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October 16, 2024

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we catch up with the latest in the universe of Elizabeth Strout. Lucy Barton, Olive Kitteridge, Bob Burgess, the town of Crosby, Maine, and some minor characters from previous books all have parts to play in the beautifully orchestrated Tell Me Everything.

Another new contemporary work of fiction by an old hand is Charles Baxter's Blood Test, a delightful satirical take on modern for-profit healthcare in which a mild-mannered Midwestern dad is informed by a genetic test that he will, in all likelihood, kill someone. Meanwhile, Daniel Lavery's debut Women's Hotel is a pitch-perfect ode to the days of women-only residential spaces in New York City. Danielle Trussoni's The Puzzle Box, sequel to The Puzzle Master, flits between past and present as Mike Brink attempts to solve a mystery from Meiji-era Japan.

In nonfiction, Wright Thompson's sobering and resonant The Barn unearths little-known details about Emmett Till's murder, dispels common misperceptions, and contextualizes the incident in the culture and history of Mississippi. Our Beyond the Book article outlines the experiences of Willie Reed, the witness who was driven into hiding after identifying Till's killers.

You can read many other reviews and articles, check out our blog post on Examples of Good Book Reviews, enjoy previews of upcoming books, peruse the latest book news items (including Han Kang's recent Nobel win), and more.

Thank you for being a BookBrowse subscriber!

Davina & Nick
Founder & Publisher

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October 02, 2024

Dear BookBrowsers,

As we move into October and the cooler breeze carries the promise of darker days ahead, we bring you some spine-chilling reading for the scariest month of the year. Olga Tokarczuk's The Empusium, a "health resort horror story," follows a young guest "taking the waters" in a European mountain spa town during the days before World War I, as rumors of unsettling happenings flow. Rivers Solomon's Model Home is a modern haunted house tale about a Black American family who weathers disturbing occurrences while living in a white gated community. Charles Burns' graphic novel Final Cut pays tribute to classic horror films and examines the dangers of idealized unrequited love.

But these books are only part of the veritable cornucopia of fantastic fiction coming out this fall. In this issue, we review the stunning latest from Louise Erdrich, The Mighty Red, in which the personal devastations of a North Dakota community are reflected in the dying surrounding landscape. Richard Powers' multilayered Playground develops plotlines linked to the world's oceans, the board game Go, and other topics. Yuri Herrera's richly rendered Season of the Swamp follows eventual Mexican president Benito Juárez during his exile in 19th century New Orleans. Sally Rooney's vivid Intermezzo, her fourth and longest novel yet, centers two brothers and their strained relationship after the death of their father. Our related article reports on a recent appearance Rooney made in Dublin.

We also bring you our list of 9 New Books to Read This Fall, which includes both recent and upcoming reads, along with additional reviews and articles, a giveaway of Jesmyn Ward's novel Let Us Descend, previews of soon-to-be-released books, and much more.

As always, thank you for subscribing to BookBrowse!

Davina & Nick
Founder & Publisher

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September 18, 2024

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we're excited to bring you three strikingly original titles that just made this year's National Book Award for Fiction longlist. Rachel Kushner's Creation Lake features a secret agent infiltrating a French commune in a one-of-a-kind novel that mixes modern anxieties with classic espionage. Yr Dead, the poignant fiction debut of poet Sam Sax, follows a young person in the reflective moments leading up to a death they've chosen. Tony Tulathimutte's entertaining Rejection presents characters' relationships to the titular concept, whether they're being spurned romantically or having their writerly dreams dashed.

Along with the NBA nominees, other books feature vivid glimpses of and challenges to our contemporary social reality. Cebo Campbell's imaginative debut Sky Full of Elephants is a sweeping speculative story exploring racial politics and their limitations in a world where all white people have walked into the nearest body of water and drowned. Our connected article looks at the modern appeal of historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs). Fans of Greek mythology adaptations can kick off their fall reading with The Palace of Eros by Caro De Robertis, a creative retelling of the story of Eros and Psyche that transcends binary gender. In her inspiring memoir A Well-Trained Wife, Tia Levings recounts escaping an abusive marriage sustained by Christian patriarchy and the Institute in Basic Life Principles ministry, which has entered mainstream awareness through reality TV and the documentary Shiny Happy People.

Meanwhile, Richard Osman, author of the beloved Thursday Murder Club series, is back with We Solve Murders, a fast-paced, wisecracking new thriller about a bodyguard, her father-in-law, and a bestselling author investigating linked crimes as they flee an assassin.

We hope you enjoy these reviews and articles along with new First Impressions books, advice on How Anyone Can Fight Book Bans ahead of Banned Books Week (September 22-28), author interviews, previews of upcoming releases, and much more.

Thanks for subscribing to BookBrowse!

Davina & Nick
Founder & Publisher

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September 04, 2024

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we bring you the latest from Booker finalist Elif Shafak. There Are Rivers in the Sky is an ambitious novel of three linked timelines that ranges from the Tigris to the Thames. We also feature an impressive debut story collection with a strikingly similar title — Ruben Reyes Jr.'s There Is a Rio Grande in Heaven, which puts a supernatural spin on the experiences of Latinx immigrants — along with a connected reading list of more speculative fiction dealing with themes of displacement and migration.

Another book with celestial associations is Ruby Todd's Bright Objects, about a grieving widow in Australia caught up in the strange and powerful events surrounding a newly discovered comet. In an accompanying article, we cover real-life inspirations for Todd's novel: Comet Hale-Bopp and the Heaven's Gate cult.

Garth Greenwell's Small Rain is a quiet, thoughtful story about a poet in Iowa City who reflects on the general and specific during a period of hospitalization. In a more electric exploration of the writing life, Danzy Senna's Colored Television zooms in on a novelist trying to switch to a TV career in sunny Los Angeles.

Readers everywhere will enjoy The Bookshop by Evan Friss, a loving tribute to the bookstores and booksellers that have engaged with the social landscape throughout American history.

Along with many other reviews and articles, you can check out our selection of upcoming September releases, an overview of BookBrowse's Young Adult Award Winners from recent years, our giveaway of Afabwaje Kurian's debut novel of 1970s Nigeria Before the Mango Ripens, and much more.

As always, thank you for supporting BookBrowse as a subscriber!

Davina & Nick
Founder & Publisher

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August 21, 2024

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we review Liars, the fascinating new novel from literary innovator Sarah Manguso, which explores a woman's struggles with her sense of self in a doomed marriage through an intense but often warm and funny narrative. Our accompanying Beyond the Book article looks at Manguso's previous work and the evolution of her unique approach to form over time.

We also feature the latest from recent Hugo Award winner T. Kingfisher: A Sorceress Comes to Call renovates the Grimm fairy tale "The Goose Girl," telling of an evil enchantress and her imprisoned daughter. More domestic drama follows with Pink Slime by Fernanda Trías, awarded the National Uruguayan Literature Prize, a dystopian story unfolding in an unnamed coastal city that despite its apocalyptic setting focuses primarily on one woman, her relationships, and her everyday problems. In Long Island Compromise by Taffy Brodesser-Akner, a family is haunted by the kidnapping of their patriarch years later despite their financial comfort. Mina's Matchbox by Yoko Ogawa is an evocative coming-of-age novel in which a young girl stays with wealthy relatives for a year and is absorbed into their world. Jessica Anthony's The Most, about a couple in mid-century America having marital difficulties, reads like a more woman-centric season of the show Mad Men.

This e-zine contains a hefty helping of nonfiction, too. A Passionate Mind in Relentless Pursuit is Noliwe Rooks' affecting account of the life of civil rights activist and educator Mary McLeod Bethune. In Becoming Earth, Ferris Jabr introduces the biological interconnections that sustain our planet. Theodore H. Schwartz provides an insightful walkthrough of brain surgery with Gray Matters. Carol Mithers investigates how poverty affects pets and their people in Rethinking Rescue.

Enjoy these reviews and articles along with many others, our list of 6 Inspiring Books About the Olympics and Its Athletes to follow the Paris Summer Games, a giveaway of Diane C. McPhail's historical novel Follow the Stars Home, and much more.

Thank you for subscribing to BookBrowse!

Davina & Nick
Founder & Publisher

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July 31, 2024

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we review Dinaw Mengestu's latest novel Someone Like Us, the dark but lyrical story of an unconventional immigrant family living in Chicago and the DC suburbs, and the vast, unspoken isolation borne by a father and son.

This e-zine also features several works of vivid historical fiction that don't just recreate a period but reimagine it. Masquerade by O.O. Sangoyomi conjures a vision of 15th-century West Africa that draws from Yorùbá mythology, following a young blacksmith as she negotiates a new life of power and intrigue among royals. Nicked by M.T. Anderson is a sweet, humorous story about an 11th-century Italian monk caught up in a heist plot that sprinkles in supernatural elements from medieval texts. In Kevin Barry's The Heart in Winter, a pair of lovers flee an Old West mining town in a universe beset with strong premonitions and a hovering sense of fate. And Lev Grossman's The Bright Sword adds to the long tradition of tales of King Arthur, beginning at a time of chaos and turmoil after the famed ruler's death. Related Beyond the Book articles supplement our reviews of these inspired novels with background knowledge, covering the Yorùbá deity Ṣàngó, the Catholic church's history of stolen holy relics, personal ads in the Old West, and the contemporary world of Arthuriana.

Looking for a top-notch summer mystery? With an intricate structure stretched between 1950 and 1975, Liz Moore's The God of the Woods traces a compelling story of missing children in the Adirondacks.

We also bring you a couple of gorgeous new young adult graphic novels: Ondjaki's Our Beautiful Darkness, focusing on two teenagers forming a quiet connection amid civil war in 1990s Angola, and Rosena Fung's Age 16, which follows three generations of family members during their respective adolescences.

You can enjoy these along with many other reviews and articles, a look at how our coverage compares to the recent New York Times Best 100 Books of the 21st Century list, author interviews, news, and more.

Thanks for being a BookBrowse subscriber!

Davina & Nick
Founder & Publisher

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July 17, 2024

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, Kate Quinn's The Briar Club, a mystery centered on a murder at a boardinghouse in 1950s Washington, D.C., brings the McCarthy era to life through a striking cast of complex women. Our accompanying Beyond the Book article covers the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, which inspired the film A League of Their Own.

A different major American city features in Yasmin Zaher's The Coin, the bizarre story of a Palestinian woman pursuing glamour, control, and cleanliness in contemporary New York. Michael Deagler's Early Sobrieties gives readers a vivid summer tour of Philadelphia through the eyes of Dennis Monk, a young man from suburban Bucks County who has finally gotten sober. In Akira Otani's The Night of Baba Yaga, two women with starkly different pasts team up to go on the run from the yakuza in 1970s Tokyo. Hari Kunzru's Blue Ruin alternates between upstate New York during pandemic lockdown and London of the late 20th century while following the life trajectories of a group of artists. The Anthropologists by Aysegül Savas is set in an unnamed city that forms a backdrop for the quiet reflections of narrator and documentary filmmaker Asya. Henry Wise's Holy City refers with its title to Richmond, Virginia, where deputy sheriff Will Seems spent the last ten years, but takes place in the rural Southside region where he is faced with solving a crime intertwined with his own past. Chuck Tingle's Bury Your Gays satirizes modern Hollywood and skewers the use of AI in the entertainment industry.

Another novel commenting on the dangers of AI is Toward Eternity, the debut of Korean-to-English translator Anton Hur, which considers the ties between language and humanity through artificial beings. And for those who long to escape the constraints of the city and technological strife, Olivia Laing's The Garden Against Time is a lush, wild adventure of a book exploring how private and public interests have been bound up in the creation and maintenance of gardens.

Besides these, we bring you many other reviews and articles, a piece on how authors have responded to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, the latest book news, a fresh Wordplay, and much more.

Thank you for subscribing to BookBrowse!

Davina & Nick
Founder & Publisher

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BookBrowse seeks out and recommends the best in contemporary fiction and nonfiction—books that not only engage and entertain but also deepen our understanding of ourselves and the world around us.