American Animals: A True Crime Memoir
by Eric Borsuk
This is Erik Borsuk’s true crime confession
about a few college lads that decide to burglarize their university’s library!
What could you possibly steal from a library you might ask…well this
library had a few rare books worth millions. I can’t wait to see how this
heist caper turns out. P.S. A librarian gets shot with a Taser gun!
For fans of: Assassination
Vacation by Sarah Vowell; The Man Who
Loved Books Too Much by Allison Hoover Bartless
The City We Became
N.K. Jemisin
I became enamored with Jemisin’s writing
after reading her three-time Hugo Award-winning Broken Earth Trilogy. Here she
leaves The Stillness behind and heads to New York City. While the setting might
be familiar this go-around, the story appears to be wholly unique. The city is
gaining sentience, and five New Yorkers have been chosen to become avatars for
each borough and protect it from an alien threat.
For fans of: Trail of Lightning
by Rebecca Roanhorse; The City by
Dean Koontz
Cool Town
Grace Hale
When people think of alternative music, they
usually picture Seattle, Washington. This book takes a detour down to Athens,
Georgia where the true birth of alternative music quite possibly took place.
Along with bands like the B-52s and R.E.M., author Grace Hale was there when it
all happened in the late 70s and early 80s, and promises the book will be a
perfect blend of her own memories and a music historian’s diligent research.
This one should be irresistible to all the music nerds out there.
For fans of: Girl in a Band by
Kim Gordon; Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl
by Carrie Brownstein
The Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives in
Your Home
Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor
The creators of the popular podcast “Welcome
to Night Vale” reveal to fans the thrilling life of one of the most mysterious
characters from the show, The Faceless Old Woman Who Secretly Lives in Your
Home. I’m especially interested to listen to the audiobook read by Mara Wilson
of “Matilda” fame who also voices the character on the podcast.
For fans of: Midnight, Texas
by Charlaine Harris; The Watchmaker of
Filigree Street by Natasha Pulley
The Glass Hotel
Emily St. John Mandel
A strange and compelling story of people
linked by a remote hotel in the Pacific Northwest. Fascinating characters and
an intriguing but scattered plot that meanders all over the place. Difficult to
pin down what it’s really about—trust, lies, luck, disappearances, the general
uncertainty of life—but nevertheless a pleasure to read and hard to put down.
For fans of: A Visit from the Goon
Squad by Jennifer Egan; Fates and
Furies by Lauren Groff
A Good Neighborhood
Therese Anne Fowler
Heartbreaking to read and think about. We all
want to live in a good neighborhood, but what does that really mean? The author
throws a lot of heavy stuff into this novel, with lines of tension running
under everything. Race, environment, ambition, privilege, abuse, double
standards for men and women, activism, all the things.
For fans of: Ask Again, Yes by Mary Beth Keane; Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng
The Henna
Artist
Alka Joshi
Seventeen-year-old Lakshmi leaves an abusive marriage and becomes
the most requested henna artist. There she learns secrets and gossip from the wealthiest
women. She must tread lightly to avoid jealous gossip that could ruin her.
For fans of: Dominicana by Angie Cruz; The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh
The Light in Hidden
Places
Sharon Cameron
Based on a
true story of Holocaust heroine Stefania Podgorska, a 16-year-old Catholic
girl. Stefania hid 13 Jewish people in her attic with an SS officer that lived
adjacent to her for months. A tense and gripping novel, full of urgency, in
which death seems to wait around every corner.
For fans of: The Librarian of Auschwitz by Antonio Iturbe; Mapping the Bones by Jane Yolen
Recollections of my Nonexistence
Rebecca Solnit
"To have a
voice means not just the animal capacity to utter sounds but the ability to
participate fully in the conversations that shape your society, your relations
to others, and your own life." In her new memoir, Solnit (Men Explain
Things to Me) reflects on the events that helped her to find her own voice in a
world and profession dominated by men.
For fans of: Hunger: a Memoir of (My) Body
by Roxane Gay; We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Valentine
Elizabeth Wetmore
Amazing debut. Tells the
story through the voices of several women and girls in Odessa, Texas, a town
where the oil flows freely but so do racism, sexism, hatred, anger, and fear. A
young Mexican girl is beaten and raped by a white oil worker and everyone takes
a side. Mostly the young man’s side.
For fans of: The
Mothers by Brit Bennett; Salvage the
Bones by Jesmyn Ward
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