Indie Next List for September 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...

Commonwealth

By Ann Patchett

(Harper 9780062491794, $27.99)

"Patchett leaves behind the exotic locales and intricate plots of State of Wonder and Bel Canto for an even darker and more difficult place to navigate--the interior of a blended family over the course of several decades. While more domestic than many of her previous novels, Commonwealth offers plenty of intrigue and surprises as Patchett explores the interaction of a group of children forced into each other's lives because of their parents' impulsive choices. With keen insight, tears of both sorrow and joy, and some real--if dark--humor, Patchett pulls readers into this complex family's world, and we are eager for every detail."
--John Christensen, Arcadia Books, Spring Green, WI

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

photo: Heidi Ross

Indie booksellers have selected Commonwealth (Harper, September 13), Ann Patchett's latest novel, as the number-one Indie Next List pick for September.

Commonwealth follows the Cousins and Keating children and their parents over the course of five decades after a chance encounter on a Sunday afternoon in California brings the two families together.

While Commonwealth's domestic setting appears to be a departure from Patchett's other novels, namely Bel Canto, in which a famous opera singer finds herself hostage during a party in an unnamed South American country, and State of Wonder, set deep inside the Amazon rainforest, Patchett said her novels that feature exotic, far-away places are still ultimately books about family.

"If you scrape away all of the costuming and the setting, the bones are so similar. In a way, I just wanted to write something that felt a little more direct and literally closer to home--to tell that story without all the props, without all the bells and whistles," Patchett recently told Bookselling This Week.

Commonwealth opens at Franny Keating's christening party, where Bert Cousins, an uninvited guest, kisses Franny's mother, Beverly--a single action that leads to the dissolution of both of their marriages.

Patchett had originally set out to write about a character who attends a play, only to discover the play is about his own childhood. "I just could never figure out how to get him to the theater," she said. "That really was the first thing that I thought of. What if you saw something or read something and you could very clearly see yourself as a character? And, suddenly, you would understand things about your own life that you never understood before?

"So many of us have that moment with fiction. We just completely identify with a character in a book and, in doing so, we learn things about ourselves that we didn't know before. What if the character you identified with in a book was actually you? And it wasn't your imagination?"

Patchett eventually did find a way to incorporate this idea into Commonwealth: Midway through the book, when an author writes a novel based on their lives, the four Cousins and two Keating kids, who were brought together decades earlier when Bert and Beverly married, are forced to confront their childhoods and the truth behind the death of one of their siblings.

Each member of this unconventional family shares their story as the novel progresses, because Patchett found them all to be interesting--all six children, the four parents, and even the novelist who writes about them. "I think they are all tiles in the larger mosaic. It is all of their stories," she explained.

Often when people write about divorce, they write about the impact on the children or the spouses, but Patchett said she wanted to explore what each of the characters' lives would look like 50 years later. "With any decision that we make, there are repercussions on our own lives and the lives around us, and those ripple out and out and out," she said. "How did this decision, a kiss at a party, impact all these different lives at different points down the line?"

"I really do feel like this is a book I haven't read," she added. "That's what I always want to do, write a book I haven't read."

Patchett, who is also the co-owner of Parnassus Books in Nashville, Tennessee, said she has grown very interested in time as a theme in both her work and her life. After writing Run (Harper, 2007), which takes place over the course of 24 hours, she wanted to attempt a narrative that was much more expansive.

"I wanted to really stretch it out," Patchett said. "I ultimately wanted to write a birth-to-death novel, but I didn't make it--I made it 50 years. It seemed that family was a better place for me to do that than something that was very exotic and far away. I really wanted to focus on having a lot of people and a lot of locations over a great span of time."

Commonwealth's nomination to the Indie Next List is particularly meaningful to her, Patchett said, because she knows the quality of the other titles coming out in September. "It's really wonderful," she said. "It feels like a big, warm pat on the back from the people that I work with, both in my store and all over the country."

Patchett, who opened Parnassus Books in 2011 with business partner Karen Hayes, said she's been surprised by how much she enjoys owning a bookstore and that she particularly loves the people she works with.

"For a novelist, for somebody who is used to working alone all the time, it's incredible to dip in and out of that world," Patchett said. "They are my dearest friends, and it's like being in a sitcom. It's like we're the comedy writers on the old Dick Van Dyke Show, or we're sitting in the coffee shop in Friends or the bar in Cheers. Everybody is kind and everybody is smart and everybody is a good reader, and we have a certain Island-of-Misfit-Toys vibe. It's really dear.

"And to say nothing of the customers, who are also a blast. Walking around with books in a bookstore is like walking your dog--it gives everyone free license to have a conversation. So I can just go around and talk to people."

Because of her passion for indie bookstores, Patchett recently signed on as the co-ambassador for the Book Industry Charitable Foundation, alongside author James Patterson. "It is my job to promote independent bookstores and the health and well-being of bookstores and of booksellers," she said. "The idea of working with an organization that makes grants to booksellers in need--what could be more beautiful than that?"  --interview by Sydney Jarrard for Indie Next List

More Indie Next List Great Reads

A House Without Windows

By Nadia Hashimi

(William Morrow 9780062449689, $26.99)

"Hashimi sets her layered and suspenseful novel at the crossroads of tradition and modernity in present-day Afghanistan. Her nuanced and well-paced tale tells the story of Zeba, who is accused of murdering her husband. In the Chil Mahtab prison, where Zeba awaits her trial and sentencing, she comes to know a colorful cast of female inmates, many of whom are ordinary women who have been snared in various traps of family honor and have been cast away by their families and by society. This is a compassionately written and moving page-turner."
--Marya Johnston, Out West Books, Grand Junction, CO

The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate--Discoveries from a Secret World

By Peter Wohlleben

(Greystone Books 9781771642484, $24.95)

"The Hidden Life of Trees reads like a 250-page epiphany. Wohlleben knows trees inside and out, and his revelatory examination of the inner lives of forests provides evidence of what many sensitive nature-lovers long suspected: that trees form friendships, sustain one another, and should be viewed as more than a natural resource. This is the kind of writing that can profoundly affect the way we live on this planet."
--Stephen Sparks, Green Apple Books, San Francisco, CA

Pancakes in Paris: Living the American Dream in France

By Craig Carlson

(Sourcebooks 9781492632122, $15.99)

"Pancakes and Paris make for a winning combination in this charming memoir. Readers will cheer for Carlson as he follows his dream of opening a restaurant in another country. He faces many challenges, but perseveres until he reaches his goal. Thanks to Carlson it is now possible to get hearty pancakes and other treats at Breakfast in America, the first American-style diner in Paris. This is a perfect read for armchair travelers or for Francophiles planning their next trip to the City of Lights."
--Elizabeth Merritt, Titcomb's Bookshop, East Sandwich, MA

Loner

By Teddy Wayne

(Simon & Schuster 9781501107894, $26)

"David Federman, a gifted student who is both socially awkward and emotionally immature, is trying to find his place as a Harvard freshman. Enter the beautiful and sophisticated Veronica Wells, and David is hopelessly, obsessively in love for the first time. Suffice it to say this is not a match made in heaven, and it ends badly for everyone when David starts stalking Veronica and violates the school's honor code – the first steps down a slippery slope towards a violent and tragic ending. David is by turns sympathetic and repellent, and Loner is a complex portrayal of alienation, gender politics, and class at the highest echelons of American academic life."
--Ellen Burns, Books on the Common, Ridgefield, CT

The Fortunes

By Peter Ho Davies

(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 9780544263703, $27)

"At a time of talk about building walls and isolationism, Davies offers a look at American history through the lives of a group of people who have helped to forge this nation--Chinese-Americans. Davies presents characters for whom the American dream is as elusive or as real as it would be to any others. Set in the California Gold Rush, 1930s Hollywood, and the present day, Davies' tale is artfully told with passion and conviction, and readers will empathize fully with each generation of 'outsiders.' "
--Jessie Martin, Nicola's Books, Ann Arbor, MI

A Whole Life

By Robert Seethaler

Charlotte Collins (Transl.)

(Farrar, Straus and Giroux 9780374289867, $23)

"Andreas Egger lived his whole life with nature as his most trusted companion. When humans, war, and debilitating events threatened him, he quietly climbed mountains, bathed in icy streams, watched the sun streak its intense color into the sky, and then put his head down and forged ahead. He lived eight decades, mostly alone, and faced death and privation with heroism, stoicism, and a depth of character rarely seen in the 'modern' 20th century. In this short novel, Seethaler has poetically created a character and a way of looking at the natural world that readers will never forget."
--Gayle Shanks, Changing Hands Bookstore, Tempe, AZ

The Art of Waiting: On Fertility, Medicine, and Motherhood

By Belle Boggs

(Graywolf Press 9781555977498, $16)

"Boggs tackles a variety of challenging topics throughout this cohesive collection of essays. With a knowledgeable, considerate, and honest mind, Boggs is somehow able to transform the clinical and sedate language of infertility treatments into a beautiful song of hope and transformation. The metaphors Boggs finds for her travails sing, and the patient quality of her narration stuns. The candidness of her voice, combined with her ability to find the perfect words to sum up data, studies, statistics, and personal experience, make The Art of Waiting a gift for all readers."
--John Francisconi, Bank Square Books, Mystic, CT

Razor Girl

By Carl Hiaasen

(Knopf 9780385349741, $27.95)

"Welcome back to Southern Florida! In the land of flimflam artists, illegal substances, and scantily clad women, disgraced detective Andrew Yancy is just trying to get his job back. Merry Mansfield, master of the car crash scam, insinuates herself into Yancy's life with brazen confidence. As it turns out, he needs her more than he could ever anticipate. Reality TV stars, redneck kidnappers, mobsters, and corrupt developers cross paths throughout this novel in hilarious, nonstop action. Hiassen is at the top of his game with quirky characters, rapid-fire banter, and Wodehouse-like plotting."
--Cindy Pauldine, the river's end bookstore, Oswego, NY

Lady Cop Makes Trouble: A Kopp Sisters Novel

By Amy Stewart

(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 9780544409941, $26)

"Stewart's follow-up to Girl Waits With Gun is equally fascinating. Based on the life of Constance Kopp, the first female deputy sheriff in New Jersey, this tale takes readers from rural New Jersey to the mean streets of New York City in 1915. With grit, smarts, and utter determination, Constance tracks a convict who escaped her custody. Despite the astounding restrictions on a woman's life in the early 20th century, Constance takes every risk to capture her suspect. Complemented by the historical notes that Stewart provides, Lady Cop is both informative and loads of fun."
--Kathy Kirby, Powell's Books, Portland, OR

The Risen

By Ron Rash

(Ecco 9780062436313, $25.99)

"The most overused cliché in the book business is 'page-turner,' so I will ask indulgence when I declare that The Risen by Ron Rash is a page-turner in the truest sense of the phrase. The Risen explores a young boy's coming of age, sibling rivalry, a decades-old mystery, and extreme life choices. It is an exciting read for all who appreciate literature at its finest."
--Jake Reiss, Alabama Booksmith, Birmingham, AL

Little Nothing

By Marisa Silver

(Blue Rider Press 9780399167928, $27)

"Silver turns the oral tradition into fine literature with Little Nothing, a masterful work of fairy tale and folklore. Pavla, a dwarf born in Eastern Europe in the early 20th century, is a survivor who magically adapts time and again in order to overcome cruelty. Danilo loves her and is obsessed only with protecting her. This is a story of the power of transformation and the gift of finding the love we need, if not the love we seek."
--Maureen Stinger, The Fountain Bookstore, Richmond, VA

The Gentleman

By Forrest Leo

(Penguin Press 9780399562631, $26)

"Fast-paced, funny, and extremely enjoyable, The Gentleman has fantastic elements and intriguing characters tied together with smart dialogue and timing reminiscent of a Baz Luhrman film. Badly behaved Victorian ladies, indolent poets, an exasperated editor, intrepid British adventurers, steampunk inventors, omniscient butlers, a genteel Devil, and a number of cunning plans combine to make this debut novel exciting and amusing."
--Jennifer Richter, Inkwood Books, Haddonfield, NJ

Darktown

By Thomas Mullen

(Atria/37 Ink 9781501133862, $26)

"Darktown is a knockout novelization of the history of Atlanta's first black police officers, who were appointed in 1948. Deftly merging social history with crime fiction, the story follows two of the new recruits as they secretly investigate the murder of a young black woman. It is a mission fraught with danger as the black officers come up against bigoted white officers and the insidious racism of an Atlanta still under Jim Crow. Mullen spins an immersive tale out of this friction, and it is his willingness to engage with this time period and to let its ugly realities shape and inform the course of the investigation that elevates this novel from a standard procedural."
--Nneoma Amadi-Obi, Politics & Prose Bookstore and Coffeehouse, Washington, DC

A Great Reckoning

By Louise Penny

(Minotaur 9781250022134, $28.99)

"There is something rotten at the Sûreté academy, and the now-retired Chief Inspector Armand Gamache has been brought in to clean it up. In the meantime, a strange map has been found in Three Pines. Old friends, new characters, murder, and history combine in another irresistible tale from Penny, whose writing is always compassionate, funny, and literate. This latest in the series is not to be missed."
--Kathy Magruder, Pageturners Bookstore, Indianola, IA

Leave Me

By Gayle Forman

(Algonquin Books 9781616206178, $26.95)

"Filled with poignant, heartwarming insights into the incessant demands of marriage and motherhood, Leave Me brilliantly shows readers that sometimes you really do have to run away from it all in order to discover what really matters. In her adult debut, Forman provides a frank and moving story about losing and finding yourself by embracing the power of forgiveness, the inevitability of growth, and the stubbornness of love."
--Anderson McKean, Page and Palette, Fairhope, AL

The Nix

By Nathan Hill

(Knopf 9781101946619, $27.95)

"Hill's debut is remarkable because it does both the little things and the big things right. It is an intimate novel of identity and loss, the story of a boy abandoned and the man now trying to recover. It also paints a vivid portrait of America and its politics from the 1960s to the present. The Nix overflows with unforgettable characters, but none more clearly rendered than Samuel Andersen-Anderson and his mother, Faye, both bewildered by life and struggling to repair the rift between them. From intimate whispers to American news cycles, this astounding novel of reclamation is guaranteed to sweep readers off their feet."
--Luisa Smith, Book Passage, Corte Madera, CA

The Underground Railroad

By Colson Whitehead

(Doubleday 9780385537032, $26.95)

"Whitehead's new novel is much more than the story of a runaway slave, Cora, who fights her way to the North; it is also a phantasmagorical look at race in America. In this instance the railroad is literal--a train roaring through tunnels constructed like a subway, leading Cora to several unlikely destinations. Like the travels of Gulliver, each of Cora's stops on the railroad is a different version of America, displaying the varied ways in which Americans view race and manifest destiny. With exquisite prose, Colson digs deep into the troubled heart of America, exposing prejudice, tolerance, hatred, violence, and love as readers stop at each distinct station. Cora is a hero for the ages, and Whitehead is a writer who can guide us, like a station master, into the light. This is a fantastic novel."
--William Carl, Wellesley Books, Wellesley, MA

A Gentleman in Moscow

By Amor Towles

(Viking 9780670026197, $27)

"Through Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov's ordinary encounters and activities within the bounds of the four walls of post-revolutionary Moscow's Metropol Hotel, where he is under house arrest, Towles deftly guides readers across a century of Russian history, from the Bolshevik uprising to the dawn of the nuclear age under Krushchev. Grandiloquent language and drama reminiscent of Tolstoy gradually give way to action and tradecraft suggestive of le Carré in this lovely and entertaining tale of one man's determination to maintain his dignity and passion for life, even after being stripped of his title, belongings, and freedom. Reading A Gentleman in Moscow is pure pleasure!"
--Becky Dayton, The Vermont Book Shop, Middlebury, VT

Mischling

By Affinity Konar

(Lee Boudreaux Books 9780316308106, $27)

"Sisters Stasha and Pearl are accustomed to the imaginative interior life they share as twins, but in Josef Mengele's 'Zoo' at Auschwitz they must find refuge in that life in order to survive. Readers descend into the violence and despair of the Holocaust as experienced through the eyes of the twins but are protected by an innocence that is also urbane and by a sardonic playfulness that does not shy from horrors but transforms them into fortitude and resilience. Konar has achieved the unlikely--Mischling simultaneously haunts and inspires."
--Kelly Pickerill, Lemuria Bookstore, Jackson, MS

The Light of the World: A Memoir

By Elizabeth Alexander

(Grand Central Publishing 9781455599868, $15.99)

"It is hard to find the right words to do justice to this very special book. Yes, it is by one of our greatest contemporary poets, Elizabeth Alexander, who wrote 'Praise Song for the Day' for President Obama's first inauguration, so the language is gorgeous. And yes, it is a memoir of losing her husband at a young age and so it is, in parts, gut-wrenchingly sad. And yes, it is an ode to an extraordinary man we come to feel we know as an artist, chef, father, friend, and lover. But, above all, it is as beautiful a love story as I have ever read, and it lifts readers up and gives us hope and makes us believe. I will urge it on everyone I know."
--Carole Horne, Harvard Book Store, Cambridge, MA

The Gates of Evangeline

By Hester Young

(G.P. Putnam's Sons 9780425283172, $16)

"Charlie Cates recently lost her young son and the job that she worked so hard for is probably going to be eliminated. When Charlie is offered a chance to write about the Deveau family and their child who went missing over 30 years ago, she jumps at the chance. What she hasn't told anybody is that she has been seeing visions of children in trouble and is currently experiencing one of a young boy in a rowboat in a Louisiana swamp who she suspects is the missing Deveau child. But what if she has it all wrong? In this excellent thriller, things are really not what they seem to be. A wonderful puzzle with a Southern Gothic feel, this is a definite must-read!"
--Janice Hunsche, Kaleidosaurus Books, Metamora, IN

Eileen: A Novel

By Ottessa Moshfegh

(Penguin Books 9780143128755, $16)

"Psychological thrillers don't get any better than this. Moshfegh masterfully captures the inner despair of a young mind filled with vitriol. Through atmospheric and unsettling writing, the cold dreariness of small-town New England seeps into readers' bones even as Eileen's twisted view of the world -- desperate, angry, and vulnerable -- seeps into the reading experience. Creepy, but morbidly funny too, Eileen, both the girl and the book, will be with readers long after the last page is turned."
--Christopher Phipps, DIESEL: A Bookstore, Oakland, CA

Don't Suck, Don't Die: Giving Up Vic Chesnutt

By Kristin Hersh

(University of Texas Press 9781477311363, $14.95)

"You don't need to be familiar with Chesnutt's or Hersh's work to appreciate this phenomenal book, but you will undoubtedly want to be once you've finished it. Hersh is a writer of intense and subtle beauty, and she will make you cry and feel a hundred other things with the power of her style alone. Through the tragic story of her close friend and tourmate, Chesnutt, Hersh evokes the torture of all that artistic genius encapsulates and makes that pain sing in a voice both opaque and elegant, grimy and pristine. Ultimately, this is a deeply affecting meditation on one's thrust toward 'important art' and on how music is a necessary expression of sadness and loneliness but also one of intense and inimitable beauty."
--Donovan Swift, Inkwood Books, Tampa, FL

Black Man in a White Coat: A Doctor's Reflections on Race and Medicine

By Damon Tweedy, M.D.

(Picador 9781250105042, $16)

"This is the marvelous story of the pitfalls and problems of 'doctoring while black.' From a professor who mistakes him for a maintenance worker, to both white and black patients who assume he is less competent than a white doctor, Tweedy tells an engaging, personal, and compassionate story of his road to becoming a physician. Tweedy manages to come through his journey with great insights into both sides of the doctor/patient relationship, including the subtle effects of race on the quality of medical care for black patients."
--Tom Campbell, The Regulator Bookshop, Durham, NC

Bell Weather

By Dennis Mahoney

(St. Martin's Griffin 9781250093813, $15.99)

"Set in a fantastical 18th century world where rain falls up and color storms wash the land with bright hues, Bell Weather is, at its core, the story of a spirited young woman fighting for the freedom to choose her own path. Although Molly tells the townsfolk of Root almost nothing of her past, readers learn about her childhood with an overbearing governess, a cold father, and a brilliant, cunning brother who will stop at nothing to ensure that he and Molly are together and unbridled. Mahoney has created a marvelous world that readers will want to visit again and again."
--Amelia Stymacks, Northshire Bookstore, Manchester Center, VT

Be Frank With Me

By Julia Claiborne Johnson

(William Morrow Paperbacks 9780062413727, $15.99)

"When reclusive novelist Mimi Banning loses her fortune and must quickly write a second novel, her publisher sends a young publicist to oversee the efforts and make sure their huge investment is secure. Alice Whitley arrives and is put to work as a caregiver to Mimi's eccentric nine-year-old son, Frank. Frank is a diamond in the rough, and as Alice gets to know him and the mysterious characters in his life, she becomes all-consumed with discovering his paternity. Be Frank With Me is captivating, irresistible, moving, heartbreaking, and utterly unputdownable."
--Bess Bleyaert, McLean & Eakin Booksellers, Petoskey, MI

The Art of Memoir

By Mary Karr

(Harper Perennial 9780062223074, $15.99)

"Karr, a professor of literature at Syracuse University and the author of three memoirs, provides readers and writers with background, insights, hints, history, and humor related to both her own writing and that of other memoirists, past and present. The book is valuable not only to those who aspire to document portions of their own lives, but also to those who find the genre of memoir of interest for casual reading."
--Susan Posch, The Book Shoppe, Boone, IA

And Again

By Jessica Chiarella

(Touchstone 9781501116117, $15.99)

"This intriguing novel explores the age-old body/soul relationship from a fresh angle by introducing us to four participants in a pilot program that gives terminally ill patients new, genetically perfect bodies. Will these four--a beautiful actress, a womanizing congressman, a talented artist, and a beloved mother--simply resume their lives as they were before disease or accident struck? Or will they make new starts, make different choices? Can their new bodies incorporate what they have learned in the past? A fascinating literary debut."
--Ellen Sandmeyer, Sandmeyer's Bookstore, Chicago, IL

The Known World

By Edward P. Jones

(Amistad 9780061159176, $16.99)

Originally published in hardcover in 2003.
"When Jones' first novel, The Known World, was published in 2003, it was a literary sensation; Jones was even compared to Toni Morrison and William Faulkner. Set in a fictional antebellum Virginia county with a protagonist who is a mixed-race slaveholder, this complex examination of slavery won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and a number of other literary awards. With a quiet restraint and luminous prose, it plumbs the depths of slavery's harsh realities and anomalies. It is a rare wonder and should not be missed."
--Carole Horne, Harvard Book Store, Cambridge, MA

Geek Love

By Katherine Dunn

(Vintage 9780375713347, $16)

Originally published in hardcover in 1989
"A stunning, gripping, and profoundly unforgettable tale of what it means to be a 'freak,' Geek Love is the story of the Binewskis, a couple whose traveling carnival is failing, when they decide, through the use of prescription drugs and radiation, to birth a line of 'freakish' children to save their business. Narrator Oly, their albino dwarf daughter, leads us through the unsettling journey of her siblings. The humanity portrayed through those whom we may see as the least human among us is captured brilliantly."
--Kelly Estep, Carmichael's Bookstore, Louisville, KY

And the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic

By Randy Shilts

(St. Martin's Griffin 9780312374631, $21.99)

Originally published in hardcover in 1987
"And the Band Played On fuses the thoughtfulness of history to the urgency of a great news story. In writing about the people affected by the AIDS epidemic – doctors, politicians, and, most of all, gay men – Shilts powerfully conveys not only his anger at official inaction, but also his love and compassion for the victims. Thirty years after the book's publication, it continues to inspire, to move, and to drive a stronger engagement with issues and the truth of people's lives. Every time someone worries that a devastating topic means a depressing book, I think of And the Band Played On. Like Schindler's List or Behind the Beautiful Forevers, this book enlarges our understanding of the human story. It should be required reading."
--Michael Barnard, Rakestraw Books, Danville, CA

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