Starred Review

Aflame: Learning from Silence

by Pico Iyer

Pico Iyer's illustrious writing career has taken him around the world many times, but one of his favorite places appears to be a tiny monastery high above the Pacific Ocean. Aflame: Learning from Silence is a love letter to a place to which Iyer has returned over and over for more than 30 years, seeking solace and renewal in the consolations of solitude.

The location that has played such a central role in Iyer's spiritual and emotional life is the New Camaldoli Hermitage, established in 1958 in California's

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Cold Kitchen: A Year of Culinary Travels

by Caroline Eden

Caroline Eden's fourth book, the sumptuous Cold Kitchen, harvests memories and recipes from her travels in Central Asia and Eastern Europe. The dozen chapters--three per season--cover an archetypal year.

Eden (Red Sands) cooks and reminisces from the basement kitchen of her Edinburgh apartment. When wanderlust strikes, she revisits favorite places via their cuisines. In Proustian fashion, smells and tastes evoke other times and places. As she prepares a watermelon, feta, and mint salad, she remembers asking

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Hospital Heroes Save the Day!

by R.W. Alley

Famously, when Fred Rogers was a kid confronted with upsetting scenes in the news, his mother told him to look for the helpers. In that spirit, R.W. Alley presents his Breezy Valley at Work picture-book series, which showcases anthropomorphized animals giving their all to their communities. Following the launch title, Firefighters to the Rescue!, comes the winsomely demystifying Hospital Heroes Save the Day!

Breezy Valley Hospital is a hive of activity. Readers meet the hospital workers: "Greeter Owl makes

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Make a Pretty Sound: A Story of Ella Jenkins--The First Lady of Children's Music

by Traci N. Todd, illus. by Eleanor Davis

In the radiant Make a Pretty Sound, author Traci N. Todd (Nina) and illustrator Eleanor Davis (Flop to the Top) reverently capture the legacy of singer/songwriter Ella Jenkins, who revolutionized children's music. Todd frames the story by beginning with Ella's childhood in Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood and closes with an elderly Ella, who traveled "farther than she has ever been" to perform onstage for children in Indonesia.

Todd and Davis explore the influences that shaped young Ella into the renowned

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Andromeda

by Therese Bohman, trans. by Marlaine Delargy

A pair of bibliophiles discover common ground in unexpected areas in Andromeda, a sharp, observant novel by Therese Bohman (Eventide), translated from the Swedish by Marlaine Delargy. In 2009, university student Sofie Andersson lands an internship at Rydéns, a Stockholm publishing house that "looks like a ship moored in the city center." Sofie's only previous job experience may have been as a maid, but she shows poise when she tells editor-in-chief Gunnar Abrahamsson, a man close to retirement age and

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We Are the Beasts

by Gigi Griffis

A wild thing of a girl furiously protects her own against men worse than monsters in this savagely feminist YA horror tale inspired by mysterious attacks in France's history.

Sixteen-year-old Joséphine, a shepherdess in 1765 Gévaudan, lives in a village terrorized by a brutal beast. Many think it's a deadly animal, others a devil, and a dangerous few claim it's a witch. A mob of men murdered someone suspected guilty, yet the attacks continue. Joséphine, however, is more concerned with

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Y2K: How the 2000s Became Everything (Essays on the Future that Never Was)

by Colette Shade

Y2K, Colette Shade's debut collection of 10 perceptive essays, contrasts the promises and pitfalls of what she calls "the Y2K era," 1997-2008.

Shade, an adolescent at the turn of the millennium, recalls the thrill of early Internet use and celebrity culture. Her dot-com entrepreneur uncle invested $100,000 toward her college education and retired at 45. It seemed life could only get better, but this was a "dream state," Shade writes: "We dreamt we were ascending into the future" and "everyone could get rich

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Welcome

Shelf Awareness is a free e-newsletter about books and the book industry. We have two separate versions:

For Readers: Every Friday, discover the 25 best books published that week as selected by our industry insiders. Sign up now.

For Book Trade Professionals: Receive daily enlightenment with our FREE weekday trade newsletter. Sign up now.

Learn more about Shelf Awareness.

Shelf Discovery

You Dreamed of Empires

by Álvaro Enrigue, trans. by Natasha Wimmer

This riveting, playfully menacing novel reimagines the talks between Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés and Mexico's Moctezuma that led to Spain's conquest of the Aztec Empire.

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Schooled in Murder

by Victoria Gilbert

In this sharp, suspenseful cozy mystery, the director of a university writing center who writes mystery novels under a pen name solves the murder of an elitist colleague.

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The Longest Autumn

by Amy Avery

When the human world is plunged into endless autumn in this atmospheric fantasy debut, a young woman must unravel a dangerous plot, exonerate herself, and save the god she serves.

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Kubrick: An Odyssey

by Robert P. Kolker, Nathan Abrams

Kubrick is the quintessential biographical resource for cinephiles and the legions of Stanley Kubrick students and fans.

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Inverno

by Cynthia Zarin

Inverno is an entirely oblique construction, looking sideways at grief and trauma and the ways memory can distort the truth even as we try to pin it down.

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For One Night Only

by Jessica James

In this second-chance rock-star romance, two members of a reuniting band try to hide their redeveloping feelings for each other while fake dating for press attention.

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Beautiful Ugly

by Alice Feeney

Alice Feeney's seventh psychological thriller, in which someone taunts a man with reminders of his missing wife a year after her disappearance, has the twist the author is known for.

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Work in Progress

by Kat Mackenzie

A woman looking to escape realizes that what she actually needs is to come back to herself while traveling on a dreamy bus tour of the U.K. that will set Anglophile bookworms' hearts aflutter. 

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Vantage Point

by Sara Sligar

This superbly suspenseful novel features a wealthy but cursed family haunted by eating disorders, an Internet scandal, and bizarre visions that portend a terrifying future.

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Rosarita

by Anita Desai

An Indian woman studying Spanish in Mexico encounters surprising memories about her mother from a stranger in Anita Desai's sublime examination of identity, autonomy, and the legacies of trauma.

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The Last Word

by Elly Griffiths

The cast of Elly Griffiths's The Postscript Murders returns to figure out who killed a romance writer in this transporting cozy mystery with teeth.

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Good Girl

by Aria Aber

Good Girl is an immersive dive into a young woman's coming-of-age in Berlin amid class and social tensions, set in the milieu of rave culture.

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Sourcebooks Landmark: Babylonia by Costanza Casati

Media Heat

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Fresh Air: Pagan Kennedy, author of The Secret History of the Rape Kit: A True Crime Story (Vintage, $19, 9780593314715).

Kelly Clarkson Show: Josh Gad, author of In Gad We Trust: A Tell-Some (Gallery Books, $28.99, 9781668050521).

Sherri Shepherd Show: Trisha Tobias, author of Honeysuckle and Bone (Zando/Sweet July Books, $19.99, 9781638931027).

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Fresh Air: Pico Iyer, author of Aflame: Learning from Silence (Riverhead, $30, 9780593420287).
 
CBS Mornings: Jinger Duggar Vuolo, author of People Pleaser: Breaking Free from the Burden of Imaginary Expectations (Thomas Nelson, $29.99, 9781400341719).

Kelly Clarkson Show: Brooke Shields, author of Brooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old: Thoughts on Aging as a Woman (Flatiron, $29.99, 978125034694).

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

CBS Mornings: Trisha Tobias, author of Honeysuckle and Bone (Zando/Sweet July Books, $19.99, 9781638931027).

Good Morning America: Anne Marie Anderson, author of Cultivating Audacity: Dismantle Doubt and Let Yourself Win (Ideapress Publishing, $32.95, 9781646871698).

Today: Josh Gad, author of In Gad We Trust: A Tell-Some (Gallery Books, $28.99, 9781668050521).

Drew Barrymore Show: Jamie Oliver, author of Simply Jamie: Fast & Simple Food (Flatiron, $39.99, 9781250374004).

Monday, January 13, 2025

CBS Mornings: Graham Norton, author of Frankie: A Novel (HarperVia, $18.99, 9780063436473).

Good Morning America: Ramit Sethi, author of Money for Couples: No More Stress. No More Fights. Just a 10-Step Plan to Create Your Rich Life Together. (Workman, $19.99, 9781523523689).

Today: Keila Shaheen, author of The Book of Shadow Work (Atria/Primero Sueno Press, $28.99, 9781668069943).

The View: Brooke Shields, author of Brooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old: Thoughts on Aging as a Woman (Flatiron, $29.99, 9781250346940).

Late Show with Stephen Colbert: Kwame Alexander, author of How Sweet the Sound (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, $18.99, 9780316442497).

Thursday, January 9, 2025

Today Show: Ina Garten, author of Be Ready When the Luck Happens: A Memoir (Crown, $34, 9780593799895).

The View: James Longman, author of The Inherited Mind: A Story of Family, Hope, and the Genetics of Mental Illness (Hyperion Avenue, $27.99, 9781368099479).
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