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May 21, 2025

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we feature two standout debut memoirs. This Is Your Mother by Erika J. Simpson paints a picture of the author's late mother Sallie Carol, whose larger-than-life presence is rendered in a playful and multifaceted narrative. The True Happiness Company tells Veena Dinavahi's story of being swept into a self-help cult as a teenager, when she suffered from persistent depression and the group seemed to promise a brighter future.

Candace Fleming's Death in themore

May 07, 2025

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we cover fiction featuring various ages and stages of life. Ocean Vuong's The Emperor of Gladness, set in a Connecticut town of colorful characters, focuses on the unlikely bond between a 19-year-old boy from a Vietnamese immigrant family and an 82-year-old Lithuanian refugee, while Old School Indian by Aaron John Curtis drops the reader into the mind of a middle-aged Mohawk man who returns to the reservation of his childhood to deal with a life-threateningmore

April 23, 2025

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we bring you a fresh batch of historical fiction of many flavors, ranging from the weird and wonderful to the delectably detailed to the story drawn from tantalizingly little-known facts. And don't worry, we have some top-notch contemporary novels coming your way, too.

Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu's The Creation of Half-Broken People, published as a paperback original, tells a strange tale of colonialism in Zimbabwe through historical women who appear to an unnamedmore

April 09, 2025

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we review Binnie Kirshenbaum's Counting Backwards, a novel that puts a perceptive, witty spin on the difficult topic of dealing with illness in a marriage.

Author Katie Kitamura brings us her trademark suspense in Audition, another story about roles and relationships, here seen through the lens of performance. We include an accompanying Beyond the Book reading list of fiction featuring actors. The Usual Desire to Kill by Camilla Barnes also employs theatre-more

March 26, 2025

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we bring you two highly anticipated novels that allude to stealing in their titles. Allison Epstein's Fagin the Thief follows the infamous Fagin from Dickens' Oliver Twist, who teaches pickpocketing to young boys. Theft, the latest from Nobel laureate Abdulrazak Gurnah, trails three people whose paths cross in early 2000s Tanzania, one of whom is falsely accused of stealing from his employers.

We also cover several works of fiction about women and girls onmore

March 12, 2025

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we feature Karen Russell's The Antidote, a sprawling and fantastical Dust Bowl epic that explores cultural memory and forgetfulness.

Book clubs and readers may find Michelle de Kretser's Theory & Practice pairs fruitfully with Jessica Zhan Mei Yu's But the Girl, which we covered back in November. De Kretser's novel details a Sri Lankan-born Australian woman's struggles to resolve her feelings about Virginia Woolf's racism as she writes her graduate thesismore

February 26, 2025

Dear BookBrowsers,

In this issue, we review two works of nonfiction written by novelists that address ongoing wars of occupation. Omar El Akkad's One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This critiques the response of Western liberals, among others, to Israel's bombardment of Gaza, while Victoria Amelina's posthumous Looking at Women Looking at War is an on-the-ground account of life in Ukraine, with a focus on women resisting Russian invasion. Accompanying Beyond the Book articlesmore

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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.