Week of Friday, January 31, 2025
Several of this week's reading highlights dig up family secrets and root out old crimes. Charmaine Wilkerson's "layered and complex" second novel, Good Dirt, examines the provenance of a beloved heirloom and the ancestry connected to it throughout American history. Kristin Koval's "uncommonly impressive debut," Penitence, is a weighty family tragedy wrapped up in a suspense novel. And historian Tanya Pearson's "fiercely persuasive" Pretend We're Dead investigates the disappearance of female alternative rock performers of the '90s from the mainstream. Plus, Chickenpox by Remy Lai is a "side-splitting, pitch-perfect" graphic novel for middle-grade readers about the complicated responsibilities of being a big sister in a chaotic household under quarantine.
And in The Writer's Life, children's author Will Taylor invites readers into a corner of Oz that they've never seen before, and divulges a few special secrets about the foreboding academy at the heart of The School for Wicked Witches.
https://shelf-awareness.com/readers/2025-01-25/penitence.html
Blob: A Love Story
by Maggie Su
Maggie Su's Blob: A Love Story is a funny and pathos-ridden tale of social awkwardness and self-realization; a modern, delayed coming-of-age. Su's narrative voice is perfectly pitched for her inelegant but deeply sympathetic protagonist.
Vi is a 24-year-old townie and college dropout in a midwestern college town. She is still suffering from a breakup eight months ago; her Taiwanese father and white mother are well-meaning and supportive, but they have trouble connecting with Vi. Then, she stumbles upon something new in the alley behind a bar: a shapeless blob with a mouth and two eyes. She carries it home and, under Vi's yearning influence, it grows.
The evolving blob, which Vi will come to call Bob, is the only fantastical detail in a story otherwise rooted in a very familiar world, featuring the casual racism of Vi's hometown and her awkwardness with social situations. Bob takes in lots of television (and Fruity Pebbles), and after examining the pictures Vi shows him of movie stars, fashions himself into a tall, stunningly handsome white man with a six-pack. But their pairing is, in fact, a strain: "For a while, he seemed happy enough to eat and breathe and exist--the perfect companion. I should've anticipated that molding him into a man would trigger something deeper, some sort of existential awakening."
What makes Blob special is its mix of heartrending conflict and silly, self-aware humor. Truly cringy scenes balance sweet ones. In the end, discomfiting though it may be, Blob makes incisive observations about life for a 20-something trying to make it on her own. Blobs and humans alike may yet find home. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia
Discover: This quirky, funny, pained novel considers the challenge, for any of us, of becoming fully human.
Good Dirt
by Charmaine Wilkerson
Charmaine Wilkerson's powerful second novel, Good Dirt, explores the lasting effects of a long-ago tragedy and its connection to a beloved family heirloom. Through the history of the Freeman family and the provenance of a handmade pottery jar affectionately known as "Old Mo," Wilkerson (Black Cake) considers family secrets, race and respectability politics, the long-term nature of childhood trauma, and the complexity of American history.
On an autumn day in 2000, two armed burglars break into the Freemans' house to find the children, Baz and Ebby, at home unexpectedly. The encounter results in Baz's murder; Old Mo is shattered into fragments, and 10-year-old Ebby experiences a trauma that will haunt her for the rest of her life. Wilkerson continues her narrative years later with a different kind of tragedy, as Ebby's wealthy white fiancé, Henry, fails to show up for their wedding.
Ebby begins to ask questions about Old Mo and the circumstances of its attempted theft, as she reckons with the pain Henry caused her and the lingering trauma from Baz's death. The jar, made under enslavement, holds more history than even Ebby can guess, and Wilkerson reaches back a few centuries to excavate some of that history through the stories of skilled potter Moses, his brother-in-law, Willis, and their descendants.
Wilkerson probes the layers of each family member's connection to the jar; their deep love for one another and fierce pride in their heritage; and the guilt they carry, logical or not, relating to Baz's death. Layered and complex, Wilkerson's novel brilliantly sculpts a story of quiet resistance, skilled craftsmanship, and dedication to family and freedom. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams
Discover: Charmaine Wilkerson's powerful second novel explores family, resistance, and skilled craftsmanship through the story of a handmade jar known as "Old Mo."
Penitence
by Kristin Koval
Penitence, an uncommonly impressive debut from Kristin Koval, has the signposts of a traditional crime novel--a murder, a murderer, criminal justice machinations--but it really isn't one. The book's concern isn't why the killer killed; it's the human behaviors that harm without piercing the skin. This gives Penitence the tension of a suspense novel and the gravitas of a family tragedy.
The novel opens with 13-year-old Nora Sheehan sitting in a Lodgepole, Colo., jail cell. She's there because, using her park-ranger father David's gun, she fatally shot her 14-year-old brother, Nico, in his bed, after which she called 911 to confess to the crime. Nora "loved Nico.... That's why none of this makes sense," their mother, Angie, agonizes to Martine Dumont, an elderly lawyer and erstwhile family friend whom Angie and David tap to defend Nora; as David privately tells Martine, "Angie said you should do it because of Diana."
Who is Diana, and how did her death set off a chain of events that redirected several lives? As Nora's case proceeds, Koval uses a roving point of view to fill out key players' histories. Among the questions that haunt the novel: Why are Martine and her son, Julian, a New York criminal defense attorney who takes over Nora's case, practically estranged? And why did Angie, once the love of Julian's life, leave him? With agile and affecting prose, Penitence asks what, if anything, family members owe one another and whether enough acts of selflessness can lead to atonement. --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer
Discover: This uncommonly impressive debut novel centered on a juvenile fratricide asks what, if anything, family members owe one another, and whether enough acts of selflessness can lead to atonement.
Voices of the Fallen Heroes and Other Stories
by Yukio Mishima and Stephen Dodd, editor, transl. by Jeffrey Angles et al.
January 2025 would have marked Yukio Mishima's 100th birthday. Before his death by suicide at age 45, he left a substantial legacy: 35 novels (including Spring Snow and The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea), 40 plays, dozens of essays, several films, and 170 short stories. Voices of the Fallen Heroes, with an erudite introduction by Japanese cultural studies scholar John Nathan, gathers 14 compelling tales written between 1962 and 1969, the final decade of Mishima's truncated life. Collection editor Stephen Dodd leads an impressive assembly of notable translators that includes Sam Bett and Juliet Winters Carpenter.
The titular story is the longest. It melds the fantastical with the historical as it gives voice to the spirits of soldiers who sacrificed their lives in defense of Japan, disappointed that their divine emperor ultimately proved to be merely human. Multiple stories examine love from various angles: it's a matter of fresh conquest in "Strawberry"; casual distraction in "Cars"; fatally performative in "True Love at Dawn"; destructively nonchalant in "Clock." Murder recurs as a desperate obsession to witness avicide in "The Peacocks" and as the horrific cost of proving loyalty in "The Strange Tale of Shimmering Moon Villa." Mishima shares autobiographical glimpses: his visit to San Francisco's Union Square inspires "The Flower Hat," and he inserts himself in "From the Wilderness," about an intruder breaking into his home demanding a meeting.
This sampling of Mishima's massive trove provides another intriguing look at his profound accomplishments. As with most collections, resonance may vary with these stories. That said, further access to Mishima's extraordinary oeuvre is an undeniable gift to fans and newbies alike. --Terry Hong
Discover: A team of notable scholars and translators enabled this compelling collection of 14 of the iconic Yukio Mishima's immersive short stories.
Let's Call Her Barbie
by Renée Rosen
The incredible story of the creation of Barbie is reimagined by Renée Rosen (The Social Graces; Park Avenue Summer) in an entertaining and informative novel about the history of the iconic doll. In the 1950s, Ruth Handler, co-founder of the Mattel toy company alongside her husband, Elliot Handler, realizes that every doll on the market was a baby doll, encouraging young girls to dream only of becoming a housewife and mother. Ruth decides there should be another option.
With the help of Mattel's head engineer, Jack Ryan, and fashion designers Charlotte Johnson and Stevie Klein, the Barbie team pushes against all hesitations and pours their energy and expertise into creating Mattel's first doll. But after years of designing, tweaking, and finalizing the designs, Ruth's vision of Barbie as a grown woman with endless possibilities, accompanied by an even more endless wardrobe, is harder to market than she thought. Shocked by society's immediate rejection of a doll "with breasts," Ruth is devastated for herself, her team, and the employees that will suffer from her overconfidence. However, just when Ruth loses all hope, Barbie orders start coming in faster than Mattel can fill them.
Rosen's dynamic dialogue and raw portrayal of Ruth Handler, the real-life mastermind behind Barbie, showcase the determined, hardworking woman that she was without ignoring the mistakes she, and the others, made along the way. The immense success of Barbie came with great losses for the team: time with loved ones, struggles with mental health, and painful business and personal decisions. The poignant Let's Call Her Barbie is nonetheless inspiring. --Clara Newton, freelance reviewer
Discover: This fictional retelling of the creation of Barbie highlights the women and men who painstakingly and inspiringly fought to create the iconic doll.
Elita
by Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum
"What happens when the wildness is tamed? What is lost in that erasure?" These are questions Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum ponders in her lustrous first novel, Elita.
This atmospheric mystery takes place on the eponymous Elita Island in Washington State's Puget Sound during the winter of 1951, when "the world is a churning mass of gray sky, gray sea." Lunstrum's evocative, insightful writing captures the nuanced and moody Pacific Northwest landscape and brings to life some very compelling characters, such as a woman with "a face like an apple gone soft with age."
Bernadette Baston, a professor of child development, is summoned to assist in a baffling case: two prison guards have discovered a feral, nonverbal adolescent girl living alone in the inhospitable wilderness. She is given the name Atalanta, after the girl from Greek mythology who was left to die in the woods by her father. Officials work to uncover Atalanta's origins, but the residents of Elita and the neighboring island of Adela remain secretive. Bernadette, who was abandoned by her husband when their daughter was an infant, is no stranger to survival and takes a personal interest in Atalanta.
In Elita, Lunstrum (What We Do with the Wreckage: Stories) explores the challenges women faced during the 1950s, drawing parallels between Atalanta and Bernadette's struggles for autonomy: "How different from a feral child is a grown and educated woman?" As Bernadette contemplates her own life, she realizes that "the entire system of society is set up to stop her from freeing herself." --Grace Rajendran, freelance reviewer
Discover: This moody, captivating Pacific Northwest-set noir draws parallels between a nonverbal girl discovered living in the wilderness and the child development professor who investigates her origins.
Grace of the Empire State
by Gemma Tizzard
In her debut novel, Grace of the Empire State, Gemma Tizzard constructs an inspiring story of an Irish-American family working to support each other in challenging times. Like the titular landmark, Tizzard's story is built on a strong foundation: family loyalty and the determination to succeed, along with romance, a touch of danger, and more than a few seemingly impossible dreams.
Since their father died, twins Patrick and Grace O'Connell have been working hard to keep their family financially afloat: Grace as a nightclub dancer, Patrick as a steelworker helping to raise the new Empire State Building. When Patrick breaks his arm during a shift, he begs Grace to impersonate him for a few weeks so the three other men on his team won't lose their jobs. Grace, newly unemployed, reluctantly agrees. To her surprise, she comes to enjoy certain parts of the work and forms a deep bond with her teammates. All of them have serious motivation to keep going, even with the risk of Grace getting caught.
Tizzard vividly depicts the glamor and the heartache of Depression-era New York, and she slips in glimpses of iconic Manhattan landmarks like the New York Public Library. She immerses readers in the hot, dusty, dangerous details of working at the Empire State Building through Grace's eyes, honoring the effort and sacrifice of the workers (many of them immigrants) who built the skyline that epitomizes New York City today.
With engaging characters and a vibrant depiction of Manhattan--its glittering possibility and its stark heartbreak--Tizzard's novel soars like its namesake building, and moves along as elegantly as its nimble, determined heroine. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams
Discover: Gemma Tizzard's engaging debut novel follows an Irish-American dancer forced to impersonate her twin brother as a steelworker helping to raise the Empire State Building.
Mystery & Thriller
The Note
by Alafair Burke
"It was meant to be a harmless prank." In Alafair Burke's stellar thriller The Note, three friends clearly are waiting for a parking spot when it is grabbed by an entitled couple. The trio, on a girls' trip to the Hamptons, are so incensed they write notes to the couple. One of them says, simply: "He's cheating. He always does."
The childhood friends--law professor May Hanover, real estate heiress Kelsey Ellis, and musical prodigy Lauren Berry--agree to keep the notes to themselves. But unbeknownst to the other two, one woman sticks that note under the windshield wiper of the offending driver's car. After the driver goes missing, the police trace his movements and eventually show up at May's New York City apartment. The three have good reason to worry that their seemingly innocuous note could cause negative publicity, ruin relationships, destroy careers. They've experienced similar chain reactions before: when Kelsey was a suspect in her husband's murder; after a confrontation between May and a man on the subway went viral; and when Lauren was caught having an affair with a prominent married Texas oilman. As the investigation intensifies, each woman faces more scrutiny.
The Note realistically explores the women's relationship; through the years, it fluctuates from friendship to frenemy-ship as the trio support and betray one another. To avoid being recognized, Kelsey lives "her life in disguise," but Burke (The Wife; Long Gone) reveals how this descriptor applies to May and Lauren, too.
Burke's skillful plotting, punctuated by sharp dialogue, keeps The Note churning to a surprising finale. --Oline H. Cogdill, freelance reviewer
Discover: Three friends fear they will once again face public humiliation when a seemingly innocuous note is followed by a man's disappearance in this stellar thriller.
We Are Watching
by Alison Gaylin
A mere whisper that something evil is afoot can blow up into nasty rumors spread by conspiracy theorists, as Edgar winner Alison Gaylin explores in the explosive We Are Watching. Gaylin creates an unpredictable plot in which the gullible are convinced to believe outlandish ideas that infiltrate ordinary lives.
Meg Russo and her husband, Justin, are driving their 18-year-old daughter, Lily, to college in Ithaca, N.Y., when skinheads in a pursuing car harass them. It leads to a horrific crash in which Justin is killed. Months later, Meg, who was driving, is still wracked with guilt, and Lily is living at home, withdrawn into her music, wanting to emulate her rock musician grandfather who lives off the grid. Meg and Lily become targets of a cult that believes a fantasy novel Meg wrote back when she was 15 is a harbinger of doom. The bookstore Meg owns in Elizabethville, N.Y., is vandalized and the intimidation escalates, as do Meg's suspicions that the car crash that took Justin's life is somehow connected.
Briskly paced, We Are Watching demonstrates how ordinary people can overcome outrageous circumstances. Gaylin superbly shows how close relationships in a small town can be both an asset and a detriment, and how the relationship between a parent and child can undergo changes, with Meg acknowledging she must recover from her own grief to save her family from the violent cultists. In the end, Gaylin (If I Die Tonight) delivers a terrifying story about the most innocuous situation being taken out of context and twisted into a weapon. --Oline H. Cogdill, freelance reviewer
Discover: A gripping thriller that shows how an ordinary family can become the target of out-of-control conspiracy theorists.
Science Fiction & Fantasy
The Outcast Mage
by Annabel Campbell
In Annabel Campbell's engaging debut, The Outcast Mage, a young woman named Naila is identified as having magical powers and is sent to Amoria's Academia to learn how to control them. All she wants is to return to her life and the people she knew before, but she's never been able to make her magic work. Meanwhile, the tension between mages and the hollows--those without any magical abilities--is growing in Amoria, and the already fragile balance maintained in the glass city on the edge of the desert is crumbling quickly, giving way to violence. Naila ends up in the midst of a power struggle between the elite mages who run Amoria, and tangled in wider political games that might change the world--and possibly mean the end of the home she grew up in.
Campbell's fast-paced fantasy plunges readers into a new world, filling out the shape of it by bouncing between character viewpoints. This often leads to more questions than answers, but in a compelling way that effectively draws readers along. Her characters are not stereotypical heroes and villains, but rather complex and flawed figures, and the magic system is vast. The Outcast Mage is a contemporary take on classic high fantasy, an update on the genre's hallmarks of magic wielders and political struggles playing out in new worlds. The epic storytelling is full of familiar ideas emerging in fresh ways; just when readers might think they know where they are, the story transforms once again. The cliffhanger ending is sure to keep readers eagerly awaiting what might happen next in Amoria. --Michelle Anya Anjirbag, freelance reviewer
Discover: Annabel Campbell's debut is a fascinating, evocative fantasy with engaging characters that will leave readers eager for the next installment.
Romance
The Southern Charmer
by Janice Maynard
In The Southern Charmer, Janice Maynard returns readers to Blossom Branch, Ga., a charming small town where the hope of romantic second chances blooms.
Gabriella "Gabby" Nolan, a single, hardworking, 27-year-old accountant, hasn't had an easy life. Her mother was 16 and unmarried when Gabby was born. The closeknit pair always struggled to fend for themselves and to find a way out of poverty. While working in Atlanta, Gabby runs into handsome photographer Jason Brightman, an old crush from her hometown who left Gabby's best friend at the altar 18 months earlier. The meeting resurrects feelings from the past secretly rooted deep in Gabby's heart--and in Jason's, too.
Jason comes from a well-to-do family and always appeared to Gabby to be spoiled, someone who took all the sophisticated privileges of his life for granted. After the two share a car ride back to Blossom Branch, romance sparks. Gabby's emotions vacillate and she is forced to reassess her impressions of Jason's selfishness in the face of the vulnerable, caring goodness he's exhibiting now. Can she trust him?
As in Maynard's other novels in this tender, heartwarming series (The Runaway Bride of Blossom Branch; One Sweet Southern Summer), stereotypically stifling small-town living enlarges the worlds of her well-drawn characters. The love story in this endearing installment will greatly appeal to those already familiar with Blossom Branch and will win over new readers as well. --Kathleen Gerard, blogger at Reading Between the Lines
Discover: This endearing small-town romance reunites successful 20-somethings who have long-simmering feelings for each other.
Biography & Memoir
Pretend We're Dead: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of Women in Rock in the '90s
by Tanya Pearson
Call it a disappearing act: Why did the successful female alternative rock performers of the 1990s vanish from the mainstream by the early 2000s? Tanya Pearson (Why Marianne Faithfull Matters) handily solves the mystery in Pretend We're Dead: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of Women in Rock in the '90s. Assisting with the detective work are Liz Phair, Tanya Donelly, Tracy Bonham, and a dozen other 1990s alt-rock high-fliers whom Pearson has interviewed for her Women of Rock Oral History Project.
The backlash began in the late 1990s, as the feminism of male musicians like Kurt Cobain was supplanted by, as Pearson sees it, "overtly misogynist male rock stars, nu metal, teen pop stars, and boy bands." Shirley Manson, vocalist for alt-rock darlings Garbage, identifies another turning point: "It's a blanket fact that after September 11, nonconformist women were taken off the radio," a response to what Phair calls a "patriarchal patriotism" that sidelined girl rockers. What's more, the mid-1990s saw the beginning of the music industry's corporate consolidation, which hobbled college radio and other stations committed to playing female artists.
Pretend We're Dead is fiercely persuasive and should enlighten even readers who came of age with '90s alternative rock. Pearson, a historian born in 1981, frequently touches on her youthful delight at witnessing her subjects' musical ascendancy, and she toggles easily between academic observations ("Throughout American history... marginalized people are blamed for the collapse of American values thought to keep the country safe") and earthier formulations ("I fucking hate Limp Bizkit"). --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer
Discover: In Pretend We're Dead, Tanya Pearson handily solves a mystery: Why did the successful female alternative rock performers of the 1990s vanish from the mainstream by the early 2000s?
Wild West Village: Not a Memoir (Unless I Win an Oscar, Die Tragically, or Score a Country #1)
by Lola Kirke
When Lola Kirke and her three older siblings were being raised by their rock star dad, Bad Company's Simon Kirke, and their decorator/clothing designer mom, Lorraine, the question wasn't whether the Kirke kids would become artists but what kind. With the remorselessly oversharing Wild West Village: Not a Memoir (Unless I Win an Oscar, Die Tragically, or Score a Country #1), actress and musician Lola Kirke establishes her artistic bona fides as a writer.
When Kirke was four, she and her loud, loving, hating, fractious family moved from London to New York City. Kirke had all manner of creature comforts--Welsh nanny, Freudian therapist, Park Avenue hypnotist--but with the opulence came excess; at one point when Kirke was a teenager, "everyone in my family was either at Barneys, RISD, or rehab." Through it all, Kirke's sisters, actress Jemima and musician Domino, were her saviors, foils, and rivals.
Kirke puts her spin on the poor-little-rich-girl saga by skipping the pity party. Her book teems with raunchy stories that inevitably morph into vehicles for Kirke's spot-on self-deprecating humor, and when she goes for laughs that are in poor taste, it's with winking awareness ("She had stunted her growth through an eating disorder of her own, but the good kind that made you skinny"). By book's end, Kirke, who wrote Wild West Village at age 33, is onstage enjoying success in a creative field her parents never would have imagined for her--and in which her sisters are, finally, not competition. (Yet.) --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer
Discover: Lola Kirke's remorselessly oversharing Wild West Village teems with raunchy stories that inevitably morph into vehicles for the actress/musician's spot-on self-deprecating humor.
The Loves of My Life: A Sex Memoir
by Edmund White
Give it up for Edmund White's can-do attitude. "I have a small penis," he writes in The Loves of My Life, his unapologetic sex memoir, yet "I was stung from ten or eleven by sexual desire." A gay man born in 1940, he has reached an age where "writers are supposed to say finally what mattered most to them." His answer: "thousands of sex partners." This book is only 224 pages long, so a few of those gentlemen didn't make the cut. There's still a large cast here, starting with his "maniacal attachment" to fellow fifth-grader Nick, whom he would wrestle for hours, quickly discovering that it felt good "to rub our crotches against each other." That is, by far, among the book's tamer descriptions of intimacy.
More relationships follow, from the many times in his early teens when "I had sex with young dads in station wagons at the edge of Lake Michigan," to Rory, a half-Filipino "half a century younger than me." White (A Saint from Texas; City Boy) brackets these stories with sober firsthand accounts of gay history, triumph, and sadness, including the Stonewall Riots of 1969 and the friends and lovers who died of AIDS. But the bulk of The Loves of My Life is devoted to vivid descriptions of White's prodigious sexual appetite. As always, White is witty company, deploying a mostly "frivolous tone" yet displaying a gentler touch when writing about the struggle for equality. Readers looking for a spirited play-by-play of one author's satyriasis and a moving account of gay history will be captivated. --Michael Magras, freelance book reviewer
Discover: The Loves of My Life by Edmund White is exactly that: his account, in many short, well-written essays, of some of the thousands of sexual relationships he has had with other men over seven decades.
History
The Eurasian Century: Hot Wars, Cold Wars, and the Making of the Modern World
by Hal Brands
The 20th century's titanic struggle for supremacy in Eurasia--Earth's largest landmass--created the world of the 21st century and continues to rage, according to global affairs expert Hal Brands in his brilliant history The Eurasian Century. The Eurasian supercontinent and the oceans surrounding it were "the crucible in which the contemporary world was forged," and they remain "the cockpit of global rivalry," Brands contends.
Holding 70% of the world's population, boundless resources, and industrial might, Eurasia has always been "a prize without equal," the stage on which the drama of two "hot wars" (World Wars I and II) and one cold war played out. Brands unpacks the geopolitical factors that led to these conflicts through the percipient work of now-obscure English polymath Halford Mackinder (1861-1947), whose sharp and prophetic insights posited the nightmare scenario of "a world with a tyrannical Eurasia at its center." As "the march of technology shrank Eurasia's epic geography," Mackinder foresaw "the emergence of totalitarian states with industrial economies" that easily "fueled aggression and conquest" outward. But it was the alliance of liberal superpowers that allowed a "flanking free-world community" to contain bad Eurasian actors.
In the book's sobering second half, Brands draws chilling parallels between the past and the 21st-century authoritarian regimes of China, Iran, and Russia. "Geography shapes but strategy decides," he writes, and The Eurasian Century is Brands's cogent appeal to "learn the lessons of the first Eurasian century" to avoid the "return of history's horrors" in the second. --Peggy Kurkowski, book reviewer and copywriter in Denver
Discover: The long, violent century of Eurasian power struggles--with eerie parallels to rising Eurasian authoritarian regimes in the 21st century--is the focus of this sobering geopolitical survey.
Religion
Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza: A Reckoning
by Peter Beinart
Readers seeking a measured, globally contextualized understanding of the Israel-Hamas war will find much to ponder in Peter Beinart's Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza: A Reckoning. With characteristic directness, Beinart explains that his book is about "the story Jews tell ourselves to block out the screams," a narrative that allows Jewish people to justify the horrors committed in their name.
Beinart (The Crisis of Zionism; The Good Fight) is a New York Times columnist, professor of journalism and political science at the City University of New York, and editor-at-large of Jewish Currents. His family came to the U.S. as immigrants from apartheid South Africa. A steadfast promoter of equality over supremacy, he describes risking "excommunication" from his cherished American Jewish community to voice a new narrative of liberation created by abandoning the oppression of another people. Beinart employs historical examples, such as white people in the American South during Reconstruction who "considered racial equality a monstrous delusion," and Northern Ireland's Protestants who "were terrified" of sharing power with their Catholic neighbors, to illustrate political scientist Mahmood Mamdani's assertion that, over time, "inclusion yields safety" while domination breeds violence.
At the core of the disconnect between the atrocities being committed in Gaza and the apathy of "Jews in Israel and the diaspora," Beinart posits, lies a belief in the "collective victimhood and moral infallibility" of the Jewish people. Yet Beinart believes that this contradicts what "sacred texts say about Jewish ethical responsibility" and the dangers of "unchecked power."
Beinart takes comfort in "the metaphor of Jews as a family," despite deep ideological divisions, and is persuasive in his conviction that shedding the burden of occupation will make way for a new Jewish story. --Shahina Piyarali
Discover: Self-described "Jewish loyalist" Peter Beinart proposes a new narrative of liberation "based on equality rather than supremacy" and acknowledges that his ideas risk "excommunication."
Health & Medicine
Dare I Say It: Everything I Wish I'd Known About Menopause
by Naomi Watts
Menopause is having a moment in the spotlight after long being something women felt ashamed, scared, or ill-equipped to talk about. Part of this new attention is undeniably due to the efforts of actor and author Naomi Watts, elegantly enumerated in a foreword by expert Dr. Mary Claire Haver (The New Menopause; Demystifying Menopause). In Dare I Say It: Everything I Wish I'd Known About Menopause, Watts is frank and engaging as she investigates the subject from many angles.
Watts found that there was a dearth of information when she was assessed as being in perimenopause--the phase of years leading up to menopause--at the relatively young age of 36, while undergoing fertility treatments. She wondered why nobody had ever mentioned to her what menopause actually entailed, and she set out to destigmatize these kinds of conversations and provide clear, candid information and guidance: "I thought that by sharing our stories, we could one day live in a world where we've cut away all the stigma associated with middle age, and it's the norm to be fully, authentically ourselves at any age."
Watts shares anecdotes as well as the most current medical knowledge and studies, in straightforward, accessible prose. She covers all aspects of menopause and perimenopause, including libido, nutrition, and medical care. Readers will find something of use in every chapter, delivered with humor and the conversational style of a good, learned friend.
Dare I Say It strips away the social stigma surrounding menopause, and will be useful for anyone wanting a personal guide. --Elizabeth DeNoma, executive editor, DeNoma Literary Services, Seattle, Wash.
Discover: Dare I Say It, written in an entertaining and personal way,provides a much-needed discussion of menopause and perimenopause.
Children's & Young Adult
Chickenpox
by Remy Lai
In the sidesplitting, pitch-perfect middle-grade graphic novel Chickenpox by Remy Lai (Fly on the Wall; Pie in the Sky), eldest sister Abby suffers when she and her four rambunctious siblings catch the itchy virus and are forced to quarantine together at their home in Indonesia.
Twelve-year-old Abby's father has a work trip during the 10-day chickenpox lockdown, meaning Abby's mother is left alone with five sick children between the ages of three and 12. Abby has "all the responsibilities of a big sister," which include caring for and entertaining her "zombie"-like brothers and sisters. The full-fledged tween counts down the days in "the maximum security zoo" and bemoans that "even though I have big sister responsibilities, my parents still treat me like a kid." Yet when Abby's two best friends witness her explode at her relentlessly bothersome siblings, they label her as immature and ostracize her.
Lai's storytelling expertly pairs honest narration and lively dialogue with spirited illustrations that are both funny and achingly relatable. The author/illustrator depicts the siblings in various states of chaos, including as boxers in a ring and as wild animals roaming free. Abby narrates, "My siblings always take my stuff. From my toys... to my dignity... to my sanity." The text accompanies an illustration of Abby leading her youngest brother through a crowd of teens as he proclaims, "I NEED TO WEE-WEE!"
Chickenpox is based on real events from Lai's life growing up in Indonesia in the 1990s. Anyone who has ever struggled with raucous siblings or lived through the social and emotional struggles of adolescence should empathize with Abby and her siblings. --Kieran Slattery, freelance reviewer, teacher, co-creator of Gender Inclusive Classrooms
Discover: This hilarious and relatable middle-grade graphic novel depicts a tween girl taking care of her four siblings while they're all quarantined with chickenpox.
Everything Is Poison
by Joy McCullough
The riveting Everything Is Poison takes place in 17th-century Rome, "just across the river" from the setting of Joy McCullough's extraordinary debut, Blood Water Paint. This novel is less harrowing but no less affecting.
When she turns 16, Carmela Tofana is finally permitted to learn the secrets of her mother's apothecary shop. With those secrets come hard-won lessons as Carmela creates and dispenses all manner of tonics and balms. But "the amount Carmela has never considered about the world, about the hair-thin lines people walk every day, knocks her off-balance with each new person she helps." These include Violetta Raso, Carmela's nemesis, who purchases a love potion and returns for a remedy to its results; Eleonora, a sex worker stabbed by a man who didn't want to pay; Nina Santori, Carmela's childhood friend, now pregnant with twins; and Patrizia Moretti, who claims to have "every ache and pain under the sun" because what she truly wants is a cure for her violent but influential husband. When Carmela makes a fateful error in judgment, the consequences threaten not only the future of the apothecary but also the lives of the Tofana women.
McCullough skillfully reveals the origins of the apothecary shop and the women who work there, imbuing her historical novel with a moving sense of its characters' individual but intersecting backstories. Carmela's lessons at the shop are fascinating; even better is the camaraderie and warmth among its workers and customers. McCullough portrays some of life's most gut-wrenching challenges, but she doesn't make Carmela face them alone. In her powerful novel, an open heart proves the ultimate cure. --Stephanie Appell, freelance reviewer
Discover: In Joy McCullough's riveting and affecting historical novel, 16-year-old Carmela Tofana learns the secrets of her mother's apothecary shop alongside gut-wrenching life lessons.
Toto
by Hyewon Yum
Hyewon Yum specializes in illustrating uplifting picture books centered on brave young girls who discover their strength--in a big swimming pool (Saturday Is Swimming Day), within their small bodies (Not Little), and so on. In that triumphant vein, Yum has written Toto, in which a little girl comes to terms with a prominent birthmark that preoccupies her without defining her.
"Sometimes I wonder," begins the girl, who goes unnamed, "how I would look without Toto," as she calls the bubble-gum-pink birthmark on her forehead. She has never really minded the mark--her cousin Charlie thinks it means she has a superpower--but she's nervous about it in the run-up to the first day of school because "sometimes people only see Toto, not me." Her mother gives her a hairstyle that largely hides Toto, and at school the girl immediately finds a bosom buddy who has no idea of Toto's existence... until the girl hangs upside down from the monkey bars, gravity tugs at her bangs, and her secret is revealed. Now what?
Yum's watercolor-and-pencil art is invitingly roomy and subdued: it's all browns and grays except for the girl's birthmark and the occasional burst of pale pink--the color of her face, say, when she's embarrassed by Toto. And sharp-eyed readers will note that Toto is on proud, pink view in photos of the girl scattered around her home. Toto is an it's-okay-to-be-different book that leaves room for realistically mixed feelings about standing apart. --Nell Beram, freelance writer and YA author
Discover: This it's-okay-to-be-different picture book, centered on a little girl with a prominent birthmark on her forehead, leaves room for realistically mixed feelings about standing apart.
As You Wish
by Nashae Jones
In the delightful and droll middle-grade fantasy As You Wish by Nashae Jones (Courtesy of Cupid), a 13-year-old Ghanian American must face the unforeseen consequences of three wishes granted to her by a trickster god.
Birdie attended her first day of kindergarten wearing "latex gloves that stretched up to [her] elbows." Since then, her mother's anxiety has remained consistent, making it hard for Birdie "to just live like a normal kid." Luckily, Birdie has next-door neighbor and "bestie for the restie," Deve. Both are starting eighth grade and Birdie is determined to "make her mark." So, she needs a boyfriend--and, since she and Deve do everything together, he needs a girlfriend. But this suggestion makes Deve upset. Nancy, the new girl at school, reveals to Birdie that she is "Anansi, god of stories and knowledge" and can give the teen three wishes. Birdie is skeptical but hopes wishes can fix her relationship with Deve. However, every wish makes Birdie's situation increasingly worse. How can Birdie maneuver through the tangled web she's woven?
As You Wish is a sweet fantasy that faultlessly portrays the difficulties and delights of tweenhood. Jones approachably discusses mental illness, with Birdie explaining, "my mom was different, and it wasn't her fault, but that didn't make dealing with the fallout from her anxiety any easier." The author also gracefully ties West African culture and mythology into her contemporary novel with stories of Anansi tricking people throughout the years at the start of each chapter. As Birdie deals with the outcome of each wish, she begins to understand that one's life may already be great as it is. --Natasha Harris, freelance reviewer
Discover: In this sweet and funny middle-grade novel a Ghanaian American teen discovers wishes may result in surprise outcomes.
After Life
by Gayle Forman
Gayle Foreman's After Life is an engrossing portrayal of grief and healing that revolves around a teen hit-and-run victim who comes back from heaven, hell, or "the whatever" and realizes that the lives of her loved ones have been drastically altered by her death.
Seventeen-year-old Amber Crane, "a white girl with honey-colored hair," realizes she's unsure of the day as she rides her bike home from school. When she arrives, Amber learns that she has been dead for seven years. Her at-the-time nine-year-old sister, Missy--now blue-haired and called Melissa--is almost the age Amber was when she died; Amber's mom freaks out and her atheist dad is now a believer and certain a miracle has occurred. Worse, her parents have separated, her "forever" boyfriend is a bartending, "druggy loser," and her once-close Aunt Pauline is now estranged and living in New Zealand. As Amber struggles to understand why she's come back, she begins to appreciate how her life--and her death--had far-reaching effects: on her friends, the school photographer, an English teacher, even a woman who works at a nearby pet shelter.
After Life tackles love and forgiveness, interconnectivity, and the possibility of a "different sort of existence" tangential to life and death. Foreman (Not Nothing; If I Stay) uses flashbacks to enrich Amber's narrative and also weaves in past and present accounts of family members, as well as people who seem at first to be only marginally involved. Earnest and absorbing, After Life describes how one individual may touch the lives of many, in life as well as in death. --Lynn Becker, reviewer, blogger, and children's book author
Discover: After Life is a graceful, thought-provoking read revolving around a teen hit-and-run victim who mysteriously returns from the dead seven years later.
January Stars
The Writer's Life
Will Taylor: Magic Has a Cost but Always Seems Like a Bargain
Will Taylor |
Will Taylor cast his first spell when he was 10 years old and has yet to be carried off by a dragon, so it seems to have worked. He is a reader, writer, and honeybee fan, and lives in downtown Seattle. When not writing, he can be found searching for the perfect bakery, talking to trees in parks, and completely losing his cool when he meets longhaired dachshunds. His books include Maggie & Abby's Neverending Pillow Fort, Catch That Dog!, and The Language of Seabirds, which won the Washington State Book Award for Books for Young Adult Readers.
The School for Wicked Witches (Scholastic, $7.99 paperback, ages 8-12) is the first in an ongoing series of adventures following a West Oz witch named Ava Heartstraw, whose magical abilities are deemed too wicked for traditional school, so she is sent to a foreboding academy filled with other wicked witches. Book Two in the series will be released on February 4, 2025.
The School for Wicked Witches takes place in a future Oz, hundreds of years after the events most of us know and love. How did you go about balancing a familiar world with fresh ideas?
I gave up on the idea of trying to re-create what others have done. Oz is such a thoroughly explored territory, but it's also still fresh and vibrant. One thing that struck me about L. Frank Baum's Oz books was how he kept adding on characters and lore with a kind of giddy abandon. It's not like Tolkien where history builds on itself in a highly methodical and cyclical way around a core conflict. Exploring Oz feels more like channel surfing--in a good way--so there's plenty of room for new versions to join the party.
Is magic difficult to write, to make it believable?
It's incredibly difficult. Magic that's too convenient will ruin the story, but it's got to be useful and used often. Magic must have strict rules and limits and follow them to the letter, and it should always come with a price.
From an entertainment point of view, it's also essential that it be aspirational. You want the reader to wish they had the powers they're reading about, like Tinabella's running-in-place invisibility. As a kid that was my favorite part: the thrill while reading A Wizard of Earthsea of imagining what it would be like to call a hawk down out of the sky or summon a magewind. Magic has to come at a cost, but it should always seem worth the bargain. It's definitely a balancing act!
I highly recommend J. Elle's A Taste of Magic and Claribel A Ortega's Witchlings series for examples of magic done absolutely right.
Is there a secret to pacing out a series like this?
One thing I do very deliberately is leave myself crumbs I can play with later. All the odd little details in their first tour of the school in book one, for instance, were me giving myself a stockpile of material to bring back as needed throughout the series. Pre-placing in an off-hand way lets you get away with using it later, since the reader already has a memory of that one weird room or hidden door or random accordion. It's a bit like sprinkling clues in a detective story.
I thoroughly resonated with Ava Heartstraw, whose ambition and self-doubt tug on her every step of the way. How did that character form as you wrote?
I knew right from the start Ava's core character conflict was her determination to show that she doesn't belong at the School for Wicked Witches, no matter how many rules she has to break to prove herself good. That stubborn, cheerful certainty shares strong similarities with Maggie in my first book, Maggie & Abby's Neverending Pillow Fort, and Eilonwy from Lloyd Alexander's Prydain series, which was fundamental to me as a kid. I loved Eilonwy for her bossy confidence and I absolutely see her influence on Ava, though I tempered it with self-doubt for reader sympathy.
Seeing Ava realize she's completely out of her depth socially when she gets to school, then mess up hard in a cascading series of failures--all that lets us root for her as she starts to gain real power.
What part of the book did you have the most fun writing?
In book one, it would have to be the introduction to Vivienne Morderay at the circus. I knew I needed to refresh the tone around that point in the quest and she was so dramatic and villainous and unbelievably silly. She kept surprising me. I had a blast writing her.
Then for book two, absolutely the Moldy Horse. As I say this, I'm realizing he's a lot like Vivienne: a breath of fresh air right when the book needed it, a silly, adult-lite figure with a ridiculous way of speaking who leads the cast down an unexpected path. I guess I have the most fun writing comically confident disruptor characters! That's probably good for me to know about myself as an author.
What do you think about our continued fascination with wickedness and our love of a villain redemption story?
I think we're fascinated by structures of power and the individuals who find ways to wield it. Misrule is something that we find both threatening and entertaining, maybe because we like to imagine what we would do in that situation. One of my favorite scenes in The Lord of the Rings is when Sam is briefly tempted by the evil ring and imagines turning Mordor into a garden, striding over the hillsides of beautiful flowering plants in all his noble might. Everyone's vision of what they would do if they allowed themselves to be wicked is unique. I think that's why it's fun to look at a person's image of their grand, divine self. If they could do whatever they wanted, and they had all the power in the universe, what would they do?
That's one of the core questions laced through this series: Is there something fundamentally wicked about having power over other people and using it? What if it's unearned, like a child born into magic? Ursula K. Le Guin, my favorite author of all time, brought that up in an essay about writing A Wizard of Earthsea, which she said came together for her when she realized, "A child with power is an idea that contains worlds."
The School for Wicked Witches is a silly fantasy romp at heart, but I hope it contains worlds, too. I've had a great time getting lost in Oz, finding the overlaps with earlier stories and the footprints from other realms that have slipped across the borderlands. Book three comes out next September, happily, so there are plenty more bouncy adventures ahead! --Dave Wheeler, senior editor, Shelf Awareness
Book Candy
Book Candy
Mental Floss considered "the surprisingly literal reason we call letters "uppercase" and "lowercase."
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"Forgotten" sites linked to Jane Austen are featured in new trails villagers in Overton have set up in places the author would have known, the Guardian noted.
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Kumanaki Kage (Clear Shadows) is an 1867 book of Ochiai Yoshiiku's silhouette portraits that also includes short biographies, picture riddles, and poems. (via the Public Domain Review)
Rediscover
Rediscover: Michael Longley
Michael Longley, a Belfast poet "of exceptional poise and eloquence--but with a sardonic streak to temper his technical accomplishment," died January 22 at age 85, the Guardian reported. "For more than half a century, Longley was an exemplary practitioner of the art of poetry, and, in his later years, something of a 'grand old man' of letters."
Longley's many books included The Echo Gate (1979) and Gorse Fires (1991), which was the first of nine full-length collections appearing between 1991 and 2022, "all displaying an increasing mastery and depth of feeling (alongside a robust repudiation of what the poet labelled 'mad dog shite,' in work or in life). Each new collection drew a round of applause for its continuing 'subtlety, emotional power and rhythmic and musical resource,' among other virtues," the Guardian wrote. Longley's latest collection, The Slain Birds (2022), "exemplifies his undying preoccupation with nature and natural forces." Ash Keys: New Selected Poems was published in 2024 to coincide with his 85th birthday.
A member of the Irish Association of Artists, Aosdána, he was appointed CBE in 2010. For many years, Longley worked for the Arts Council of Northern Ireland as combined arts director. He was a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a recipient of the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry. He won the Whitbread Prize in 1991 for Gorse Fires and the T.S. Eliot Prize, the Hawthornden Prize, and the Irish Times Poetry Prize in 2000 for The Weather in Japan. He also received the Librex Montale Prize, the Wilfred Owen Poetry Award, the Yakamochi Medal, the International Roma Prize, and in 2015 the international Griffin Poetry Prize. In 2022, he was awarded the Feltrinelli International Poetry Prize for a lifetime's achievement.
Describing Longley as "a key figure in contemporary poetry," the Bookseller quoted Robin Robertson, his long-standing editor at Jonathan Cape: "I knew and admired Michael Longley's poetry before joining Secker & Warburg in the late 1980s, and so it was an honor to work with him on his books from Gorse Fires in 1991 until his new selected poems, Ash Keys.... Not that I had to work very hard, as every poem was close to perfect."
When Longley was presented with the PEN Pinter Prize in 2017, chair of the judges Don Paterson said: "For decades now his effortlessly lyric and fluent poetry has been wholly suffused with the qualities of humanity, humility and compassion, never shying away from the moral complexity that comes from seeing both sides of an argument."
FROM #1 NYT BESTSELLER MARISSA MEYER |