisasters of our own unintended devising. Riveting, provocative, and unforgettable.\
David Quammen
RaveBooklistBest-selling science journalist Quammen...precisely and vividly explains how these [various scientific] findings have \'tangled\' the tree ... telling a dramatic, many-limbed tale of courageous theorists and assiduous experimentalists, all portrayed with zest in short, punchy chapters ... With humor, clarity, and exciting accounts of breakthroughs and feuds, Quammen traces the painstaking revelation of life’s truly spectacular complexity.
Sarah Weinman
RaveBooklist\"Weinman points out the many parallels between the novel and Sally’s life (so cruelly shortened after her rescue—she was just 15 when she died), while chronicling Nabokov’s own cross-country journeys, writing habits, and denial of the Horner connection. Weinman’s sensitive insights into Horner’s struggle play in stunning counterpoint to her illuminations of Nabokov’s dark obsession and literary daring, and Lolita’s explosive impact.\
Walter Mosley
RaveBooklist\"Mosley is at his commanding, comfort-zone-blasting best in this heady tale of a fugitive genius. His hero’s lectures are marvels of intellectual pyrotechnics and provocative inquiries; intense sex scenes raise questions about gender roles and intimacy; and John Woman’s increasingly drastic predicament and complex moral quandary precipitate arresting insights into race, freedom, power, and the stories we tell to try to make sense of the ceaseless torrent of human conflict and desire.\
Gary Shteyngart
RaveBooklist\"Shteyngart’s storytelling is otherwise electric in its suspense and mordant hilarity; his characters are intriguingly and affectingly complex, and, while the action never stops, he still digs deeply into our perceptions of self and family, lies and truth, ambition and success, greed and generosity, love and betrayal, and, most touchingly, what we deem normal and how we respond to differences. Lake Success is a big, busy, amusing, needling, and outraging novel, one to revel in and argue with ... For all his caustic critique and propulsive plotting, Shteyngart is a writer of empathic imagination, ultimately steering this bristling, provocative, sharply comedic, yet richly compassionate novel toward enlightenment and redemption.\
William T. Vollmann
RaveBooklist...Refused interviews by fuel-industry executives and U.S. Department of Energy staff, Vollmann portrays individuals who have endured intimidation to speak out against the \'callous villainies\' of fuel corporations. Unflinching, exacting, and forthright, Vollmann brings abiding respect, empathy, and tenderness to this endeavor, both documenting the fuel industry’s betrayal of hardworking people and recognizing \'the stubbornly irrational component in human affairs.\' Invaluable, enlightening, and heartrending testimony to how enmeshed we all are in the carbon-industrial complex and accelerated climate change.
Meg Wolitzer
RaveBooklist...a diabolically smart and funny assault against the literary establishment and the tacit assumption that only men can write the Great American Novel. As Joan recounts the misery she and her fellow writers’ wives endure, popular and shrewd novelist Wolitzer choreographs her ire into kung-fu precision moves to zap our every notion about gender and status, creativity and fame, individuality and marriage, deftly exposing the injustice, sorrow, and sheer absurdity of it all.
Andre Dubus
RaveBooklistThe solidly yet intricately constructed short stories and novellas of Dubus (1936–99) vibrate with a provocative intensity of place, predicament, thought, and feeling. Each is an intimate, unnerving drama of the everyday conflicts between dream and reality, spirit and desire ... In each surprising tale, Dubus, equally empathic in portraying women and men, tackles with supreme candor, precision, artistry, and valor the full emotional and moral weight of love, marriage, adultery, friendship, parenthood, ambition, selfishness, and loneliness, subtly critiquing social mores versus questions of self and faith. Dubus explores everything from a young woman’s struggle with conformity to the tough revelations of a young man’s military training, while three linked novellas about two young Massachusetts couples are magnificently explosive in their bold psychological, erotic, and moral complexity.
Andre Dubus
RaveBooklistThe solidly yet intricately constructed short stories and novellas of Dubus (1936–99) vibrate with a provocative intensity of place, predicament, thought, and feeling. Each is an intimate, unnerving drama of the everyday conflicts between dream and reality, spirit and desire ... In each surprising tale, Dubus, equally empathic in portraying women and men, tackles with supreme candor, precision, artistry, and valor the full emotional and moral weight of love, marriage, adultery, friendship, parenthood, ambition, selfishness, and loneliness, subtly critiquing social mores versus questions of self and faith. Dubus explores everything from a young woman’s struggle with conformity to the tough revelations of a young man’s military training, while three linked novellas about two young Massachusetts couples are magnificently explosive in their bold psychological, erotic, and moral complexity.
Laura Van Den Berg
PositiveBooklist Online\"...[a] brooding, often-surreal, funereally bemusing second novel ... In sync with Vendela Vida’s The Diver’s Clothes Lie Empty (2015), van den Berg’s entrancing, gorgeously enigmatic tale dramatizes the narcosis of grief.\
Nick Dybek
PositiveBooklistDybek has created a carefully constructed, deeply inquisitive, and broodingly romantic tale of mourning resonant with judicious echoes of Hemingway and Fitzgerald and spiked with piquant insights into the loss, longing, and delusion rampant in the haunting aftermath of war.
Michiko Kakutani
RaveBooklist\"While others have established a historical context for today’s political polarization, none has so meticulously excavated the conceptual strata ... Kakutani has issued an elegantly well-argued and profoundly illuminating call to protest.\
Anne Tyler
RaveBooklist...an especially lithe and enlivening tale ... Tyler’s bedazzling yet fathoms-deep feel-good novel is wrought with nimble humor, intricate understanding of emotions and family, place and community—and bounteous pleasure in quirkiness, discovery, and renewal.
Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, Trans. by Margaret Jull Costa and Robin Patterson
RaveBooklistA brilliant and imaginative satirist and a contemporary of Chekhov and Maupassant, he is unknown to most American readers. That will change with the release of this monumental volume. A towering achievement in translation, it presents all of Machado de Assis’ stories in English for the first time, and it is a treasury of wily, captivating, ironic, revealing, and exuberant tales of Brazilian life and human folly. These stories are vital; their social particulars striking, even shocking... Machado de Assis’ stories belong in every world-fiction collection.
William T. Vollmann
RaveBooklistVigilant in his precision, open-mindedness, and candor, Vollmann takes on global warming, elucidating the science used to measure the impact of carbon-based fuels and nuclear energy on the atmosphere and Earth, and analyzing the \'ideologies,\' or assertions, that keep the energy industries churning, no matter the consequences. Vollmann provides an extensive, richly sourced \'primer\' of mind-seizing quantifications about greenhouse gases emitted by agriculture, transportation, power plants, and manufacturing, vividly conveyed information matched by arresting enumerations of negligence and malfeasance ... His poignant conversations with nuclear refugees, unnerving visits to contaminated towns, telling photographs, and stubborn attempts to measure radiation all attest to the terror, sorrow, and eerie normalization of this ongoing disaster. Vollmann’s careful descriptions, touching humility, molten irony, and rueful wit, combined with his addressing readers in \'the hot dark future,\' make this compendium of statistics, oral history, and reportage elucidating, compelling, and profoundly disquieting.
Lydia Millet
RaveBooklist...a book of adeptly interlocked tales ... As Millet makes exceptionally potent use of the linked-stories form, her writing is razor-edged, her comedy at once caustic and compassionate, and her insights agile.
David Lynch and Kristine McKenna
PositiveBooklist…a personification of unconventionality, multimedia visionary David Lynch has combined memoir with biography to forge a strikingly multidimensional portrait of the artist. Coauthor McKenna, a journalist who has known Lynch for decades, presents the facts along with forthright recollections gleaned from extensive interviews with Lynch’s family, ex-wives, friends, and colleagues … incandescently detailed and complexly enlightening chronicle of a fervent, uncompromising life devoted to \'pure creativity\'
Penelope Lively
RaveBooklistShe visits \'painted\' gardens by Monet, Bonnard, and Van Gogh, as well as diverse fictional gardens, including those conjured by Beatrix Potter, Virginia Woolf, and Edith Wharton. Lively also looks to gardens as indicators of social standing, tracks garden fashions, confesses her addiction to fuchsias, and zestfully critiques the writings of influential English garden designers, including Gertrude Jekyll and William Robinson. Erudite, witty, and irreverent, Lively darts ebulliently from topic to topic like a bee among blossoms.
Fatima Farheen Mirza
RaveBooklistMirza’s debut novel, extraordinary in its depth and diligence ... adeptly revisits painful dilemmas from each narrator’s perspective, revealing jolting secrets. Each complex, surprising character struggles with faith, responsibility, racism, fear, longing, and jealousy, while Mirza conveys with graceful specificity the rhythms of Muslim life, from prayer to wearing hijab, gender etiquette, food, holidays, and values, all of which illuminate universal quandaries about family, self, culture, beliefs, and generational change.
Caryl Phillips
RaveBooklistPhillips’ hypnotic interpretation of the first half of Gwen’s life is riddled with strategic lacunae, so that the sudden mention of her writing cracks the bitter gloom like a lightning bolt. Phillips’ bravura, empathic, and unnerving performance makes the real-world achievement of his muse all the more surprising and significant.
Stuart Kells
RaveBooklistIn this free-roaming history of libraries, Kells, well read, well traveled, ebullient, and erudite, relishes tales of innovation, obsession, and criminality ... scintillating, often irreverant ... Kells’ revelatory romp through the centuries cues us to the fact that, as has so often been the case, libraries need our passionate attention and support, our advocacy, gratitude, and (given Kells’ tales of book-kissing, including Coleridge pressing his lips to his copy of Spinoza) love.
Julia Van Haaften
RaveBooklistVan Haaften...chronicles Abbott’s demanding life and extraordinary accomplishments with scrupulous detail ... Van Haaften’s expert foundational biography brings Abbott into sharp focus as a photographer able to \'express deep feeling through technical mastery.\'
Julia Fine
RaveBooklistWith convincing intensity and a charming mix of wit, gruesomeness, magic, and romance in the spellbinding mode of Alice Hoffman, Fine offers a provocative fairy tale about womanhood under siege and one young woman’s fierce resistance.
Michael Pollan
RaveBooklistPollan’s complexly elucidating and enthralling inquiry combines fascinating and significant history with daring and resonant reportage and memoir, and looks forward to a new open-mindedness toward psychedelics and the benefits of diverse forms of consciousness.
Jon Meacham
RaveBooklistBy investigating the ways presidents have faced crises, Meacham, whose shining, cogent prose carries in its swift current mind-opening quotes from myriad sources, freshly defines the \'soul of America\' ... This engrossing, edifying, many-voiced chronicle, subtly propelled by concern over the troubled Trump administration, calls on readers to defend democracy, decency, and the common good.
Michael Ondaatje
RaveBooklist\"Ondaatje’s gorgeous, spellbinding prose is precise and lustrous, witty, and tender. As the painful truth of this fractured family emerges and Rose’s riveting story takes center stage, Ondaatje balances major and minor chords, sun and shadow, with masterful grace beautifully concentrated in \'warlight,\' his term for the sparest possible illumination during the city’s defensive blackouts ... Ondaatje’s drolly charming, stealthily sorrowful tale casts subtle light on secret skirmishes and wounds sustained as war is slowly forged into peace.\
Paula McLain
RaveBooklist\"McLain has perfected her dramatic and lyrical approach to biographical fiction, lacing Marty’s ardent inner life into electrifying descriptions of place and action ... McLain brings forth the deepest, most ringing elements of both \'love and ruin,\' the two poles of Marty and Ernest’s tempestuous relationship, a ferocious contest between two brilliant, willful, and intrepid writers. McLain’s fast-moving, richly insightful, heart-wrenching, and sumptuously written tale pays exhilarating homage to its truly exceptional and significant inspiration.\
Patricia Hampl
RaveBooklist\"For all the vital, sensuous, enrapturing descriptions that engender a powerful sense of presence, this is also a contemplation of absence and solitude as Hampl tenderly contends with the sudden death of her husband. An exquisite anatomy of mind and an incandescent reflection on nature, being, and rapture.\
Andrea Barnet
PositiveBooklistWith both resonant detail and purposeful distillation, Barnet tells their dramatic stories within the context of the counterculture of 50 years ago, charts the ongoing vitality and influence of their compassionate visions, and asks if we will yet accomplish what these four 'accidental revolutionaries' call on us to do to preserve the web of life.
Kevin Young
RaveBooklist\"Thrillingly quick-footed, Young’s poems are also formally intricate and fully loaded with history, protest, and emotion as he writes of racial injustice.\
Rachel Kushner
RaveBooklist\"Romy, Kushner has created a seductive narrator of tigerish intensity whose only vulnerability is her young son ... Rooted in deeply inquisitive thinking and executed with artistry and edgy wit, Kushner’s dramatic and disquieting novel investigates with verve and compassion societal strictures and how very difficult it is to understand each other and to be truly free.\
Tracy K Smith
RaveBooklist\"Poetry requires acts of exquisite selection and distillation that Smith, poet laureate of the United States, performs with virtuosity and passion throughout her profoundly affecting fourth collection ... The sacred and the malevolent are astutely juxtaposed in this beautifully formed, deeply delving, and caring volume.\
Sue Halpern
PositiveBooklistHalpern (A Dog Walks into a Nursing Home, 2013), a master of precise, warmhearted creative nonfiction and a discerning and sensitive novelist, infuses this tale of derailments and second chances with free-ranging empathy, lithe humor, and penetrating insights into the human psyche ... The adversity-defined perspectives and piquant senses of humor possessed by Halpern’s irresistible characters shape this inclusively appealing novel’s searingly candid yet ultimately benevolent worldview. Finely choreographed and lucidly told, Halpern’s uplifting tale peers into suffering both random and inflicted with malice, then works its way with wisdom and charm to an unfazed celebration of supportive communities—epicenters of kindness and teasing, skepticism and respect, nosiness and generosity, backed by a low-key affirmation of just how essential public libraries—oases, bedrocks, incubators, launching pads—are to our lives, our democracy, and our future.
Michelle Dean
RaveBooklist\"With the word ferocity appearing with satisfying frequency, Dean presents shrewd, discerning, fresh, and crisply composed interpretations of the temperaments, experiences, and sophisticated trailblazing works of these gutsy and transformative thinkers.\
Kate Braverman
RaveBooklistBraverman daringly, ravishingly, and resoundingly dramatizes the profound consequences of delusions, lies, ignorance, anger, cruelty, poverty, disappointment, conformity, inebriation, and violence with high imagination, sensual precision, cutting humor, and bracing insight.
A.G. Lombardo
PositiveBooklistDespite some forced notes, Lombardo has created an exuberantly cartoonish, incisive, and suspenseful tale of an erupting city and an earnest 'street scholar' intent on making us 'see the writing on the walls.'
Richard Powers
RaveBooklistA virtuoso at parallel narratives, concurrent micro and macro perspectives, and the meshing of feelings, facts, and ideas, Powers draws on his signature fascination with the consequences, intended and otherwise, of science and technology as he considers the paradox of our ongoing assaults against nature in spite of all the evidence indicating impending disasters ... Powers’ sylvan tour de force is alive with gorgeous descriptions; continually surprising, often heartbreaking characters; complex suspense; unflinching scrutiny of pain; celebration of creativity and connection; and informed and expressive awe over the planet’s life force and its countless and miraculous manifestations. Powers elevates ecofiction ... The Overstory and its brethren seed awareness and hope.
Tatyana Tolstaya, Trans. by Anya Migdal
RaveBooklistPraised by Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky (1940–96) as \'the most original, tactile, luminous voice in Russian prose,\' Tolstaya, two decades on, is all that and more in this edgy, brash, slyly surreal, and mordantly funny short story collection, which begins with the sudden awakening of a woman’s literary imagination, an inherited gift ... Tolstaya’s daring, masterful stories, crisply translated, glint and whirl with extraordinary dimension and force.
Lynne Tillman
RaveBooklist\"Incantatory, maddening, brilliant, zestful, compassionate, and timely, Tillman’s portrait of a floundering academic trying to make sense of a digitized world of churning, contradictory messages reveals the perpetual interplay between past and present, the personal and the cultural, image and life.\
Leslie Jamison
RaveBooklist\"Within this relentless work of self-scrutiny, Jamison also conducts a meticulously researched, richly nuanced, and sensitive inquiry into the lives of now-legendary alcoholic writers ... Jamison’s questing immersion in intoxication and sobriety is exceptional in its vivid, courageous, hypnotic telling; brilliant in its subtlety of perception, interpretation, and compassion; and capacious in its scholarship, scale, concern, and mission.\
David Cay Johnston
RaveBooklistJohnston’s well-sourced and knowledgeable account chronicles exactly how cabinet secretaries and their staffs are dismantling protection of everything from worker safety to fair banking policies, veteran’s benefits, and affordable education, while purging diplomats and scientists, especially those studying climate change ... This precise and fiery indictment of an unstable, unethical president concludes with a call for us to defend our democracy, a system of 'compromise, cooperation, and caring.'
Jesse Ball
RaveBooklistHis latest mysterious, mesmerizing, and insightful fairy tale is an imaginative and tender tribute to his late brother, who had Down syndrome ... Each strange, touch-and-go encounter on their poignant and demanding journey reveals the contrariness of human nature, especially as people respond to the unusual boy. Ball’s mind-bending, gorgeously well told, and profoundly moving fable celebrates a father’s love for his son, whose quintessence is to inspire people to be their better selves.
Jason Matthews
RaveBooklistMatthews spins a mighty operational web replete with exacting tradecraft and horrific violence. His descriptive precision is breathtaking; the sparring between his vividly realized characters is devilishly clever. With nail-biting suspense, scorching eroticism, dark wit, lashing contempt for politicians dismissive of intelligence work, and fury over Russia’s disinformation campaigns, this is a riveting and knowing dramatization of today’s clandestine geopolitical conflicts.
Amy Bloom
RaveBooklist\"Via Hick’s crisp delivery and fluency in telling detail, Bloom uncloaks the insidious treacheries girls and women face, poor and privileged alike ... novel of extraordinary magnetism and insight; this keen celebration of love, loyalty, and sacrifice.\
Xhenet Aliu
RaveBooklistRage and hilarity form a dynamic symbiosis in Aliu’s debut novel ... Aliu is spectacularly funny and deeply insightful. With all-the-way-live characters, vigorous observations, combative dialogue, bravado metaphors, and ninja parsing of social class, immigrant struggles, bad behavior, and stubborn hope, Aliu has created a boldly witty and astute inquiry into the nature-versus-nurture debate, the inheritance of pain, and the dream of transcendence.
Paul Goldberg
PositiveBooklist\"Goldberg follows his delirious Stalin-era satire, The Yid (2016), with an qually caustic send-up of today\'s brand of authoritarianism ...With allusions to Gogol...impishly comedic Goldberg?peer to Tom Wolfe, Leslie Epstein, and Stanley Elkin?cannily burlesques the toxicity of human folly uynder Trump and Putin.\
Maggie O'Farrell
RaveBooklistO’Farrell’s intrepidness and determination are awe-inspiring, her experiences overwhelming, and her writing impeccable. This is a memoiristic tour de force.
Martin Amis
RaveBooklist\"...[a] vital, heady, landmark compendium. Amis writes with buoyant and cutting authority. His vocabulary, cross-pollinated by his trans-Atlantic reading and life, is pinpoint and peppery; his syntax supple and ensnaring. The pleasure Amis takes in observation, cogitation, and composition is palpable, and he is acidly funny. His literary analysis...is commanding and enlightening, while he brings his novelist’s sensibility to politics, especially in his unnervingly prescient assessment of Trump’s wobbly mental health during the 2016 campaign. In considering Vegas, tennis, Jane Austen films, and personal milestones, Amis writes with agility, spirit, artistry, and a shrewd sense of the deepest implications.\
Dave Eggers
RaveBooklistReaders will never take coffee for granted or overlook the struggles of Yemen after ingesting Egger’s phenomenally well-written, juggernaut of a tale of an intrepid and irresistible entrepreneur on a complex and meaningful mission. This highly caffeinated adventure story is ready-made for the big screen.
Jamie Quatro
RaveBooklist\"A stunning first novel about faith and yearning in the crucible of a strained marriage and a brief affair ...The lyric cadence of Quatro’s writing gets into one’s veins as she stealthily transforms the most common of plotlines into a scorching analysis of the ‘agony of temptation,’ prayer, the relationship between Eros and the divine, and a ‘renewed sense of holiness.’ Maggie longs for a ‘return to a viable literature of faith.’ Quatro infuses that tradition with fresh, molten energy.”
Chloe Benjamin
RaveBooklist...[a] bewitching and provocative novel ... Aligned in her artistic command, imagination, and deep curiosity about the human condition with Nicole Krauss, Dara Horn, and Stacey D’Erasmo, Benjamin asks what we want out of life. Duration? Success? Meaning? Who do we live for? Do our genes determine our path? How does trauma alter us? Benjamin has created mesmerizing characters and richly suspenseful predicaments in this profound and glimmering novel of death’s ever-shocking inevitability and life’s wondrously persistent whirl of chance and destiny.
T.C. Boyle
RaveBooklistA master of emotional precision and breakneck plots, Boyle also has a gift for light-touch speculative fiction, conjuring an eerie, genetically modified suburb in the hilariously caustic 'Are We Not Men?' In the title story, a divorced father fails his teenage daughter by becoming addicted to a device that turns obsessing over one’s past into a diabolical malady ... all are portrayed with empathic imagination, acid social critique, and commanding artistry. Boyle’s substantial collection is funny, disarming, and crushing, haunting and beautiful.
Sam Shepard
RaveBooklistA meshing of memoir and invention, it snares with virtuoso precision both nature’s constant vibrancy and the stop-action of illness. Told in short takes pulsing with life and rueful wit ... Gradually the spy and the man on the porch merge, and the resilient yet reconciled narrator celebrates family love beneath a full moon in the farewell beauty of twilight. A gorgeously courageous and sagacious coda to Shepard’s innovative and soulful body of work.
Daniel Ellsberg
RaveBookPage...[a] gripping and unnerving book ... Entwining affecting personal revelations with jolting governmental disclosures, declaring that Stanley Kubrick’s infamous nuclear-weapons satire, Dr. Strangelove (1964), 'was, essentially, a documentary,' and citing our tense standoff with North Korea, Ellsberg concludes his dramatic elucidation of how the nuclear arsenal endangers all of life on Earth with steps for dismantling this Doomsday Machine. A must-read of the highest order, Ellsberg’s profoundly awakening chronicle is essential to our future.
Nancy Pearl
RaveBooklistIn classic rom-com style, Pearl’s titular protagonists collide at an Ann Arbor, Michigan, bowling alley, where stoned and brokenhearted college student Lizzie manages to irredeemably sabotage dental-school freshman George’s dream date and near-perfect game. The novel spins back to reveal this fated couple’s diametrically different childhoods … Through knotty predicaments both sorrowful and hilarious, Pearl dramatizes a complicated and deeply illuminating union of opposites and conducts profound inquiries into the self, family, empathy, and love. The result is a charming, edgy, and many-faceted novel of penetrating humor and resonant insight.
Louise Erdrich
RaveBooklistIn this feverish cautionary tale, Erdrich enters the realm of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale (1985), Emily Schultz’s The Blondes (2015), Edan Lepucki’s California (2014), Laura van den Berg’s Find Me (2015), and Claire Vaye Watkins’ Gold, Fame, Citrus (2015), infusing her masterful, full-tilt dystopian novel with stinging insights into the endless repercussions of the Native American genocide, hijacked spirituality, and the ongoing war against women’s rights. A tornadic, suspenseful, profoundly provoking novel of life’s vulnerability and insistence.
Anne Fadiman
RaveBooklistIn this crisp, scintillating, amusing, and affecting memoir, Anne incisively and lovingly portrays her brilliantand vital father and brings into fresh focus the dynamic world of twentieth-century books and America’s discovery of wine.
Isabel Allende
RaveBooklistAllende, as effervescent in her compassion, social concerns, and profound joy in storytelling as ever, brings both humor and intensity to this madcap, soulful, and transporting tale of three survivors who share their traumatic pasts while embarking on a lunatic mission of mercy ... Allende has a rare and precious gift for simultaneously challenging and entrancing readers by dramatizing with startling intimacy such dire situations as the desperation behind illegal immigration and domestic violence, then reveling, a page later, in spiritual visions or mischievous sexiness or heroic levity.
Jed Perl
RaveBooklistThe first in a foundational two-book inquiry into the unusually sunny life and exuberantly radical work of sculptor Alexander Calder … Graced with 400 photographs, Perl’s dynamic and illuminating biography, as buoyant and evocative as Calder’s sculptures, concludes with the ebullient and cosmic artist poised for ever more creative adventures and renown.
Pamela Bannos
RaveBooklist...[an] assiduously researched and riveting biography ... Bannos tacks between fully chronicling Maier’s fiercely independent and creatively intrepid life and thoroughly investigating the sale of her photographs and the questions raised about who has the right to profit from them ... aking measure of the barriers women face, Bannos portrays Maier as nothing less than a consummate, prolific, world-traveling, uncompromising, and fearless artist.
Cristina Garcia
RaveBooklistTogether their tales form a jarring and haunting choral work of remembrance and pragmatism, pride and regret ... Garcia, a transcendentally imaginative, piquantly satiric, and profoundly compassionate novelist, dramatizes the helter-skelter of lives ruptured by tyranny, war, and political upheavals with sharp awareness of unlikely multicultural alliances ... With echoes of W. G. Sebald and Günter Grass, Garcia has created an intricate, sensitive, and provocative montage revolving around the question: 'Do people remember only what they can endure, or distort memories until they can endure them?'
Cristina De Stefano, Trans. by Marina Harss
RaveBooklistIn this meticulous, perceptive, and dramatic portrait, De Stefano reveals the full intensity and sensitivity of a trailblazing warrior writer.
Amy Tan
RaveBooklistIn her ambushing and revealing memoir, beloved novelist Tan chronicles with striking candor, sharp wit, and storytelling magic stranger-than-fiction traumas ... In this year of intense literary memoirs, including Sherman Alexie’s You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me and Richard Ford’s Between Them, Tan’s is electric with her forensic curiosity and extraordinary ability to extract from suffering startling insights into the mind-body connection, inheritance, memory, and creativity. A profound work of endless fascination, discovery, and compassion.
James Atlas
RaveBooklistAtlas relays all with wry hilarity, bighearted candor, and effervescent passion for the art of literary biography, from the toils and thrills of research to the lonely struggles of distillation, interpretation, and composition ... Atlas’ expert, provocative, and enlightening 'biographer’s tale' is a work of both depth and radiance.
Patti Smith
PositiveBooklistSmith, a contemplative writer of gratitude and reverence who names her muses in poems, memoirs, and songs, deepens her inquiry into the nature of inspiration in this slender, trenchant volume ... Gracefully improvisational, as always, Smith offers an unusually poetic, mystical, and transfixing perspective on the mystery of literary creation.
Jennifer Egan
RaveBooklistLike Dennis Lehane, Egan has combined insightful historical fiction with emotionally rich crime fiction to create a riveting and provocative investigation into the human condition. For all her keen attunement to social metamorphosis, what is most engrossing is Egan’s charting of the psychological eddies and storms that shape her irresistibly stubborn, risk-seeking characters ... Ultimately, Egan’s propulsive, surprising, ravishing, and revelatory saga, a covertly profound page-turner that will transport and transform every reader, casts us all as divers in the deep, searching for answers, hope, and ascension.
Geoffrey C. Ward and Ken Burns
RaveBooklistWith the combined impact of robustly detailed writing and more than 500 staggering photographs, Ward and Burns thoroughly chronicle horrific combat and relentless bombing missions, the mass deployment of napalm and Agent Orange, the suffering and death of civilians, the resiliency of North Vietnamese forces, and the powerful antiwar movement. The eye-opening stories of key public figures, from Ho Chi Minh and Ngo Dinh Diem to Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon, are matched by those of 'ordinary' people, including American and South and North Vietnamese soldiers and their families; an American doctor POW; a woman field nurse; a young, long-separated North Vietnamese couple; antiwar activists, including war veterans; and Vietnamese refugees. With reflections by prominent journalists and writers, including Philip Caputo and Viet Thanh Nguyen, this is a vivid, affecting, definitive, and essential illustrated history.
Alice McDermott
RaveBooklistIn this enveloping, emotionally intricate, suspenseful drama, McDermott lures readers into her latest meticulously rendered Irish American enclave, returning to early twentieth-century Brooklyn ... Like Alice Munro, McDermott is profoundly observant and mischievously witty, a sensitive and consummate illuminator of the realization of the self, the ravages of illness and loss, and the radiance of generosity. As she considers the struggles of women, faith and inheritance, sacrifice and passion, she pays vivid tribute to the skilled and sustaining sisters, a fading social force. McDermott’s extraordinary precision, compassion, and artistry are entrancing and sublime.
Joanna Scott
RaveBooklist...what begins as a clever and larky tale, all shimmers and sparks, then evolves into a suspenseful drama of profound dimensions. MacArthur Fellow Scott, a novelist of wit and daring, creates fresh and compelling characters and nimbly spans decades as she delves into the struggles of women in a blatantly sexist world ... Scott’s dynamic and provocative novel offers arresting insights into moral dilemmas at the intersection of the personal and the societal.
Diane Ackerman
RaveThe Los Angeles TimesCool-headed, with nerves of steel, Jan undertakes missions as suspenseful as the plot of any top-notch thriller. Antonina, exhibiting equal grace under pressure, and even more vulnerable after the birth of their daughter, survives more than her share of terrifying encounters with Nazis … It is no stretch to say that this is the book Ackerman was meant to write...Every rapturous hour she has spent communing with plants and animals, every insight gleaned into human nature, every moment under the spell of language is a steppingstone that led her to Poland, the home of her maternal grandparents, and to the incomparable heroes Jan and Antonina Zabinski. The result of her tenacious research, keen interpretation and her own ‘transmigration of sensibility’ is a shining book beyond category.
John McPhee
RaveBooklistEight crisply instructive and drolly self-deprecating essays [are] gathered here in this exceptionally entertaining and illuminating book . . . [Draft No. 4] is expert, charming, and invigorating.
Nicole Krauss
PositiveBooklistAs both seekers end up alone in the desert, Epstein in ecstasy, Nicole in wonder-struck peril, Krauss reflects with singing emotion and sagacity on Jewish history; war; the ancient, plundered forests of the Middle East; and the paradoxes of being. A resounding look at the enigmas of the self and the persistence of the past.
Adam Gopnik
RaveBooklistBy virtue of his exceptional observational and analytical powers, acute emotional and moral exactitude, and charmingly rueful sense of humor, he turns in a riveting and incandescent chronicle of personal evolution vividly set within the ever-morphing, cocaine-stoked crucible of ferocious ambition that was 1980s Manhattan. He tells tales of the forging of a marriage; of nightmarish apartment battles with verminous hordes; of fortuitous jobs at museums, men’s fashion magazines, and a book publisher; and of bonds developed with critic Robert Hughes, artist Jeff Koons, and, most profoundly, photographer Richard Avedon. Arabesque, captivating, self-deprecating, and affecting, Gopnik’s cultural and intimate reflections, in league with those of Alfred Kazin and Joan Didion, are rich in surprising moments and delving perceptions into chance, creativity, character, style, conviction, hard work, and love.
Donna M. Lucey
RaveBooklist...Lucey vividly reveals the hidden truths of their tumultuous lives, while also succinctly telling the artist’s own intriguing story ... Lucey’s portrait of 'mercurial' and 'brazen' Isabella Stewart Gardner, the best known of the quartet, is as fresh and revelatory as Sargent’s scandalous painting as she recounts Gardner’s zeal for art collecting and her unique home museum. Lucey’s superlative group portrait, rendered in crystal-clear prose, is spring-fed by her immersion in vast archives of letters and diaries, her pilgrimages to the extraordinary places that shaped her subjects’ lives, and her keen insights into what drove these women to break out of their gilded cages.
Salman Rushdie
RaveBooklistRushdie’s galvanizing epic of the fall of civilizations attacked from within is spiked with references to ancient Greece and Rome, the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, and a litany of recent American mass and police shootings and other horrific crimes. It is also electric with literary echoes from Homer, Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, and Fitzgerald, and vivid with cinematic tributes to Buñuel, Bergman, and Hitchcock. This contextual amplitude is matched by narrative complexity as René experiments with different approaches to a story that is forever intensifying ... There is a scorching immediacy and provocation to Rushdie’s commanding tragedy of the self-destruction of a family of ill-gotten wealth and sinister power, of ambition and revenge, and the rise of a mad, vulgar, avaricious demigod hawking 'radical untruth' and seeding chaos. The Golden House is a headlines-stoked novel-on-fire sure to incite discussion. But it is also a ravishingly well-told, deeply knowledgeable, magnificently insightful, and righteously outraged epic that poses timeless questions about the human condition. Can a person be both good and evil? Is family destiny? Does the past always catch up to us? In a time of polarizing extremes, can we find common ground? Will despots and their supporters be forever with us? Will humankind ever learn? Can story and art enlighten us? As Rushdie’s blazing tale surges toward its crescendo, life, as it always has, rises stubbornly from the ashes, as does love.
Claire Messud
RaveBooklistAfter the fierce complexity of The Woman Upstairs, Messud presents a more concentrated, no less emotionally intense novel about an adhesively close friendship ... Messud’s entrancing, gorgeously incisive coming-of-age drama astutely tracks the sharpening perceptions of an exceptionally eloquent young woman navigating heartbreak and regret and realizing that one can never fathom 'the wild, unknowable interior lives' of others, not even someone you love ... [her] exquisitely realized young characters and their tough initiations into adolescence are captivating and profound.
Laura Shapiro
RaveBooklist...six crisply written, ardently researched, and entertainingly revelatory portraits of very different women with complicated relationships with eating and cooking ... A bounteous and elegant feast for hungry minds.
Curtis Dawkins
RaveBooklist...[a] staggering debut collection ... Each tale of incarceration expands this theater of grim comedy, repercussive tragedy, and warped adaptation ... In stories that range from high-definition realism to wistful surrealism, Dawkins illuminates the nuances of prison life from the fragility of inmate friendships to the constant assault of memories and regrets, sensual deprivation, the intricate web of lies and power plays, and the many shades of stoicism. Sorrowful, hard-hitting, and compassionate, these finely formed, quietly devastating stories are told with unusual and magnetizing authority.
Ann Beattie
RaveBooklistThese gorgeously complicated, psychologically astute tales are catalyzed by holiday gatherings, weddings, birthday celebrations, and reunions, joyous occasions wildly derailed by divorce, sibling rivalry, generational clashes, financial disasters, violence, and medical emergencies. The directions in which these encounters veer are beyond unexpected, thanks to Beattie’s puckish imagination ... Beattie’s profoundly intriguing and unsettling stories abound in delectably witty and furious inner monologues, barbed dialogue, ludicrous predicaments, many-faceted heartaches, and abrupt upwellings of affection, even love.
Maile Meloy
RaveBooklistInfusing literary fiction with criminality and terror in a mode similar to that of Ann Patchett and Hannah Tinti, Meloy compounds the suspense in this gripping and incisive tale by orchestrating a profoundly wrenching shift in perspective, and morality, as well-meaning tourists face the dark realities of a complex place they viewed merely as a playground. Meloy’s commanding, heart-revving, and thought-provoking novel has enormous power and appeal.
Sherman Alexie
RaveBooklist...a profoundly candid union of prose and poetry catalyzed by the recent death of his Spokane Indian mother, Lillian, one of the last to speak their tribal language, a legendary quilter, and a fighter to the end. Alexie’s deeply delving remembrance expresses a snarl of conflicting emotions, ranging from anger to awe, and reveals many tragic dangers and traumas of reservation life, from the uranium dust generated by nearby mines, which caused Lillian’s lung cancer, to the malignant legacy of genocide: identity crises, poverty, alcoholism, and violence, especially rape, in which the 'epically wounded . . . turned their rage' on each other. Alexie chronicles his own suffering as a boy born hydrocephalic and an adult diagnosed as bipolar, and tracks his flight from the rez and his life as a writer, pouring himself into every molten word. Courageous, anguished, grateful, and hilarious, this is an enlightening and resounding eulogy and self-portrait.
Courtney Maum
RaveBooklist...a work of zealous social critique laced with sexy romantic comedy and a just-in-the-nick-of-time family reconciliation ... With a weirdly nurturing driverless car, a family emergency, a sexy art director, and wrenching and hilarious confrontations and meltdowns, Maum’s incisive, charming, and funny novel ebulliently champions the healing powers of touch, the living world, and love in all its crazy risks, surprises, and sustaining radiance.
Gail Godwin
RaveBooklistWith intriguingly eccentric supporting characters and a dramatic setting, Godwin’s riveting and wise story of the slow coalescence of trust and love between a stoic artist and a grieving boy, and of nature’s glory and indifference, subtly and insightfully explores different forms of haunting and vulnerability, strength and survival ... [a] tender and spellbinding supernatural novel.
Ed. by Ayelet Waldman and Michael Chabon
RaveBooklistTheir dramatic testimonies are radiant with telling details, vital portraits, and explosive facts. Geraldine Brooks tells the crushing story of two young Palestinian cousins. Dave Eggers meets courageous artists in Gaza, a dehumanizing 'open-air prison.' Assaf Gavron tells harrowing tales of Palestinian soccer players; Porochista Khakpour meets rappers. The soul-crushing bureaucracy of the occupation is exposed in Raja Shehadeh’s narrative about a Palestinian taxi driver and in Chabon’s tale of a businessman. This sensitive, galvanizing, and landmark gathering brings the occupation into sharp focus as a tragedy of fear and tyranny, a monumental failure of compassion and justice, a horrific obstacle to world peace.
David Sedaris
RaveBooklist\"...a mesmerizing volume of deftly edited passages ... Sedaris is caustically witty about his bad habits and artistic floundering. Even when he cleans up his act, falls in love, and achieves raving success, Sedaris remains self-deprecating and focused on the bizarre and the disquieting. A candid, socially incisive, and sharply amusing chronicle of the evolution of an arresting comedic artist.\
Téa Obreht
RaveBooklist\"Not even Obreht’s place on the New Yorker’s current \'20 under 40\' list of exceptional writers will prepare readers for the transporting richness and surprise of this gripping novel of legends and loss in a broken land ... Every word, every scene, every thought is blazingly alive in this many-faceted, spellbinding, and rending novel of death, succor, and remembrance.\
Amelia Gray
RaveBooklistHistorical novels about artists abound, but few attain the psychological intricacy, fluency of imagination, lacerating wit, or intoxicating beauty of Gray’s tale of Isadora Duncan ... As Isadora plunges into near madness, then slowly reclaims her artistic powers, Gray, performing her own extraordinary artistic leap, explores the nexus between body and mind, loss and creativity, love and ambition, and birth and death. The spellbinding result is a mythic, fiercely insightful, mordantly funny, and profoundly revelatory portrait of an intrepid and indelible artist.
Richard Ford
RaveBooklist...an exquisitely sensitive double portrait of his parents ... Illustrated with family photographs, Ford’s remembrance of his parents is a masterful distillation of sensuous description, psychological intricacy, social insights, and a keen sense of place. Ford’s reflections are bright with wit, edgy with candor, and lustrous with extraordinary poignancy and love.
David McCullough
RaveBooklistIn these clarifying and uplifting presentations, rich in historical anecdotes and portraits, he speaks of freedom and responsibility and 'courage and patience.' At an Independence Day naturalization ceremony at Monticello, he told 'new Americans' that 'the nation is richer for you.' McCullough reminds us, 'If we are beset by problems, we have always been beset by problems.' And we have always drawn on our American spirit and convictions to find our way forward.
Howard Norman
RaveBooklistNorman puts a sweetly comic spin on his signature themes to create a delectably clever tribute to cozy crime fiction ... With a masterfully constructed plot, brilliantly realized characters, and deliciously witty repartee, Norman offers a soulful variation on Nick and Nora Charles from Dashiell Hammett’s The Thin Man, while also addressing the tragic legacies of war, paying homage to books and libraries, and celebrating love. An emotionally vibrant, keenly funny, genuinely suspenseful, and altogether spellbinding novel that will thrill Norman’s fans and readers who relish creative improvisations on the grand noir tradition.
Lesley Nneka Arimah
RaveBooklist...a slender yet mighty short story collection that delivers one head-snapping smack after another ... Like Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, she writes with subtlety and poignancy about the struggles of love and hope between daughters and mothers and fathers, including relationships complicated by the legacy of the Biafran War, class divides, and transatlantic separations ... Arimah’s stories of loss, grief, shame, fury, and love are stingingly fresh and complexly affecting.
Jerome Charyn
RaveBooklistAs Charyn, deeply versed in Kosinski’s worlds, reaches back to young Jerzy’s mastering of the art of lying to survive the war, he ultimately portrays a traumatized, desperately masquerading artist 'caught between languages,' identities, and cultures, and between renown and scandal. Daringly imaginative and profoundly insightful.
Omar El Akkad
RaveBooklist...[a] vigorously well-informed, daringly provocative speculative first novel ... El Akkad has created a brilliantly well-crafted, profoundly shattering saga of one family’s suffering in a world of brutal power struggles, terrorism, ignorance, and vengeance. American War is a gripping, unsparing, and essential novel for dangerously contentious times.
Hannah Tinti
RaveBooklistWith life-or-death struggles in dramatic settings, including a calving glacier, and starring a fiercely loving, reluctant criminal and a girl of grit and wonder, Tinti has forged a breathtaking novel of violence and tenderness.