Indie Next List for August 2016


The best new books this month chosen by us and other
independent booksellers across the country.

This Month's #1 Indie Next List Pick...

Another Brooklyn

By Jacqueline Woodson

(Amistad 9780062359988, $22.99)

"National Book Award-winning author Jacqueline Woodson has crafted a beautiful, heart-wrenching novel of a young girl's coming-of-age in Brooklyn. Effortlessly weaving poetic prose, Woodson tells the story of the relationships young women form, their yearning to belong, and the bonds that are created--and broken. Brooklyn itself is a vivid character in this tale--a place at first harsh, but one that becomes home and plays a role in each character's future. Woodson is one of the most skilled storytellers of our day, and I continue to love and devour each masterpiece she creates!"
--Nicole Yasinsky, The Booksellers at Laurelwood, Memphis, TN

This Month's #1 Indie Next List Pick Author Interview

photo: Juna F. Nagle

Independent booksellers have selected Jacqueline Woodson's Another Brooklyn (Amistad) as the top Indie Next List pick for the month of August.

Nicole Yasinsky of The Booksellers at Laurelwood in Memphis, Tennessee, described Another Brooklyn as "a beautiful, heart-wrenching novel of a young girl's coming-of-age in Brooklyn" by "one of the most skilled storytellers of our day."

Woodson, who has written more than two dozen books for children and young adults, won the 2014 National Book Award for Young People's Literature, the American Booksellers Association's 2015 E.B. White Read-Aloud Award for Middle Grade Readers, and the 2015 Coretta Scott King Award, among other honors, for her 2014 memoir in verse, Brown Girl Dreaming (Nancy Paulsen Books). In June 2015, she began a two-year term as Young People's Poet Laureate. Another Brooklyn marks Woodson's return to writing for adults, 20 years after the publication of her only previous adult novel, Autobiography of a Family Photo (Dutton).

In Another Brooklyn, Woodson's narrator, the teenage August, is a transplant from Tennessee growing up black and female in 1970s Bushwick, Brooklyn, where she struggles to deal with the grief of losing her mother. As she navigates the perils and the pleasures of girlhood, August is nourished by the company of her three very close girlfriends, sharing secrets and dreaming of the future. As the girls become women, August and her friends each stray from--or are drawn from--their cozy, cohesive unit, and begin to take on their own identities.

 "Effortlessly weaving poetic prose, Woodson tells the story of the relationships young women form, their yearning to belong, and the bonds that are created--and broken," said Yasinsky. "Brooklyn itself is a vivid character in this tale--a place at first harsh, but one that becomes home and plays a role in each character's future."

Woodson explained that, following the widespread acclaim for Brown Girl Dreaming, she decided to return to writing for adults because she has always been interested in pushing herself to explore different projects.

"I started writing Another Brooklyn well before writing Brown Girl Dreaming and then Brown Girl Dreaming won all those awards, so afterward I thought, I can do something else now," she said. "But I know the world of children's literature very well and I will always be a part of it."

Woodson noted that writing an adult novel is significantly different from writing a children's book, both in what it allows her to do in a literary sense and in the sense of subject matter.

"One thing I allowed myself to do in Another Brooklyn is play with [places] and go back and forth in time. I'm allowed to have the protagonist stand outside her life," said Woodson, adding that she could be much more implicit in certain aspects of her writing. And when needed, she could also include sexual content that might be inappropriate for young readers.

"In my writing, I pay very, very close attention to language," Woodson said. "There is a lot of writing and rewriting and reading out loud, and so it also looks a certain way on the page. In Brown Girl Dreaming, I was allowed to play with white space in a different way.

"With this book, I took more chances and really kind of went in knowing that it would be different, more of a 'biography of place.' In writing it, I played with time and memory and really put on the page people who have historically not been represented."

The character of August weaves a narrative peppered with flashbacks, reminiscences, and stream of consciousness passages framed by her experience of running into an old friend on her return home to Brooklyn as an adult. She is visiting her old neighborhood on a temporary break from her travels as an anthropological researcher and death specialist in order to be with her dying father.

At various intervals throughout the book, Woodson uses descriptions of death and death rituals from around the world to illustrate August's lifelong fascination and struggle with the concept.

"I wanted to talk about August finding her place in the world, and I wanted to explore the idea of death," Woodson said. "Our culture is one of the least evolved cultures when it comes to death. So many other people in other cultures have a sense of what mortality means and how it is a part of a circle, and it's not the same way in the American culture. Death rituals around the world fascinate me, and I had this character who was obsessed with death, without even realizing what was going on inside her."

In writing Another Brooklyn, Woodson also sought to talk about the complexities of friendships among women.

"I wanted to look at friendships among women, now, as an adult," said Woodson. "I know women who have these deep, long friendships, and there are some women I know who have no female friends. I have a lot of old friends and deeply loved friends. I wanted to explore how someone would get to that place of being so outside their circle of protection and friendships. I wanted to look at friendships from that adolescent perspective, when it is so deep and important and life-altering--how does one grow up having had that?"

Woodson will be touring to promote her new novel at independent bookstores in around 20 cities. Where she lives in Brooklyn, Woodson said her favorite indies are BookCourt and Greenlight Bookstore. She is also a fan of Joseph-Beth Booksellers, which has locations in Ohio and Kentucky, and Scuppernong Books in Greensboro, North Carolina, as well as Politics and Prose in Washington, D.C. and Cover to Cover Children's Books in Columbus, Ohio.

"I don't think I've ever been at an indie bookstore I didn't like," said Woodson, whose last book tour was for Brown Girl Dreaming. "One of the things I like is that they are so different in so many ways, but at the same time they are similar: you get to meet people who really care and know about books, and you get to meet a new community at each one." --Interview by Liz Button for Indie Next List

More Indie Next List Great Reads

The Altogether Unexpected Disappearance of Atticus Craftsman

By Mamen Sánchez

(Atria Books 9781501118852, $24)

"Full of quirky characters, passionate lovers, and literary references, this novel takes the reader on a playful romp through both Spain and the human soul. You know how a sprinkle of salt makes chocolate taste sweeter? This book seems all the more timeless for the dashes of modernity throughout--the Spanish detective who references CSI, the wedding band that plays Lady Gaga--all against the intoxicating backdrop of Madrid and Granada. Delightful!"
--Nichole McCown, Bookshop Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA

Arrowood

By Laura McHugh

(Spiegel & Grau 9780812996395, $27)

"When her father dies, Arden inherits Arrowood, her childhood home. Set on the Mississippi River, the little town of Keokuk, Iowa, has seen more prosperous days, as has Arrowood, which has stood vacant for years. Arden decides to move back to Keokuk and re-establish the search for her two-year-old twin siblings who disappeared 20 years earlier under her watch. With the help of Ben, her childhood friend and a longtime resident of Keokuk, Arden re-examines the disappearance, hoping to not only find the twins, but also to make peace with her own deep-rooted secrets."
--Brenda Jordan, Murder By the Book, Houston, TX

The City Baker's Guide to Country Living

By Louise Miller

(Pamela Dorman Books/Viking 9781101981207, $26)

"This charming debut follows big-city baker Olivia Rawlings as she flees her cushy Boston job for small-town New England after accidentally setting her dessert--and the building--on fire. Along the way, she finds new friends, family, and a sense of belonging. Perfect for fans of Kitchens of the Great Midwest and Sarah Addison Allen, this is a comforting, big-hearted book that will enchant readers with its delightfully quirky characters, beautiful setting, and mouthwatering descriptions of baked goods."
--Rebecca Speas, One More Page, Arlington, VA

The Summer That Melted Everything: A Novel

By Tiffany McDaniel

(St. Martin's Press 9781250078063, $25.99)

"There are hundreds of coming-of-age stories, but the one told in The Summer That Melted Everything is unique. In the summer of 1984, a series of disturbing events in Breathed, Ohio, are attributed to the arrival of a 13-year-old boy named Sal who claims to be the devil. Gossip and superstitions, exacerbated by the sweltering heat, turn the villagers against Sal. Only the family of the local prosecutor welcomes the boy, who is befriended by their son, Fielding. Through beautiful imagery and rich characters, McDaniel offers an original meditation on what is right and wrong, good and evil, in a magical, heart-wrenching, and unforgettable novel."
--Pierre Camy, Schuler Books & Music, Grand Rapids, MI

Half Wild: Stories

By Robin MacArthur

(Ecco 9780062444394, $24.99)

INDIES INTRODUCE
"MacArthur's debut story collection is set in the hilly backcountry of southern Vermont -- a rural landscape of half-abandoned farms and double-wide trailers, but also one of immense natural beauty and wildness. Her characters hew close to this land -- even those who have left cannot help but return. These are beautifully drawn portraits of people who, despite poverty and decay, remain vibrantly alive to their world and to the power of memory. I cannot wait to read more from this author!"
--Peter Sherman, Wellesley Books, Wellesley, MA

I Will Send Rain

By Rae Meadows

(Henry Holt & Company 9781627794268, $26)

"As I read I Will Send Rain, I was transported to the West of the 1930s as the Dust Bowl storms began. Annie Bell is struggling to keep her home, body, and family free of the layers of dust that reappear as fast as they are wiped clean. Her husband has constant dreams of rain; her teenage daughter is blinded by love; her young son suffers from dust pneumonia; and now an admirer is forcing Annie to question her own ethics and being. I was moved by the characters, the historical background, the heartache, and the simultaneous longing and complacency that make this a beautiful and powerful story."
--Lori Fazio, R.J. Julia Booksellers, Madison, CT

The Book That Matters Most

By Ann Hood

(W.W. Norton & Company 9780393241655, $25.95)

"Hood offers the parallel stories of Ava, who is struggling to build a new life after the end of a long marriage, and her daughter, Maggie, living in Paris and descending into addiction. Ava is invited to join a book club whose members each suggest the book that matters most to them. In Ava's case, a book remembered from her childhood leads to the unraveling of family secrets and a chance to move forward without old sorrows. Hood is a master at revealing the nuances of family interactions and exploring the fine line between love and pain."
--Jenny Stroyeck, The Homer Bookstore, Homer, AK

Riverine: A Memoir From Anywhere But Here

By Angela Palm

(Graywolf Press 9781555977467, $16)

"Haunting and surprising yet immediately relatable, Palm's striking memoir sinks its roots deep into readers and holds fast. Everything ordinary, Palm reveals, is extraordinary--tragic, profound, amusing, brutal--when examined up close. In reflecting on her own formative years, growing up 'between points on the map' in small-town Indiana, Palm paints a measured, unforgettable portrait of the forces that break us free of our origins and those that inevitably call us back."
--Sam Kaas, Village Books, Bellingham, WA

The Bones of Paradise

By Jonis Agee

(William Morrow 9780062413475, $25.99)

"Agee presents the saga of the Bennett family in the years following the massacre at Wounded Knee. Formed and altered by the unforgiving Nebraska Sandhills, the Bennetts are a rough, conflicted lot, and their story is filled with secrets, lies, betrayals, vengeance, and murder. Agee evokes a lost world and time without sentiment, but with a beautiful subtlety interrupted only by the true horrors of well-researched fact. A must-read for lovers of Western literature, family sagas, and historical fiction."
--Amanda Hurley, Inkwood Books, Tampa, FL

Mr. Eternity

By Aaron Thier

(Bloomsbury 9781632860934, $26)

"Clever, smart, and brilliantly comic as it deals with our humanity, our resilient spirit, and the tremendous challenges that demand our cooperative attention, Mr. Eternity is a delight. Who can resist the tale of a 560-year-old American man named Daniel Defoe, who has much wisdom to offer the world and its people. This genre-bending page-turner is a blast to read!"
--Ed Conklin, Chaucer's Books, Santa Barbara, CA

Carousel Court

By Joe McGinniss, Jr.

(Simon & Schuster 9781476791272, $26)

"Carousel Court begins with the decline of a marriage as members of the Maguire family find themselves in the suburbs of Los Angeles, struggling to hold onto their last vestiges of power to control what feels like the free fall of their lives. Examining the paradox of both our over-connected and disconnected world, McGinniss' clear voice is beautifully balanced with the dark desperation he reveals as the all-too-common silent partner of our lives. This is a powerful book that should not be missed!"
--Luisa Smith, Book Passage, Corte Madera, CA

The Muse

By Jessie Burton

(Ecco 9780062409928, $27.99)

"Burton's follow-up to The Miniaturist also takes place in the art world, but this time the settings alternate between London in the 1960s and pre-Civil War Spain in the 1930s. In 1967, a long-lost work by a dead Spanish painter turns up in London. Is it really an original Isaac Robles? Or is there a more complicated story behind the intriguing painting? A fun read with interesting meditations on the purpose and making of art."
--Susan Taylor, Book House of Stuyvesant Plaza, Albany, NY

Behind Closed Doors

By B.A. Paris

(St. Martin's Press 9781250121004, $25.99)

"Jack is charming and handsome, but underneath his cool exterior is a brutal psychopath who thrives on terrifying others. His wife, Grace, found out too late that he is a monster who seeks to control everything she does. Even her sister, Millie, a handicapped young woman who depends on Grace, is part of Jack's vicious plan. Paris has crafted a riveting, intense tale that will keep readers on the edge of their seats until the last page."
--Stephanie Crowe, Page & Palette, Fairhope, AL

The Secret Language of Stones

By M.J. Rose

(Atria Books 9781476778099, $25)

"World War I Paris is a dangerous place for the young witch Opaline Duplessi. Still in denial about the true extent of her powers and hopelessly in love with a man she can never have, Opaline becomes caught up in a Russian émigré's plan to save a Romanov from Bolshevik spies on the windswept English coast. Magic and intrigue collide in this captivating follow-up to The Witch of Painted Sorrows."
--Paula Longhurst, The King's English Bookshop, Salt Lake City, UT

The Woman in Cabin 10

By Ruth Ware

(Gallery/Scout Press 9781501132933, $26)

"When journalist Lo Blacklock sees someone throw a woman's body over the side of a small cruise ship, it should be clear that a crime has been committed. The problem? No one is missing. This is far from the travel magazine assignment that brought Lo on board, but she can't just give up. Something happened and she must find the answer. But can she do so without losing her own life? This is a fun read full of psychological thrills and twists that readers absolutely will not see coming."
--Linda Bond, Auntie's Bookstore, Spokane, WA

Textbook Amy Krouse Rosenthal: Not Exactly a Memoir

By Amy Krouse Rosenthal

(Dutton 9781101984543, $27)

"This is the most fun and unique book I have held in my hands in a long time. It is a 'non-linear memoir' consisting of a quiz, random thoughts, poetry, essays, text message communications, family photos, and the captured moments of any given day. This textbook is an education in seeing the world through Rosenthal's magical viewpoint--necessary for all who want to appreciate life's little gifts."
--Kimberly Daniels, The Country Bookshop, Southern Pines, NC

The Invisible Life of Ivan Isaenko

By Scott Stambach

(St. Martin's Press 9781250081865, $25.99)

"Seventeen-year-old Ivan Isaenko has spent his entire life in a cloistered world, but he possesses a keen intellect and an understanding of humanity that far exceeds the confines of the Mazyr Hospital for Gravely Ill Children in Belarus. Severely physically handicapped due to radiation poisoning, Ivan has never had a friend beyond his caregivers at the hospital--until Polina is admitted. The two teens form a fast and indelible bond that will leave readers in awe of the tenacity of their commitment. Heartbreaking and awe-inspiring."
--Pamela Klinger-Horn, Excelsior Bay Books, Excelsior, MN

Dark Matter

By Blake Crouch

(Crown 9781101904220, $26.99)

"Dark Matter is equal parts science fiction, thriller, and theoretical self-examination, complete with an overarching love story. Crouch does a fantastic job of keeping readers grounded while traveling through multiple dimensions, and he offers introspection on how each of the life choices a person makes recreates that person in a new and profound way. I tore through this, waiting for --and finding -- a spectacular conclusion. A must-read!"
--Ed White, Hudson Booksellers, Marietta, GA

Christodora

By Tim Murphy

(Grove Press 9780802125286, $27)

"Murphy uses Christodora House, an historic apartment building in the East Village of New York City, as the namesake and backdrop of his compelling debut novel. The story follows the lives of several residents over the course of four decades, expertly detailing the intersections of art and ambition, activism and loss, and the consequences of addiction and the devastation of the AIDS epidemic. I can think of no novel in recent memory in which I felt so drawn to its characters and so emotionally invested in the outcome of their lives."
--Shawn Donley, Powell's Books, Portland, OR

The Tsar of Love and Techno: Stories

By Anthony Marra

(Hogarth 9780770436452, $16)

"A Constellation of Vital Phenomena is one of my favorite novels, and now Marra follows that up with a dazzling set of linked stories set in Russia, Chechnya, and Siberia over a period of time spanning from the Russian Revolution to the modern day and beyond. As with his debut novel, what I love are the characters that he makes readers care so deeply about, as well as the fact that I constantly found myself wanting to know more about their lives and the history of their countries. Marra is one of our brightest young talents writing today."
--Cody Morrison, Square Books, Oxford, MS

The Nature of the Beast: A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel

By Louise Penny

(Minotaur 9781250022103, $15.99)

"Penny scores again with this story of the struggle between the forces of good and evil in the tiny Canadian village of Three Pines. Retired homicide chief Armand Gamache must use all of his detective skills and worldly wisdom to solve the murder of a young boy, an investigation that uncovers a threat to global security. The eccentric citizens of this remote outpost add their own color and knowledge to the unraveling of this complex mystery. This book is a pure delight!"
--Sarah Pease, Buttonwood Books & Toys, Cohasset, MA

Missing Pieces

By Heather Gudenkauf

(MIRA 9780778319313, $15.99)

"Gudenkauf once again weaves her magic, drawing readers into her latest work. Missing Pieces is a story of dark family secrets that have multiplied over the years, eroding the trust and love between husbands and wives, siblings, parents, and children. Gudenkauf uses deliberate pacing, skillful character development, and even the old nursery rhyme 'Three Blind Mice' to bring this thriller to a perfect, stunning ending."
--Nancy Simpson-Brice, The Book Vault, Oskaloosa, IA

The Japanese Lover

By Isabel Allende

(Atria Books 9781501116995, $16)

"Past and present collide in Allende's new novel. Alma Belasco flees the Nazi incursion in Poland and is raised in her aunt and uncle's home in San Francisco. Alma and Ichimei Fukuda, the gardener's son, have an instant connection but are separated when he is sent to a Japanese internment camp. Years later, while fleeing her own past, Irina Bazili begins work at Alma's retirement home and finds herself caught up in the intrigue and delicate mystery that is Alma's great love. Once again, Allende's unique ability to bring forth light from the darkest recesses of humanity highlights the strength and courage it takes to live--and love."
--Anna Eklund, University Book Store, Seattle, WA

House of Thieves

By Charles Belfoure

(Sourcebooks Landmark 9781492633082, $15.99)

"The Cross family has it all. Born into the wealthy class in the 1880s and related to the Astors of New York City, their lives are envied. John, the patriarch, is a highly regarded architect; his wife, Helen, a beauty; and his children, George, Julia, and Charlie, each accomplished. But all is not as it seems. George has a gambling problem, and his inability to control himself causes criminals to threaten his family for repayment. Belfoure weaves a fascinating story that reveals the descent of this family into the underworld of crime. The endeavor to save George and the drama that ensues not only captivates the Cross family, but the reader as well. A great read!"
--Stephanie Crowe, Page & Palette, Fairhope, AL

Dragonfish

By Vu Tran

(W.W. Norton & Company 9780393352870, $15.95)

"Tran has written a highly original noir mystery involving Suzy, a Vietnamese immigrant, and her police officer ex-husband, Robert. Suzy goes missing in Las Vegas and her current husband, Sonny, enlists Robert's help to track her down. During his search for Suzy, Robert discovers a packet of letters written by her to Mai, Suzy's long-lost daughter, who is now a professional gambler living in Las Vegas. Suspenseful, cinematic, and haunting, Tran's storytelling is superb, and Dragonfish is an excellent debut."
--Sherri Gallentine, Vroman's Bookstore, Pasadena, CA

City on Fire

By Garth Risk Hallberg

(Vintage 9780804172950, $17)

"Big, juicy, and full-throated, City on Fire absorbs readers into an expertly crafted 1970s New York City and introduces them to lushly drawn characters: the charismatic young woman with a hidden life, her asthmatic punk groupie friend, the wizened reporter, the obscenely rich and rebellious, the not-so-rebellious, and those who love them. Their lives create a rich tapestry, beginning with a murder on the brink of the New Year in 1977 and culminating later that year during the infamous blackout. With unequivocal skill, Hallberg makes readers feel like they are holding the whole city in their hands."
--Melinda Powers, Bookshop Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA

Barefoot to Avalon: A Brother's Story

By David Payne

(Grove Press 9780802125170, $16)

"This memoir is the most courageous book I have ever read. The author takes readers with him as he endeavors to make sense of his relationships with his parents and siblings, mental illness, personal shortcomings, and the journey to becoming a writer. The book leaves readers amazed at how much pain the heart can hold and still emerge peaceful, whole, and full of hope. Payne holds nothing back, and his depictions of events are real and full of all that makes us human, both the good and the bad."
--Sharon Wheeler, Purple Crow Books, Hillsborough, NC

Along the Infinite Sea

By Beatriz Williams

(Berkley 9780425278994, $16)

"Heroines in different decades, Annabelle and Pepper both know the peril of loving a man seemingly always just beyond their reach as well as the need to escape in order to survive. Williams' novel follows Annabelle through the hurdles life throws her way in the years preceding World War II in Europe as well as the parallel trials and tribulations of Pepper during the 1960s. These complicated women meet when Pepper sells her restored Mercedes to Annabelle as a way to raise money for her own escape plan. Together, Annabelle and Pepper come to rescue each other and learn that sometimes love can survive life's trials."
--Dell Marie Swearer, Bluebird Books, Hutchinson, KS

The Ninemile Wolves

By Rick Bass

(Mariner 9780618263028, $13.95)

Originally published in hardcover in 1992.
"A skilled and astute nature writer as well as a fine prose stylist, Bass is the perfect narrator for this provocative, profound, and poignant story of the reintroduction of wolves into Montana. With sympathy for the rangers, the ranchers, and especially the wolves themselves, Bass brings all of his skills as an expert fiction writer and naturalist to the interwoven inhabited landscape of Montana. His empathy for the wolves and evocation of their lives is astounding and is matched by his rendering of the perceptions of the rangers who study and live alongside them. This is a testimony to the possibility of cohabitation of human, wolf, and the rest of the wild world."
--John Evans, DIESEL: A Bookstore, Santa Monica, CA

Light Years

By James Salter

(Vintage 9780679740735, $16)

Originally published in hardcover in 1975.
"When I first read Light Years in the early '80s it was like discovering an instant classic. Thirty-five years later, I found myself underlining passages, revisiting old friends. We meet Nedra and Viri in 1958 in New York--'conjugal life in its purest, most generous form'--as Salter observes the dissolution of a perfect marriage. Scenes fill with friends and family at dinner parties in book-lined apartments and country houses. One is left with a deep sense of melancholy, as Light Years is as bittersweet as it is intensely satisfying."
--Melanie Fleishman, Arcadia Books,Spring Green, WI

The Death and Life of Great American Cities

By Jane Jacobs

(Vintage 9780679741954, $16.95)

Originally published in hardcover in 1961.
"I only read The Death and Life of Great American Cities in the '90s, but it changed my experience of cities, and so my world. Jacobs' critique of 1950s urban renewal and her analysis of what makes cities successful were revelatory and eventually changed city planning. I cheered when she won her epic battle with Robert Moses to stop plans for a four-lane highway through New York City's Washington Square Park with the help of 'nobody but a bunch of mothers,' as Moses called them. Clearly, we are all in her debt."
--Carole Horne, Harvard Book Store, Cambridge, MA

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