Showing posts with label YA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA. Show all posts

Monday, September 15, 2025

Historical Fiction

The Quiet LibrarianThe Quiet Librarian by Allen Eskens
I'm always sceptical of books with the words 'library' or 'librarian' in the title (eyeroll), because it feels a little pandering. However, this EXCELLENT book actually has very little to do with either of those things -other than being a quiet librarian is the perfect way to hide in plain sight. For Hana Babic, this is extremely important, because she has a bounty on her head. And when her best and only friend, Amina, is either tossed/falls/jumps from her balcony, Hana is forced to relive events from 30 years past in a desperate attempt to understand what danger might befall her.
You see, Hana was born in Yugoslavia, and came of age when the Serbian-Bosnian conflict exploded. Initially a victim, Hana becomes a soldier for vengence until she lands in the U.S. under a false name. Chapters alternate between present day and the 1990s, and although this sounds like both a mystery and an adventure story (it is, indeed, both!), it's mostly a story about the impact of war and what we will do for love. Highly recommended!


West With GiraffesWest With Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge
If you're looking for a sweet and pleasant story to read, West with Giraffes might be the way to go. Set in the Dust Bowl years, it centers on Woody Nickel, an orphaned teen who escapes the Texas panhandle after his last family member dies, and heads to New York. There, he finds the adventure of a lifetime when he somehow gets involved with transporting the San Diego Zoo's first pair of giraffes cross-country on a bumpy journey to their new home.
Some of the characters are based on real people, but the best story centers around the fictional Woody, a female photographer named Augusta, and the beautiful giraffes. To learn more about the actual giraffes this story is based on, Zoo Walks Through History.

The Frozen RiverThe Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon
Ariel Lawhon brings us the perfect blend of history, mystery, and Maine locale in The Frozen River. Martha Ballard is a midwife in Hallowell, Maine in the late 1700s, and in her role as medical professional, she gets drawn into two separate, ghastly crimes. An intelligent woman, she knows if she can put all the pieces together, justice might be done. But to just let it lie? A dangerous situation when one of the accused is a local judge who seems to be involved in shady enterprises on more than one front. A true bonus of reading this book in winter while living in Maine is that you can look out your window and easily imagine the unfolding drama that takes place over one very long, very cold season on the Kennebec River. Definitely worth 5 stars, and do be sure to read the Acknowledgements, they're brimming with interesting factoids about Martha, the real midwife whom this character is based on.

JamesJames by Percival Everett
I usually don't care for adaptations of classical novels, it feels like cheating and rarely does the second author come close to touching on the genius that made the first author a classical writer in the first place. But Percival Everett's retelling of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn from the slave Jim's point of view is nothing short of brilliant. In fact, reading both novels together would enhance the humor and dark injustice in both tales.
In Everett's version, Jim puts up a front to reassure the whites that he is harmless and simple minded, such as all slaves must do. His interior dialogue shows him to be erudite and well-read, a dignified man who identifies as James. When he runs away to avoid being sold, he links up with Huck Finn and the adventures begin. While the ensuing shenanigans mirror the action in Twain's book, James's perspective casts a pure light on what life in Mississippi must have really been like at that time. This book could revolutionize teaching American Literature!

One Day in the Life of Ivan DenisovichOne Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Considered ground-breaking at the time, Solzhenitsyn's fictionalized account of the daily horrors of life in the Soviet gulag opened the world's eyes to what was happening to the Russian people at the hands of their own government. (Solzhenitsyn, himself, was sentenced to 8 years in the gulag for writing a criticism of Stalin in a letter -this after serving with honors during WWII in the Soviet army!) In this novel, we meet Ivan Denisovich on a typical day during an endless sentence at a Siberian prison camp. His matter-of-fact delivery of injustices and depravations is a marvel of human endurance and a testimony to the vigors of the human spirit. Also, though, it's startling to read about the callousness and cruelty that people will dish out to each other -how many times do we need to see this illustrated for us, across the spectrum of human cultures, to understand that we are part of a very flawed race? To learn more about Solzhenistyn, his battle with cancer, his exile, his conversion to Christianity, his awesome 1978 commencement speech at Harvard, and his Nobel prize: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Center

The LionessThe Lioness by Chris Bohjalian
There's something to be said for maintaining a sense of suspense throughout an entire book. One good way to do it is to be ruthless with your characters -but that rarely happens. I get it. If you go to the trouble of conjuring up this fascinating ensemble of folks to people the pages of your novel, you'd probably feel pretty protective of them. However, Bohjalian suffers no such compunction, which is what elevates this story.
When Katie Barstow, her new husband David, and a host of friends and family decide to go on photographic safari in Africa, it seems exciting, yet safe. The year is 1964, Katie is a wealthy actress, and no expense is spared on hiring the best guides available for the trip of a lifetime. However, when kidnappers descend on the party, there's no limit to how badly things can and do go wrong. And that plethora of challenges -scorching heat, predators, cold-blooded criminals-leave the reader biting their nails as you wonder if anyone will be left alive. And that's not even including a few deadly secrets that some of the members of their party are hiding... A mesmerizing read!

The Snow HareThe Snow Hare by Paula Lichtarowicz
I wasn't sure about this being a 5 star book at first, but the story deepened in emotion and meaning as it progressed, until it totally captured my heart. Lena is a Polish girl who only wants to be a doctor, but with the advent of WWII and a series of other tragic events, her dreams go unfulfilled. Misery seems to beget misery, culminating in her family's exile to the harshness of a Siberian workcamp.
But throughout the story, Lichtarowicz has juxtaposed small chapters of Lena's future life, hints about what she has endured and what happiness is yet to come. The pastiche of memories holds the threads of a fairy tale ending, in that through the pain and desolation, there is always something or someone to rejoice about. The Snow Hare gives us a piece of history that is rarely written about, and shows us the importance of tenderness and memory amidst the harshness of life circumstances, and the incredible power of forgiveness and grace.

The Snow Fell Three Graves DeepThe Snow Fell Three Graves Deep by Allan Wolf
Allan Wolf is a great historical fiction author, and certainly the story of the Donner Party is compelling, but....BUT. I had to drag myself through the book because putting a humanized face on this cannibalistic tragedy made for a very difficult read. Most particularly, because Wolf used alternating narrators, and many of the voices were children. So. Well written but hard to categorize as 'enjoyable'.

 

The Lincoln Highway by Amor Towle
Amor Towles' way of turning a phrase make his books true rare pleasures.  
"Time is that which God uses to separate the idle from the industrious. For time is a mountain and upon seeing its steep incline, the idle will lie down among the lilies of the field and hope that someone passes by with a pitcher of lemonade. What the worthy endeavor requires is planning, effort, attentiveness, and the willingness to clean up."
This story of two brothers (one recently out of juvenile lockup, one only 8 years old) undertaking an arduous trip to find their mother after their father has passed away is certainly on par with all the heroic journeys from antiquity -perils, betrayal, yearning, derring-do.  And like Greek myths of old, the story is less about the destination than it is about all the steps it takes to get there.  Also, as you get to know Emmett, Billy, and their assortment of friends and acquaintances (Woolly, Duchess, Sally, Ulysses, etc), the underlying theme that it's all just about living life resounds in their words and actions.
I would read anything by Towle because I enjoyed this novel and A Gentleman in Moscow so very much.

 

Thirteen Doorways, Wolves Behind Them AllThirteen Doorways, Wolves Behind Them All by Laura Ruby
Although the narration of this story, undertaken by a ghost who haunts an orphanage, takes a bit of getting used to, the unfolding drama of Frankie Mazza's life from 1941-1946 is worth the extra effort. Frankie and her two siblings are sent to an orphanage after the death of their mother because their father isn't able to care for them. It's a rough life which grows lonelier when their father remarries and moves away, taking his son but leaving his daughters in the institution. Pearl, the aforementioned ghost, has quite a story of her own to recount as she tries to figure out why she hasn't passed on to the other side yet. Both tales are replete with courage, betrayal, grief, love, and friendship. Best line in the book, "Why does the world want girls to be beautiful, only to punish them for it?'

Lovely WarLovely War by Julie Berry
If a tale that involves unrequited love, war, death, injury, infidelity, and racism could be called sweet and poignant, than this is the one. In 1942, Hephaestus catches his wife, Aphrodite (goddess of love) cheating with his brother, Ares (god of war) and decides to put them on trial to see what they have to say for themselves. Speaking in her own defense, Aphrodite weaves the story of Hazel and James, a pianist and a soon-to-be soldier who meet in 1917 only two days before he is shipped out to fight in the Great War to show that love and war are often intrinsically linked.
Shifting perspectives between the gods and the very human lives that they are impacting, the reader becomes captivated with the young lovers and some friends they meet along the way. Hazel goes to France to volunteer and meets a young Belgian girl, Colette, who has lost her whole family and village to the Germans. Aubrey is a member of the 369th, an American unit of all Black soldiers who also have the finest military band, led by one of the finest conductors in the U.S. Although all four of them encounter hardships, there is hope and joy in their stories. The trial of Aphrodite and Ares also brings some surprises of its own. I can see why Lovely War was listed in the Teens' Top Ten for 2020!

Deacon King KongDeacon King Kong by James McBride
I love James McBride because he always writes about those things that bring us together instead of what separates us. This story, about love, intrigue, crime and passion in a NYC neighborhood circa 1969 is uplifting as well as funny. As President Obama said about the quality and worth of McBride's writing, he "humaniz(es) the complexities of discussing race in America.” 
The titular deacon is a handyman at an apartment complex in a NYC neighborhood, as well as a gardener for a mobster's aging mother, a baseball coach for the kids in the complex (an ex-player whom has chosen to deal drugs), and a pretty ardent drunk. One day, the deacon strolls up to (or drunkenly staggers up to) the dealer and shoots him for wasting his God given baseball talent, a chain of events is set off that involves organized crime, drug pipelines, revenge, and a hidden treasure secreted somewhere in the neighborhood.  The church and its congregation play a pivotal role in this disparate cast, and lots of humor is discovered in what could be a morbid and depressing situation.  Of course, unguessable outcomes are the best, and the twinklings of love that unexpectedly come to pass lend this story heart.



The Water DancerThe Water Dancer by Ta-Nehisi Coates
This is a really good piece of historical fiction about a man named Hiram, who is a slave in Virginia in the mid 1800s. Hiram has a photographic memory, but despite this he has managed to block out the last day he saw his mother. This is significant, because the day his mother was sold (when Hi was only 9), left him without family -except for his father, the plantation owner, and his brother, also White. Hi is buffeted by forces much more powerful than himself: a culture of slavery and White superiority/Black subjugation, a robust Underground that he is destined to cross paths with, and the mysterious power of Conduction that lies within him undiscovered.
Coates does an excellent job at tapping the emotions Hiram struggles with, as well as delicately conveying the horribleness that surrounded the practice of slavery. Moreover, he addresses the complications that arise when a slave owner takes advantage of a female slave, resulting in a child. How could anyone look at their son or daughter and consider them property, something from which they could glean financial gain? What kind of relationship could one possibly expect from such beginnings? Well done.


A Gentleman in MoscowA Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles
Truly one of the best books I've read in a while, a lyrical chronicle of the life of Count Alexander Rostov after he is sentenced to house arrest at the Metropol Hotel by the new Soviet government following the Revolution of 1917.
Erudite and gentlemanly, Count Rostov "masters his circumstances so that they don't master him", showing an elegant adaptability that saves his life as well as his soul. Alexander is reprieved from a death sentence by a pro-Revolution poem he had published in his youth, but he is declared a non-person and is never again to leave the doors of the Metropol, a hotel that has always catered to the rich, powerful, and aristocratic. In his new situation, Rostov lives in the attic and leaves behind the perks of his earlier life, while retaining his decency, charm, and joie de vive. A wonderful and uplifting example of how to survive and even thrive under terrible circumstances, and also a beautiful story of how the love we share with others in any iteration-romantic, paternal, fraternal,etc-is our saving grace.

 The Half-Drowned King (The Half-Drowned King #1)The Half-Drowned King by Linnea Hartsuyker
Oaths and blood feuds, shield walls and raiding, this 12th century depiction of a fledgling Norway is so adventurous and exciting, you'll wonder how anyone survived to tell tales of the Vikings. Ragnvald is a young sailor/raider who barely escapes a murder attempt by his captain, only to find he must fight to regain his lands from his treacherous stepfather, all while the legendary Harold struggles to become the first king of a united Norway. Alliances shift on a dime, and the plight of being a woman is sharply brought into focus by Ragnvald's sister, Svanhild, who refuses to be tucked away safely and ends up in the clutches of Ragnvald's archenemy. A compelling read that reminds me of the excellent show The Last Kingdom about the Dane invasion of the British Isles and Alfred the Great's rise to power.



34313931A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum
The juxtaposition of two Palestinian-Americans, a mother and daughter, who are both caught between the old world devaluation of women and their desire for freedom and happiness. In 1990, 17 year old Isra is given in marriage to Adam and finds herself relocating to Brooklyn from Palestine, dispossessed of all that she knows -except for the devout Muslim view that she is to quietly stay at home, serve the men and her mother-in-law, and have (hopefully) male babies. There is no room in Isra's life for love, desire, dreams, or joy.
Moving forward to 2008, Deya at 18 is the oldest of Isra's four girls. Untenably, she is also expected to conform to an arranged marriage, with no possibility of college, career, or romance. Both Adam and Isra died when Deya was only seven, so she is denied the understanding and compassion that her mother would surely have given her. However, Deya is determined to rebel, and thus finds that there is a secret shrouding the circumstances of her parents' deaths.
The lifestyle that Isra and Deya experience would be anathema to most American women; codes of silence and shame, subservience and honor. The missing component is love, which isn't to say that all women in their circumstances are deprived of it; this family is a tangled up knot of obligation and anger. A novel that gives a voice to those who desperately need to be heard.


The Silence of the Girls

The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker
In ancient Greece, women were portrayed by male voices as either beautiful prizes or evil witches, or simply and anonymously as slaves and drudges.  In this retelling of the siege of Troy, the story is flipped to focus strictly on the story through the eyes of a woman -Queen Briseis, who is enslaved to Achilles after her city is overtaken by the Greeks.  The manly heroes might shine gloriously on the battlefield, but as witnessed by the women in the camps, they are beastly, demanding, and self-obsessed.  Many are rapists, and a scant few are worthy of love. Briseis is obedient to Achilles, and even finds some things to admire about him, but refuses to soften to the man who killed her brothers and father.
Achilles does value Briseis, though, and when Agememnon demands her 'company', Achilles refuses to go to battle -with dire consequences.  Though Briseis is a pawn in a man's game, her voice comes through strongly as she struggles to survive.

The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
Imagine a world so cruel that people are arbitrarily forced into labor and tortured, raped, and murdered if they don't comply. That part is (unfortunately) a matter of historical truth. Colson Whitehead intriguingly melds fact with fiction as he explores the pre-Civil War South through the eyes of Cora, a slave escaping from the Georgia plantation where she is in imminent peril from her new master. Where he chooses to weave new fictional details into this terrible time is an underground railroad that is actually underground -hidden tunnels squirreled away and managed by conductors who assist runaways to freedom. The railroad is a saving grace for Cora more than once, as a dogged slave catcher named Ridgeway is obsessed with seizing her and bringing her back to captivity. What he doesn't count on is her truly indomitable spirit -Cora is an epic heroine who bears the souls, hopes, and dreams of many as she makes her way, inch by inch, toward freedom.
(Winner of the Pulitzer Prize 2017, National Book Award 2016)

Walk on Earth a Stranger by Rae Carson
In 1849, Leah Westfall and her gold miner parents reside in a panned-out Georgia when the news comes: prospectors are getting lucky out in California, and a new Gold Rush is about to commence.  Leah possesses a secret ability: she can 'sense' when gold is near.  Before she and her parents can consider what this means for them, tragedy strikes and Leah is on her own.  Forced to flee malevolent forces, Leah becomes Lee and decides to travel out West alone, disguised as a boy, hoping to meet up with her best friend, Jefferson.
At first I was a little put off by the 'girl disguised as boy' trope, and the magical gold-sensing ability.  But this is actually a very well-written and plausible book that captures the pioneering spirit of the mid-1800s.  Leah is a sensible girl who is more likely to rescue someone else than be in need of rescuing. The trek to California is full of pitfalls and threatening situations, especially for a teen-aged girl, which makes for an engrossing read. (Longlisted for the National Book Award)

Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders
This is a tricky book to describe, but let me start with 'bardo'.  The bardo is a Tibetan Buddhist term for the state the soul enters after death, before rebirth. In Western cultures we might be more familiar with the idea of 'purgatory'.  The death in question is that of Willie Lincoln, who tragically died of Typhoid Fever when he was 11 and his father was President of the United States. There are a plenitude of stories that talk about Lincoln's presidency, and others that touch on the effect his child's untimely death had on him -this is not one of those stories (not exactly).  First we are introduced to the souls currently residing at the cemetery where Willie is laid to rest -conflicted beings who don't understand that they are, in fact, dead.  Their stories are interspersed with chapters that contain snippets from books and historical documents -some of which are real, some of which were concocted by the author.  Put everything together and you get a multiverse of the events surrounding Willie's death: his bewilderment at his new situation, his father's grief, the purgatorial remnants who try to assist Willie on his journey, and a nation caught in a bloodbath of a war that is sure to fill the bardo to the brim.  This story reminded me of The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis, another intriguing look at life after death. George Saunders has a unique voice, humorous and kind to his characters, even when they are very flawed. An intriguing look at how Lincoln might have been influenced in some of the choices he made. (Winner of the Man Booker prize)

All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
Werner is an orphan growing up in German mining country in the '40s. Despite an impressive aptitude for science (radios in particular), his outlook is bleak until he catches the eye of a Nazi officer. Marie-Laure is a girl in France, living with her beloved father, who is the locksmith and key maker for the National Museum of Natural History. Despite going blind at 6, Marie-Laure has a rich life and her father devises ways to circumvent her disability. Primarily, he constructs a miniature version of Paris so that Marie-Laure can feel her way around the model city, learning the routes before venturing out to into the real world. As Werner and Marie-Laure grow into young adulthood, their paths will collide in wholly unexpected ways. 
This book reminded me of "The Book Thief" (another excellent read) in that these children growing up in war-torn Europe are warmly and richly brought to life. Doerr paints so vividly with words that the reader feels as if they themselves have fled to St. Malo, as if they are being conscripted by the Hitler Youth, as if they are charged with saving a 133 carat diamond from the greedy hands of the Nazis. When Marie-Laure cups a shell in her hands, you will feel the cool, smooth curves for yourself. Truly deserving of the Pulitzer.

The Invention of Wings by Sue Monk Kidd
I didn't realize until after I had finished this that the two main characters, Sarah and Angelina Grimke, were actual historical figures. The Grimke sisters were outspoken abolitionists in the 1820s and 30s whose impassioned pleas to end slavery came from the dark reality that they grew up in a prominent South Carolinian home with slaves and were both strongly affected by the cruelty and injustice of the 'peculiar institution'.
In this fictionalized account, the story switches between Sarah's voice and that of a slave, Handful, who is gifted to Sarah on her 11th birthday by her rather coldhearted mother. Sarah rejects the idea of owning another human, but she is told that she will and she'd better accept the situation. Sarah counters by secretly teaching Handful how to read (in real life, Sarah actually did teach her handmaid reading and writing), an unlawful act that brings dreadful retribution on both of them when it is discovered. Sarah never does accept her place in Charleston society, but finds her calling as a Quaker in Philadelphia, and eventually as a voice crying out for freedom.
Although Handful is purely fictional, her unflinching character is brought wholly to life by Ms. Kidd, and it is her story that really touched my heart. Handful endures so much loss, humiliation, pain, and yet she never gives up and never accepts that she is lesser than the whites merely because of the color of her skin. Her devotion to her family and her intelligence highlight the absurdity, the hubris of anyone daring to claim another human being as their property.
I would highly recommend this novel, followed by reading the actual pamphlet Angelina Grimke wrote as a plea to the women of the South to end slavery: An Appeal to Christian Women of the South

Friday, May 30, 2025

Realistic Fiction

Unsettled GroundUnsettled Ground by Claire Fuller
At first this story, which opens with a woman suffering a fatal stroke, felt unnecessarily grim and quotidian, and I regretted picking it up. Essentially, Jeanie and Julius, 51 year old twins in rural England, are left bereft when their mother dies. As they live in abject poverty, Jeanie has a heart condition, and Julius is unemployed, there's no hope in sight. Sigh. But it is so worth reading past this, because there are secrets, lies, gunshots, illicit love, and other twists awaiting you. Every life, it seems, no matter how banal it might look from the outside, is a kaleidoscope of emotions and events that only really make sense to that person. A beautiful glimpse into the resilience of the human spirit.

How to Read a BookHow to Read a Book by Monica Wood
I originally picked this book up solely because it was by a Maine author, but -oh my!- what a lovely book it is, by any measure. Three people know of each other because a terrible act was committed. Violet killed Frank's wife while drinking and driving. Harriet is the retired teacher who runs Violet's prison book group, and Frank has seen Harriet in the bookstore where he has worked part-time since retiring as an engineer.
Violet gets released early, and with little else to do with her time, she goes to the bookstore to get a copy of the book that she was reading with Harriet. As fate would have it, both Harriet (a lonely widow) and Frank (who feels his heart flutter every time he sees Harriet) are there. An initial cataclysmic encounter slowly evolves into healing relationships for all three. A gentle, optimistic book, with the bonus of parrots thrown in (sorry, you have to read that part for yourself!), enhanced by the familiar landscape of Portland.

I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of DoomI'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom by Jason Pargin
I loved this book because I'm a real fan of Jason Pargin's New Weird SciFi (such as Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits. It's not only the storyline, although that's very good. He also has a lovely sense of the absurd, and a flare with dialogue. Abbott, a twitch streamer/uber driver, is offered $200k by a mysterious girl to drive her and eponymous 'black box of doom' cross country to the DC area by July 4th. Abbott is not allowed to bring his phone or computer, and doesn't even have time to refill his anxiety prescription (uh-oh!) before they set out -with a tattooed goon in full pursuit. Abbott streams one final message before he leaves, but doesn't know that it has gone viral. Thousands of online users repost, conspiracy theorize (what's in the box? nuclear bomb, dead body, the next pandemic?), and decide it's time to get involved IRL to hilarious results.

What really sends this novel over the top is the spot-on commentary about how we live in an online society that is slowly driving humans further and further apart, while simultaneously driving us all mad.
Pargin writes, "After several minutes of searching, Tanisha found what seemed like a good place to ask about the fugitive couple: a secion of Angry Nerd Internet specifically devoted to cracking the case. She had to create a Reddit account to post the photo she'd secretly snapped of the pair, adding a second pic she'd taken just moments ago of their fancy SUV. She waited, refreshed, then was flattened by the ferocity of the response. The commmenters acted like she'd captured the second coming of Jesus Christ on film. She was inundated with questions, accusations of having faked it, and criticism that she hadn't taken some kind of action to keep the couple from leaving the store. Within 6 minutes of the post, a reply told her that if a bomb detonated in Washington, every drop of blood would be on her hands."

The Secrets We KeepThe Secrets We Keep by Cassie Gustafson
 I don't often find YA books that are really well written these days, so I was pleasantly surprised to be totally engrossed in the story of Emma Clark, a high school freshman who is desperately grasping at the fraying edges of her life, all while attempting to hold in a big, ugly secret.
Emma, an excellent student and attentive big sister to 6 year old Kyle, abruptly is told that her father has been arrested -because of an accusation from her best friend, Hannah. Although the attentive reader can immediately guess where this is going, Ms. Gustafson fills in the details slowly and without sensationalism. Emma's relationship to her father and mother, as well as Hannah and Kyle, rings true. Mom is an angry, hostile woman with a disappointing marriage, dad is glib, charming(until he isn't anymore), and untrustworthy. The friendship between the two intellectually gifted teens is sweet and lacking in pretension, even as they navigate the schism that has erupted between them. Realistic, dark, yet hopeful. I would highly recommend!

Libby Lost and FoundLibby Lost and Found by Stephanie Booth
 This is an intriguing premise -wildly successful and reclusive children's author Libby Weeks (a la J.K. Rowling) suffers writer's block and memory issues as she tries to finish the last book in her hit series, "The Falling Children". She desperately reaches out to a superfan for help, but what possible aid could a confused and socially awkward 11 year old offer? Also, a million dollar prize is offered to whomever can reveal Libby's secret identity and her huge fan base is impatient for the book to finally get published, so the pressure is building.
There's a lot going on, but the pieces eventually come together (more or less). I guess my reservations with the book are that while the characters are supposed to be odd but lovable, they're more odd and less lovable. Too many complex problems, too few believable solutions.

The Wedding PeopleThe Wedding People by Alison Espach
Phoebe and Lila are about to become best friends, but they don't know each other yet. Lila has booked the Cornwall Inn for the wedding week to end all wedding weeks, and Phoebe is the lone guest at the inn who isn't one of the wedding people. When she gets pulled into Lila's (bridal) wake, it proves to be a life-changing event for all kinds of people. This book is dense with so many genuinely charming characters, but I particularly was rooting for Phoebe to overcome her hurdles. The Wedding People is an intriguing commentary about how we are possibly most ourselves when we have nothing left to lose, and how devastating loss doesn't have to mean the end of happiness in our lives.

Pet

Pet by Catherine Chidgey
Extraordinary story from Catherine Chidgey- I highly recommend for anyone who likes psychological twists and an unexpected ending!! Justine is a 12 year old girl navigating her last year of school before hitting high school. As if it weren't difficult enough to puzzle your way through puberty and first crushes, Justine must do so without her mother, who died of cancer less than a year before.
Now, add a new element to the story. Mrs. Price, her teacher, is beautiful and charismatic and all the students (including Justine) are constantly vying to be her favorite. But..is Mrs. Price a savior or a manipulative demon, casting her net of persuasion and division over Justine and her classmates? Put it this way: when items are stolen from the classroom, Mrs. Price gives each student a slip of paper and encourages them to write the name of the student who they think is responsible so she can out them. Diabolical! And not, by far, the worst thing that Mrs. Price will do. Did I mention that Justine's father was an eligible widower????

GatherGather by Kenneth M. Cadow
Ian's family has fallen on tough times, and he and his mother struggle with getting by. Things are about to get much worse for them, but what should enter into Ian's life but a gigantic stray dog? Why is this pertinent to the situation, or even to this book? Gather, the eponymous dog, is the one thing Ian can rely on, and Gather is also totally reliant on Ian. Their friendship provides a warm center to a tragic story, one that will, unfortunately, resonate with many young adult readers. Other points that will sound familiar to rural kids (this story takes place in Vermont) are family farms, hunting, solace in nature, and (I hope) finding a compassionate adult at school to provide assistance. I very much look forward to recommending this coming of age story to reluctant readers in my school!


Remarkably Bright CreaturesRemarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt
I must admit, I haven't been reading many challenging books this fall. Instead, I've been going for the cozy, warm read. Remarkably Bright Creatures certainly fits that description as it features a tidy little woman in a tidy story with a very neat ending. Tova is an elderly woman, alone after the death of her husband from cancer, and mourning the disappearance of her son 30 years ago. She fills her extra time with a group of friends who call themselves the Knit-Wits, and a job cleaning the local aquarium. Interspersed with Tova's story is a narrative by the aquarium's aging octopus, Marcellus. Marcellus is, of course, much cleverer than the humans give him credit for, and he is able to connect the dots on events unfolding around him much better than the oblivious and self-absorbed humans. The magical realism of Marcellus' voice is sweet and really helps pull Tova's story together. However, as I said, don't go looking for any revelatory concepts about life here, just be satisfied with getting to know some very endearing characters.

The Dog of the NorthThe Dog of the North by Elizabeth Mckenzie
Don't let Elizabeth McKenzie's whimsical writing style and superb wordsmithery distract you from the poignancy of the deeper issues she addresses. Although this highly recommended read was laugh-out-loud funny, it also dealt with deeper issues of loss, divorce, isolation, childhood trauma, and illness. Does that sound incompatible? Meet Penny, our heroine (for whom the bizarre is also quotidian), "..I took careful hold of the bloated milk carton and chucked it into the dumpster, wherein it exploded like a stink bomb. Peering over the side, I observed a spray of curds in a halo around the ruptured vessel. What a relief that it hadn't erupted in the van during the night! That I had avoided being covered with sour curds surely counted as the day's first success."
Penny needs all the help she can get as she navigates her divorce, her parents' disappearance, a new friend who might or might not resemble a hedgehog, and a grandmother who is suspected of sociopathic activity. 5 Stars all the way!!


The Rabbit HutchThe Rabbit Hutch by Tess Gunty
Phenomenal story about a girl named Tiffany (self-named Blandine, after a Catholic female mystic) who is struggling to make sense of her life, especially a toxic encounter that has derailed her future and unmade her. Blandine lives in a decrepit apartment complex called La Lapiniere -the Rabbit Hutch. And, much like a real hutch, the building is packed with a host of mindless individuals in various stages of life and various states of apathy, depression, and violence. There are definitely shades of Watership Down here, as well as Ian McEwan.
Aside from the artistry required to entertwine so many different stories and metaphors into one cohesive whole, Tess Gunty couldn't have written about more timely themes, as seen in this fabulous article from Iain McGilchrist: Left-brain thinking will destroy civilisation. At the heart of it, though, Gunty writes beautifully about intentions, actions, misgivings, and transcendence. She definitely earned the Nat'l Book Award!

Night of the Living Rez

Night of the Living Rez by Morgan Talty
It's nice to have an Indigenous writer from the Northeast join the pantheon of celebrated Native voices currently out there: (Louise Erdrich, Sherman Alexie, Stephen Graham Jones, Joy Harjo. In this series of short stories, we see life in a Maine Indigenous family through the eyes of a boy and a young man. It's not perfectly clear that these are the same person, but I think we can assume they are.
In any case, we are introduced to a community that not many are privy to -in fact, most readers will not have heard of the Wabanaki before. Some of the issues will have a familiar ring to them, such as substance abuse and poverty. But Talty liberally sprinkles in the details of what makes his character's experience unique to a Penobscot. Language, family dynamics, and customs are fleshed out with the vivid descriptions of life on Indian Island. An excellent companion piece would be Women of the Dawn, particularly the chapter on Molly Dellis.
*Talty won the National Book Critic Circle Award for John Leonard Prize, 2022

BeneficenceBeneficence by Meredith Hall
 Eloquently written story about a Maine farm family in the 1950s who experience a divisive, tragic event and their arduous efforts to get back to their previously good and happy life. Tup and Doris run the family farm and have three children; the narration swings between the two of them and their daughter, Dodie. Each individual blames themselves for the incident, and each navigates a very different pathway to recovery. Tup struggles to think of himself as a 'good man'. Doris cannot seem to connect with the world anymore and drifts through, mired in the past. Dodie's determination to experience a good life again, 'beneficence', is heroic. Essentially, a prototype of how different perspective colors our memories of the past, our hopes for the future, and our ability to fully engage in the present.
It's a rarity to come across an author who writes so poignantly and whose words become so translatable into the reader's daily life. I'm grateful to have never gone through an ordeal like the Senter family's, yet I find Meredith Hall's observances and descriptions to be fully applicable to my own setbacks and struggles. I would liken her style to Amor Towles, another fabulous author who encapsulates his characters' thoughts and feelings in a universal way. As Ms Hall writes, "We will ourselves to live this day grateful and unguarded. We decide. We make ourselves ready to participate in beneficence and goodness. There is no peace outside that."

Don't Know Tough

Don't Know Tough by Eli Cranor
 A surprisingly complex YA book that tackles child abuse, addiction, accountability, and the pull and power of high school athletics in small town America. Billy is a very talented running back on the local football team -but can he keep his rage and violent tendencies in check? Trent is the coach, and while he truly does his best to live a Christian life, will he be able to when it counts the most? These questions will both beg for answers when a life is snuffed out, either by accident, negligence, or murder. Very, very suspenseful, and enough sports references to keep the athletically minded fully engaged. 



Other People's ClothesOther People's Clothes by Calla Henkel
Another book exploring the vacuity and self-serving behavior of the morally hollow, narcissistic young? Well, kinda. But also an examination of the dangers of being impressionable and directionless, which is Zoe's achilles' heel. Zoe, a college student who has just lost her best friend to murder, is adrift for several reasons. One of which is that she was so attached to Ivy that she often imitated her style of hair and dress -and even ends up dating Ivy's ex-boyfriend. Not the most psychologically stable person, Zoe's escape from reality via exchange year as art student in Berlin morphs into her forming other unnatural attachments, and when unstability meets unstability meets unstability, it's an explosive combination of carnage that results. Ostensibly a tale of two girls immersed in a hedonistic year abroad, this is also very much a murder mystery and the last third of the book draws many elements together for a surprising ending. Excellent!

Now Is Not the Time to PanicNow Is Not the Time to Panic by Kevin Wilson
This is a really intriguing coming-of-age story, mostly because it presents the events that happened one summer to 16 year old Frankie in a completely nonjudgmental, unbiased way. Sort of, here, this happened, then that happened, and we're not going to decide whether it's good or bad. The jist is that Frankie and her new friend, Zeke, decide to make a poster with a curious and meaningless phrase layered over an equally curious and meaningless drawing. They then surreptitiously paper the town with hundreds and hundreds of photocopies of this image, and it takes off like wildfire. No one can figure out who did it, and it leaps into the national press. Is it the work of a cult? A political movement? What does it mean? Unfortunately, the fever drives some people to bad choices, and there are consequences, including the irrevocable rending of Frankie and Zeke's fledgling friendship.
Flash forward 2o years, and the secret is finally about to be exposed. Is this a good thing for Frankie, or will it spell disaster? A great YA novel about keeping your perspective in life when all about you are losing theirs.

Winter in Sokcho

Winter in Sokcho by Elisa Shua Dusapin
Delicate, descriptive, and metaphorical, Winter in Sokcho speaks volumes about loneliness, desolation, and suffering.
A young Korean-French girl works at a tatty guesthouse in Sokcho, right on the border with North Korea. The winter setting, her absentee and vacuous boyfriend, and the yearning she feels when a French artist comes to the guesthouse for a stay are a melancholic feast of words. Beautifully done. 



Unlikely AnimalsUnlikely Animals by Annie Hartnett
Annie Hartnett has cemented her place on my list of favorite authors with this humorous and poignant novel about a New Hampshire family dealing with brain disease, failed potential, missing persons, and the opioid crisis. Doesn't sound very funny, does it? Annie's light touch and whimsical take on serious issues is her magic touch. Speaking of which, let's talk about the story. Emma heads for home to help take care of her dad, afflicted with hallucinations and memory issues, which seems like a natural fit, since as far as her family knows, Emma is in med school. Also, Emma was born with 'the charm', the ability to heal with her touch, albeit only minor illnesses. What her family is about to discover is that Emma never went to med school, she's lost the charm, and she doesn't particularly want to come home as she's nursing a grudge against her father and doesn't want to deal with her brother -a recovering addict.
Add to the mix that her dad is obsessed with finding Emma's missing ex-best friend, another opioid addict. Her mother has had it with her dad's shenanigans, Emma's status as golden girl is tarnished, her brother is resentful, and yet..it all comes together with a beautiful mix of wryness, loveliness to each other, and the surprise life-changing event of Emma subbing for a 5th grade class. Absolutely 5 stars!

Building Stories

Building Stories by Chris Ware
I had this on my to-read list for years, so I was very excited when I finally picked it up.  If you're not familiar, this is a box full of graphic stories that are interrelated, the common denominator being residence by several protagonists in a particular Chicago apartment building.
Cool concept, but absolute maelstrom of material, in no discernable order. I would donate it to my library, but random inappropriate drawings, not particularly apropos to the story lines, abound. I feel like I tried to read this while on the teacup ride at Disney!



The Other Mother

The Other Mother by Matthew Dicks
There is a logical explanation for why Michael Parsons believes his mother has been replaced by an identical imposter -but is it the correct one? This marvelous novel really captures the voice of Michael, an extremely likeable (albeit troubled) 14 year old boy, and explores this very issue. Michael obviously has some deep-seated emotional issues stemming from the early death of his father,his mother's subsequent quick remarriage, the grind of adolescence, and a lot of responsibility for his younger siblings. When Michael finds one day that he no longer believes that his mother is his real mother, he sets off on a quest to find some answers -and ends up affecting some of the lives around him in unexpected ways. A very enjoyable read.

 

Girl A

Girl A by Abigail Dean
Loosely based on (I'm assuming) the nauseating case of the Turgeon Family , Girl A is the story of Lex, a survivor of horrendous abuse and neglect. In a family ruled by an insane, violent father and a traumatized and passive mother, seven siblings are reduced to starving near-corpses, wallowing in filth, until Lex at 15 years of age somehow makes a break for it and goes for help. After rescue, the children are all referred by pseudonyms to protect their anonymity, and thus Lex becomes Girl A.

Flashing back and forth between her nightmare of a childhood and the current day, Lex tries to act as the executor of their parents' estate after her mother dies in prison-while also grappling with memories she doesn't want to relive, and contact with siblings she would just as soon forget.

This isn't a true crime recounting, but a perching inside the headspace of someone so traumatized that it's hard to know when details are exaggerated or perhaps even glossed over. Really excellent writing that leaves lots of unanswered questions about whether one could ever truly recover from something like this.

Raft of Stars

Raft of Stars by Andrew J. Graff
This book is an emotional investment in two ten year old boys, Fish (Fischer) and Bread (Dale), caught up in the grip of a situation that is bigger than they are. Bread is the victim of abuse at the hand of his father, but things come to a head when Fish steps in and takes action. A shot rings out, and events inexorably cascade until the boys find themselves on the run in 90 miles of Wisconsin wilderness. Graff effectively brings these boys to life without either making them precious or wise and capable beyond their years.
Equally compelling are the adults who spring into action to rescue the boys. Fish's mother and grandfather are joined by Cal, the sheriff, and Tiff, whose connections to the others is vague but plausible. They are flawed but ferocious in their determination to find these boys before it's too late. No kidding, a real page turner!

The Queen's Gambit

The Queen's Gambit by Walter Tevis
A captivating story about a young orphan, Beth Harmon, who turns out to be a chess prodigy. Told in a starkly clear style, Beth moves through a somewhat troubled life with one focus: becoming a grandmaster. I don't play chess myself, so I didn't make much of an effort to understand the passages that detailed the games she played. Nevertheless, this was an insightful glimpse into the mind of a savant, and so therefore fascinating.

 

The Boy in the FieldThe Boy in the Field by Margot Livesey
Excellent novel about the repercussions that result after a trio of siblings find the victim of an attack lying in a field. Naturally we would expect that anyone who has been assaulted would have their life upended, but what about those on the periphery? For Duncan (13 yrs old), Zoe (16), and Matthew (17), their perspective on the world around them shifts slightly when they spot an injured and bleeding boy on their way home from school one day. In the aftermath, they each begin questioning their views on love, the future, and family. One thing that remains solid is the affectionate and respectful relationship that the three share with each other -it's a beautiful thing to read. Themes of mother/child bonding, beauty, and passion thread through the story, lending a warm patina.

Dear EdwardDear Edward by Ann Napolitano
Reading a book depicting a plane crash with 191 fatalities and 1 survivor is probably not the best way to begin the bleak month of March. I couldn't tell if Napolitano's writing was compulsively easy to glide through or if I was just deperate to make the sadness end. In either case, a well-done, albeit grief-filled story about 12-year old Edward picking up the pieces of his life after his family is killed in the accident and he incomprehensively survives. Juxtoposing Edward's passage toward emotional and physical healing in the aftermath with an hour by hour narrative of the flight through different passengers' eyes, the reader gets a full sense of the tragedy that has occurred. Your heart will be heavy, but all hope is not lost. A testament to our ability to mend, rebuild, and continue on, even when the future seems insurmountable.

A Children's Bible

A Children's Bible by Lydia Millet
 There's something so haunting about children who are older than their years, who are forced by circumstance to become parents to themselves, their siblings, or perhaps even their own parents. In this book, we meet a large coalition of such children, narrated through the voice of Evie, a precocious teenager whose world-weariness is earned honestly from parents who are profligate in their indulgences. The situation at first seems idyllic: a group of old friends rent out a magnificent mansion on the coast for a summerlong, hedonistic reunion. Dubbed a 'multi-family vacation', the dozen or so children are quickly relegated to the periphery whilst the parents party down. The kids resort to their own devices, but are still clearly far more mature in their antics than any of the older generation.
And then: the world falls apart. A horrific hurricane, fueled by the unstable climate, leads the kids to make a life-changing decision to flee their neglectful parents and strike out for parts unknown, all in the interest of finding safety and relieving themelves of the burdensome adults. Evie focuses on saving her little brother, Jack, whose copy of A Children's Bible(fraught with its own series of apocalyptic events) provides solace of a kind.
There are some interesting parallels that form between the kids' circumstances and events in the Bible, if you are familiar enough to pick them out. Really, I believe that Millet, an ardent environmentalist, is trying to point out that whether you believe God placed us here on Earth or not, we have but one home and our self-centeredness is breaking the world as we know it. Highly recommended!!
 

Everywhere You Don't BelongEverywhere You Don't Belong by Gabriel Bump

A frank and sincere portrayal of an African-American boy named Claude, growing up on the South Side of Chicago. Claude is not: a gang member, drug user, victim of unspeakable crime, superior athlete, or chess protege. He is, in fact, just a guy trying to live his life. Sometimes that means parents leaving, sometimes that means narrowly escaping a riot, sometimes it means falling in love or leaving for college. Always, it means that, black or white, kids deserve the opportunity to find out who they are and what they're made of. There's a lot of humor and sorrow in Claude's well-written tale, underscored by this stark truth:
"Of course, I knew. I understood the difference between how society treats misbehaving white teenagers and misbehaving black teenagers. Those parties on frat row-just turn it down, bring it inside; those black kids arrested for smoking weed in a parking lot. Those cashiers in the campus grocery store looking at me walking down the candy aisle; those white students pocketing beer cans without hesitation." Highly recommended for high school readers. 

 

Such a Fun AgeSuch a Fun Age by Kiley Reid
Reid relies so heavily on stereotypes that it was hard to think of her characters as having real lives. Her somewhat wooden descriptions about their pasts didn't help, "Kelley Copeland was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania. He had an older sister who had one child, and two younger brothers who worked in the same post office (as) his father. Kelley made a huge effort to avoid screens after ten p.m."
Nevertheless, she does a great job of showcasing that we can make such assumptions about the motives, emotions, and desires of the people we know that it makes it very hard to discern who we're really dealing with. Although this has been marketed as a book that addresses the racial divide, it also confronts differences in social classes, upbringings, and Millennial mindset, and how our own experiences color the interactions we have with others.

Trust ExerciseTrust Exercise by Susan Choi
Taking place in the '8o's at a performing arts high school, this is the story of a group of teenagers dealing with love, passion, and adolescence, exacerbated by the high drama of their involvement in the theatre program. Or is it?
While the first half of the book depicts a tumultuous romance between sophomores Sarah and David (with some pretty tawdry and unnecessary sex scenes), An abrupt shift midway reveals that the first half was a novel written by the now adult Sarah, and her frienemy "Karen", as she is named in the novel, has a bone or two to pick with her about the veracity of the tale. Namely, Karen feels that the story somehow glosses over a few devastating events that shift the tone from young love to victimhood, narcissism, and tragic aftermath.
Honestly, I thought the first half of the book was fine as it was, but didn't necessarily see the story's worth as a National Book Award winner until the voice changed to Karen's, and we start to understand all that we didn't previously comprehend. This book leaves a lot up to the reader's interpretation and would yield a fantastic discussion for a book group.

My Dark VanessaMy Dark Vanessa by Kate Elizabeth Russell
The starkest contrast between this book and Lolita is the point of view. Although there is still a predatory man and a vulnerable girl, it is an entirely different scenario when witnessed through her eyes instead of his. I never could make it through Lolita without tasting bile in my mouth, but Vanessa conjures up a different feeling, one of sadness and pity instead of pure revulsion.
Vanessa is a girl/woman with a joyless, loveless life.  As an awkward, angry 15 year old, she had trouble feeling love for herself, and that made her ripe for the plucking by Strane.  Strane's claims of loving her and being pulled into a relationship by her are utter B.S.  He carefully gleans her from the other students in order to get what he wants-innocence, trust,dependence, malleability.  He didn't love her, he loved that he had absolutely control over her -body and mind.  He brainwashed her into protecting him at all costs, and she thought that was what love felt like, because her understanding of love was so sparse.  Ah, that's heart-wrenching. Mostly, these are two people who don't like or love themselves very much and are seeking validation from outside sources, which never ends well. Vanessa at 32 is a shadow of who she might have become, frozen in time and unable to come to grips with what she has anesthetized herself into believing was her first romance.
Reading this has helped me to understand more why this story replays itself over and over again between adolescent girls or boys and pedophiles all over the world.  This story is so well written, you would swear it was autobiographical, although Russell takes pains in the foreword to assure us that it is not.




Unclaimed BaggageUnclaimed Baggage by Jen Doll
This is a sweet story about three kids: Doris, Nell, and Grant. They work together at a store called Unclaimed Baggage, which sells the contents of lost luggage that the airlines auction off when it goes unclaimed for too long. The deeper story is that all three of the teens have their own baggage: Doris has unexpectedly lost a beloved aunt, and she is also dealing with an issue that occurred when she was twelve. Nell was forced to move to Alabama from Chicago after her mother takes a new job, and has left behind a boyfriend she loves and misses greatly. Grant's story is the one that ties it all together; he is a star football player who is grappling with the fact that he's probably an alcoholic. Although sometimes it feels like the girls are a little too good to be true, and the loose ends tie up maybe a little too easily, this is a beautiful story of the power of friendship and understanding.
 

Forward Me Back to You by Mitali Perkings
40864849This is a heartwarming story about a group of high school kids going to Kolkata, India for 10 weeks over their summer break to work with a group who helps victims of human trafficking. Handled very delicately, the scenario highlights not only the tragedy of sex slavery that is pervasive worldwide, but also the issues each of the students brings with them. Robin 'Ravi' Thornton was adopted by white American parents after being abandoned in Kolkata. This is his first time back, and he's hoping to find his birth mother. Katina, a jiu jitsu student, is struggling in the aftermath of an assault that makes her very leery of any males. Gracie is looking for a change from her life of often being the caregiver to her younger siblings. They all find a deeper understanding of their place in the world, even if they don't always find what they were looking for. Nicely done.



Ask Again, Yes by Mary Beth Keane
Pick a family and you'll find a set of incidences that have shaken it to its core: illness, poverty, substance abuse, violence, loss. And a truism that follows family dysfunction is, as Keane writes, "We repeat what we don't repair". In this soulful novel, two neighboring families are linked initially because the husbands are both NYC cops, then because two of their children become inseparable friends. A long simmering problem erupts in a spasm of violence that leaves both families shattered and estranged. Until...Kate and Peter, the aforementioned friends, find their way back to each other in young adulthood, drawn together by a love that each refused to give up on.
This isn't a simple love story by any means. This novel beautifully demonstrates the way love, forgiveness, and perspective provide the tools to overcome almost anything. I particularly enjoyed the way different characters were able to grow beyond the adversity of the past, not because of any spectacular insight or awakening, but simply because (as in real life) they endured and came out of their hardships stronger, and more cognizant of the frailty of those around them. Truly an inspiring read.
 


The Overstory by Richard Powers
I wanted to love this book: Trees! Environmental Warriors! The Pulitzer! Forgive the pun, but this is a book I can only describe as 'wooden'. The first half introduces us to no less than nine separate protagonists, and if that's not enough, the nine different trees that profoundly affected them and led them on their inevitable path to activism. The stories are as slow growing as a white cedar. By the way, the white cedar is the slowest growing tree, and that's just the kind of scintillating fact that's sprinkled throughout the tales of the humans. I get it, the point is that we are all intrinsically intertwined and dependent on each other for the health and future of our planet.
The pace continues to decelerate in the second half of the novel -just as the characters are coming together and the action, such as it is, starts to happen. If long, drawn-out futility sounds like a fun read to you, by all means dive in. If you're interested in a story that uses magical realism to more effectively underscore the way all of nature is related and connected, maybe try Sweet Lamb of Heaven



Aftermath by Kelley Armstrong
Skye's life fell apart after her brother was killed in a school shooting. But Luka wasn't a victim, he was a shooter, and one of the students gunned down was the brother of her best friend/crush, Jesse. Flash forward three years and Skye is moving back to the town that her family fled in the aftermath of the tragedy. Her Dad is gone, Mom is clinically depressed, her grandmother is very ill, and she hasn't seen or spoken to Jesse since the incident-but she's still convinced that her brother was innocent.
Skye is shocked to find that Jesse -previously a straight A student-is troubled and struggling. When she finds herself the victim of a series of cruel pranks and bullying at school, she and Jesse team up to find out what really happened that day, but it seems that someone will do anything to keep the past buried.
This is a timely subject for a mystery, and highlights how an act of violence victimizes many people, including the family of the shooter.


Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng
The Richardsons are a family living in Shaker Heights, OH in the '90s.  The suburb was originally built in the early 1900s to attain a black and white kind of perfectionism, based on rigid rules.  Although life is fairly good here, it is also pedantic and predictable.  Elena Richardson, the matriarch, is the living embodiment of everything that Shaker Heights stands for, which works out okay with her first three kids, but sets her at odds with her youngest, the impetuous and fiery Izzy.
A catalyst enters the picture when Elena rents an apartment to an artist named Mia, a tumbleweed of a person who brings with her a teenaged daughter, Pearl, and a past loaded with secrets.  Pearl finds the Richardsons'  lifestyle intoxicating after the ragtag existence she's accustomed to.  Lexie, Moody, and Trip Richardson all become entangled with Pearl, Izzy is fascinated with Mia, Elena struggles to control everyone and everything, and the swirling mass of churned up emotion will result in huge life changes for all of them.
Desire, envy, and jealousy are well-expressed in this story, but there is very little true warmth or love between characters.  A side story about a white couple attempting to adopt a Chinese baby who was abandoned by her mother is difficult to empathize with because the adoptive mother is cold and entitled and the biological mother seems unable to take care of herself, let alone an infant. 
The point of the book seems to be to highlight the difficulties experienced in the mother-daughter relationship, and how sometimes those we are closest to are the ones we know the least. Perhaps a little of 'love conquers all' thrown in there, too.  However, the story left me despairing for women everywhere, because if these are typical relationships for females, then we have a lot of work to do.


Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward
Jojo is a 13 year old boy in Mississippi who's trying diligently to figure out how to grow into a man of substance.   His elderly black grandfather, whom he lives with, is working hard to make ends meet while taking care of his cancer-stricken wife. Pop is a good man, but he struggles with the accidental death of his own son, and chaotic life of his meth-addicted daughter Leonie, Jojo's mother.
His white grandfather despises him for his color and has never acknowledged his existence. Jojo's father, who is also white, is currently serving time in a state penitentiary for drugs. Things come to a head when Michael is released from the pen and Leonie decides that the family (she, Jojo, and his younger sister, Kayla) will go upstate and pick him up -a happy reunion that will turn out to be anything but.  The story gets a little complicated when a ghost enters the picture.  This 13 year old boy was actually imprisoned with Pop, back when they were kids.  Their only crime, a ugly reality of life in the South, was being black.  This magical twist blends well with Jojo's awakening sense of who he is, and who he wants to be.



Almost Perfect by Brian Katcher
Since a benefit of reading fiction books is gaining empathy and understanding of others' lives, this would certainly help someone who is confused about what it means to be transgender.  Handled sensitively, but not with any pat answers, Brian Katcher gives us a snippet of the life of a teen who feels she is a girl despite having been born male.  A precarious situation occasionally tips to a dangerous place when a straight male friend falls for Sage before learning that she is still anatomically male.  I'm not sure that many straight teen guys would be as open to the relationship that takes place between these two star-crossed kids, but perhaps.


Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain
Better than anticipated...Billy Lynn is an war hero, one of the few to survive a brutal assault on his unit when it's stationed in Iraq. Their 'reward' is a media-blitz Victory Tour that ends at the Dallas Cowboys' stadium. There is a gaping contrast between what civilians at home celebrate as 'heroic' and what soldiers in the field have experienced. Excellent book!







Dumplin' by Julie Murphy
This book was very cute, and I don't mean that in a derogatory way. Lots of young adult fiction tries to be cutting edge, writing about the issues, using 'teen' language, and it often turns into a bit of a sludge, and feels false. Dumpling addresses some real life concerns (body image, loss, relationships) and it feels authentic.  Willowdean, is a happy girl who is trying to figure out why a cute, popular boy has a crush on her when she is self-described as fat. She decides the way to break through her self-doubt is to enter the beauty pageant (run by her mother, a former beauty queen who's obsessed with looking 'perfect'). Read this book only if you're prepared to smile to yourself while doing so.
Soon to hit the movie theatre: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4878482/

Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
Eleanor might be a social misfit, but her wry observations about manners, conventions, and the inexplicable ways people relate to each other all bear the seeds of truth. Her isolated and damaged childhood has left her a stranger in a strange land, until a friendship springs up between herself and Raymond, the IT guy at her office. This is a vast oversimplification, because I don't really want to recount the plot (although it was marvelous), but I want to focus on Honeyman's wit and beautiful use of language. You will see words used in this book (tagine, numerate, epistolary) that have disappeared from the common vernacular, and gems of wisdom ("weak people fear solitude") as well as pithy descriptions (people dancing at a party appear to Eleanor to be "free-form jigging") that will result in laughing out loud. I would compare Honeyman to another favorite author, Karen Joy Fowler. If you enjoyed "Eleanor Oliphant", be sure to pick up We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves. Kudos for all the Sense and Sensibility allusions!


Maybe I Will by Laurie Gray
Very quick read, about a student who is violently victimized and doesn't know where to seek help. I'm not sure the rapidity with which the victim sank into alcohol abuse was plausible, but very, very, very clever twist by not letting the reader know if the main character was male or female. Especially in light of the fact that s/he is the victim of a sexual assault. This unique feature has quickly becoming a talking point between me and the several students I have recommended the book to -provocative!