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Sleeping Bear Press: When You Go Into Nature by Sheri M Bestor, Illustrated by Sydney Hanson

Week of Friday, January 23, 2015

"The first week of August hangs at the very top of summer, the top of the live-long year, like the highest seat of a Ferris wheel when it pauses in its turning." This image opens Tuck Everlasting, Natalie Babbitt's novel about the inexorable advancement of time. For many young people, Tuck Everlasting is the first book that ever made them think about what it would mean to live forever.

What are the tradeoffs of immortality? How many people whom you love would you outlive? What would it be like to "stay seventeen till the end of the world," as Jesse Tuck does? For the 40th anniversary of the publication of Tuck Everlasting, Farrar, Straus & Giroux created a special edition that closes with an interview with Natalie Babbitt. "The question of what it might be like to live forever is something that everyone thinks about," she says. "And I think you think about it more when you find out you can't do it." Babbitt explains that she created the four Tuck family members "specifically to talk about different points of view of living forever." She makes us think about what is precious, and what is made more so because we know it cannot last.

Gregory Maguire wrote a terrific introduction for this special edition, offering many wonderful observations. Perhaps the best is, "even though when I meet Winnie Foster again standing in her front yard, I know exactly what she will do later in the book.... what I don't know is what it will mean to me now." That is why we reread. We grow older, and the book, like the Tucks, does not change. Yet we change, and the view from the top of the Ferris wheel seems different somehow. That is the gift of Tuck Everlasting. --Jennifer M. Brown, children's editor, Shelf Awareness

The Best Books This Week

Fiction

Black River

by S.M. Hulse

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In S.M. Hulse's spare but rich first novel, Black River, troubles loom for her stoic hero, Wes Carver, and his family like the glacial mountains surrounding their small Montana prison town. Black River's economic life centers on the Montana State Prison where Wes and his neighbors walk the tiers as guards, "enforcing rules, suppressing emotions, intimidating and refusing to be intimidated." When a riot erupts, Wes is taken hostage and methodically tortured by sociopathic inmate Bobby Williams. All his fingers broken, his wrists scarred by cigarette burns and cuts from a makeshift prison shiv, Wes is forever changed. No more can he experience the pleasure of his fiddle playing and composing. Now retired from the state on disability, he and his wife, Claire, move to Spokane, Wash., where he's hired as a mall cop to chase shoplifters and rowdy teens.

Wes's riot ordeal is only the latest traumatic incident in his scarred life. His woodworking father committed suicide, leaving his young son nothing but questions and a beautiful handmade fiddle. Claire's son, Dennis, a child of rape, resents his stepfather and threatens Wes with a loaded pistol. Claire develops leukemia, requiring cycles of hospital visits and treatments until the disease finally wins. Wes's nemesis, Bobby Williams, now supposedly a born-again Christian, is up for parole in Black River and Wes returns to attend the hearing.

With neither Claire nor his music, Wes's salvation can come only from "keeping his word. Following through. Doing what needed to be done." Black River is a transcendent story subtly unfolding in flawless prose--a remarkable first effort. --Bruce Jacobs, founding partner, Watermark Books & Cafe, Wichita, Kan.

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $24, hardcover, 9780544309876

Frog

by Mo Yan, transl. by Howard Goldblatt

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Mo Yan's Frog is as alien and upsetting as good science fiction. His first novel since winning the 2012 Nobel Prize in Literature opens in 1960, in a village where all newborn children are named after body parts. A classroom of 35 starving students discover that they can eat coal to survive. The novel becomes truly surreal when it gets to China's disturbing, viciously enforced one-child policy.

Narrator Wan Zu ("Foot"), nicknamed Tadpole, is gathering material about his indomitable aunt Gugu, who was the first professional midwife in Northeast Gaomi Township, the locale of many Mo Yan novels. Gugu is the best there is; she's also the aggressive enforcer of the Party's one-child policy and is responsible for more than 2,000 involuntary abortions. She stands at the center of the novel, and carries it largely unsympathetically. When Tadpole's lovely wife refuses to abort her second pregnancy, Gugu swears to uphold the Party policy. That Mo Yan (POW!) manages to make her ultimately self-aware and forgivable is a measure of his constant compassion toward mistake-makers.

Frog is a big, challenging novel with a dizzying number of characters with similar names, but the narrative thrills far outweigh the confusion. The final section of the book is the script of the play that Tadpole has been trying to write throughout the story, in which Gugu finally confronts her own guilt for following Party directives, a theatrical conclusion to Mo Yan's portrait of a brilliant doctor who makes some horrible politically driven choices while dedicating her life to her community. --Nick DiMartino, Nick's Picks, University Book Store, Seattle, Wash.

Viking, $27.95, hardcover, 9780525427988

Outline

by Rachel Cusk

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British writer Rachel Cusk's Outline is a brilliant marriage of her fiction (Saving Agnes) and her memoirs (fearless if highly self-absorbed accounts of motherhood and divorce).

Outline's narrator is all but nameless; only near the end does she let her name slip. She's a divorced British writer headed to Greece to teach creative writing. The wealthy, much-divorced Greek man in the next seat tells her about his life during their flight and, later, on his yacht; his stories double back, correcting themselves, reflecting the normal inconsistencies of memory and of self-presentation. Others around her--friends, new acquaintances, writing students--offer accounts of their own pivotal moments and the resulting novel consists largely of anecdotes that don't center on the narrator.

Outline touches on familiar questions of narrative reliability but goes much further. "I was beginning... to see in other peoples' lives a commentary on my own," she says. Her reactions to what she hears are cerebral, provided without commentary; she herself remains invisible, and yet the outline of a life slowly takes shape. Other characters' experiences of marriage, parenthood, self-expression and identity take the stage, but they suggest the life of a woman profoundly engaged with similar preoccupations.

A novel so thoroughly reliant on information told by secondary characters with little response from the narrator is unusual, but Outline is an ingenious and highly successful marriage of form and content. It is also a reminder that we may see the lives of those around us as disconnected episodes that might make good stories, but behind those events are lives as deeply lived as our own. --Jeanette Zwart, freelance writer and reviewer

Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $26, hardcover, 9780374228347

Mobile Library

by David Whitehouse

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In an exciting and heartwarming adventure befitting the greatest of literary heroes, David Whitehouse (Bed) explores the meaning of family and the value of love.

Bobby Nusku, like many fairy-tale characters, lives in a dark world. His mother is gone; his father neglects him. At school he's an outcast, bullied by his classmates. His only true friend, Sunny, moves away, leaving Bobby completely alone--until one day a ray of light pedals into Bobby's life on an oversized tricycle. Rosa, the tricycle's rider, has a disability that makes her a target for bullies as well.

Bobby and Rosa form an immediate bond. When Bobby meets Rosa's mother, Val, who cleans the town's mobile library, his luck seems to be turning. He finds the warmth, love and safety missing from his biological family and begins to thrive in their presence.

But the utopia is short-lived. When the town puts the bookmobile out of commission, forcing Val to look for work elsewhere, and Bobby's father beats him for spending time with his new friends, Val decides to run away in the library-on-wheels. This unlikely group of misfits, joined on the road by an ex-soldier, gradually melds into a family. Now they have to elude the authorities if they're going to live happily ever after.

Whitehouse wields language like a sword, fencing to defend story. He lunges with suspenseful pacing, advances on references to literary works and guards by developing rich characters. As a result Mobile Library prevails in engaging and entertaining readers, and story lives to fight another day. --Jen Forbus of Jen's Book Thoughts

Scribner, $25, hardcover, 9781476749433

Mystery & Thriller

Fear the Darkness

by Becky Masterman

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Becky Masterman (Rage Against the Dying) follows up her first Brigid Quinn adventure with a thriller that pits the 59-year-old ex-FBI agent against a sly killer in a case complicated by family ties. Readers last met Brigid as she dealt with the loose ends of her past; this time, her future hangs in the balance.

When Brigid's beloved sister-in-law dies after a long illness, Brigid and her husband return from the funeral with unusual cargo: Gemma-Kate Quinn, their 17-year-old niece. Although her father, Brigid's brother, is still very much involved in Gemma-Kate's life, a move to Tucson will allow the brilliant girl to study biology at the University of Arizona without paying out-of-state tuition.

While she helps her niece settle in, Brigid also agrees to investigate the apparent suicide of a teenager whose parents attend her church. She intends to help the dead boy's mother find peace by allaying any suspicions of foul play but soon questions the circumstances of his drowning. Her attention is diverted when one of her pugs is poisoned and Brigid herself starts experiencing strange symptoms. As peculiar incidents multiply, it seems that Gemma-Kate might be the common link, and Brigid wonders if her niece's sweet smile masks a cold-blooded secret.

Masterman riffs on fears of disease and mortality while delving into the rocky landscape of family dynamics. Gifted at laying false trails and establishing multiple threads of possibility, Masterman pulls off a surprise ending with virtuoso-level skill. Feisty and multilayered, Brigid is an admirable if unlikely heroine readers will look forward to seeing again. --Jaclyn Fulwood, blogger at Infinite Reads

Minotaur Books, $25.99, hardcover, 9780312622954

City of Blood

by Frédérique Molay, transl. by Jeffrey Zuckerman

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Nico Sirsky, chief of police in Paris, knows from the moment he turns on the television that a complicated case is headed his way. Thirty years earlier, famous artist Samuel Cassian buried the remainders of a huge banquet in the La Villette park. Now, what is billed as "the first archeological dig of modern art" is underway, to see what the intervening years have done to the leftovers. But the archeologists and reporters present are shocked when, amidst the goblets and plates, a skeleton is found. Within days of the discovery, several men are attacked and killed in La Villette, upping the ante for the officers investigating.

Juggling his concern over his mother's poor health, the intense scrutiny that the case's publicity has caused and the dilemma of how to catch a murderer when the statute of limitations is long over, Sirsky must carefully direct his team as they investigate Cassian and his history and try to determine if there is a link between the skeleton and the modern victims.

With frequent asides about the history of La Villette (which formerly housed Paris's abattoirs) and snippets of information on French police procedure, City of Blood from Frédérique Molay (The 7th Woman) is a fascinating tale for an international audience. The case is interesting, Sirsky is a sympathetic character and the Parisian setting is unmatched. Its slim length makes for a quick read, providing a perfect (albeit slightly grisly) escape to Paris for an afternoon. --Jessica Howard, blogger at Quirky Bookworm

Le French Book, $16.95, paperback, 9781939474186

Graphic Books

Fatherland: A Family History

by Nina Bunjevac

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In her graphic memoir, Fatherland: A Family History, Serbian-Canadian artist Nina Bunjevac tells the blood-soaked history of the former state of Yugoslavia through the lens of one family's story.

Fatherland centers on Bunjevac's father, whose involvement in Serbian terrorist organization located in Canada led her mother to flee with her daughters to Yugoslavia in 1975 and ended with his death in a bomb explosion. Moving back and forth in time and place, from modern Toronto to Yugoslavia during both the Nazi occupation and the Cold War, Bunjevac explores the steps that led to her father's extreme nationalism and its tragic consequences. Using a combination of strong lines, pointillism and cross-hatching that evokes the feeling of an old newspaper, she tells a story in which there are no heroes and every choice, personal or political, has traumatic consequences. (Bunjevac's mother is forced to make a classic "Sophie's choice": the only way she can take her daughters to Yugoslavia is to leave her son behind.) Both the country and Bunjevac's family are torn apart by the bitter divisions between Serbs and Croats, partisans and collaborators, royalists and communists.

Bunjevac makes no moral judgments about her family's choices. Instead she approaches their history from several viewpoints, introducing increasing complexity and moral ambiguity with each new layer. The only thing that is black and white in Fatherland is Bunjevac's exquisite and often grim illustrations.

Fatherland is powerful visual storytelling that will appeal to fans of Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis and Joe Sacco's Palestine. --Pamela Toler, blogging at History in the Margins

Liveright, $22.95, hardcover, 9781631490316

Biography & Memoir

A Fifty-Year Silence: Love, War, and a Ruined House in France

by Miranda Richmond Mouillot

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Less than a decade after Miranda Richmond Mouillot's Jewish grandparents wed in 1944, Anna walked out on Armand, taking their two children with her. They cut off all contact with one another and never revealed what led to their bitter divide. "The more I contemplated it, the more I felt I had no right to go on with my own life until I had learned what had happened in theirs." In 2004, after graduating from college, Mouillot moved to France to uncover the reason behind their estrangement and write A Fifty-Year Silence: Love, War, and a Ruined House in France.

When she began, she had barely any factual information, not even the date her grandparents had married. Slowly she pieced together Anna and Armand's story using their refugee files and other sources, including a "jumble" of reminisces her grandmother had written down over the years about her wartime experiences. Eventually Richmond Mouillot delved into an area of Armand's life she had previously overlooked: his postwar years working at the Nuremberg Trials, where he was one of two Jewish interpreters. She had filed away this time in his career as a "proud accomplishment" and then forgotten about it in her quest to learn more about Anna and Armand's relationship because her grandmother hadn't been there. But it was the tragic knowledge Armand acquired at Nuremberg that ultimately broke apart his marriage.

This quietly riveting story is one of love, loss, sadness and survival. Through the lens of her grandparents' lives, Richmond Mouillot explores the legacy of tragedy, the responsibility of keeping history alive and the emotional ravages of war. --Shannon McKenna Schmidt

Crown, $26, hardcover, 9780804140645

The Art of Not Having It All: True Stories of Men, Sex, and Other Disasters

by Melissa Kite

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Melissa Kite is a sort of Bridget Jones whose experiences as a single woman with a life far from perfect became the basis of a popular weekly column called "The Real Life" in England's the Spectator. Her unabashed and self-deprecating memoir, The Art of Not Having It All: True Stories of Men, Sex, and Other Disasters, pays homage to women like her who embark on never-ending searches for love and Mr. Right.

Kite's story begins with her remorse about an 11th-hour pre-wedding breakup and the ensuing custody battle over an unwanted pair of clownfish. To ensure that she is never alone to deal with the "loose nuts and bolts of everyday existence" (such as unmuting the TV and navigating trash collection schedules), she falls helplessly in love with a gay Adonis and indulges in her "damsel-in-distress complex" by relying upon a succession of pseudo husbands--a wealthy shoe-tying maniac, a compulsive farter and an unattainable, married CEO. She is not above designing impromptu home improvement projects to bag a handyman boyfriend. Failing to find an ideal beau, Kite valiantly resolves to prove her own independence and throws common sense out the window (as on an ill-advised horseback trek across unfamiliar country with city-slicker girlfriends, a useless GPS device and a map they can't read).

Neurotic, self-centered but also comically endearing, Kite celebrates many of the qualities that make some women who they are, no matter how many Mr. Rights end up being Mr. Wrongs. --Nancy Powell, freelance writer and technical consultant

Thomas Dunne/St, Martin's, $24.99, hardcover, 9781250055149

Humor

Reads Well with Others: An Unshelved Collection

by Gene Ambaum and Bill Barnes

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Gene Ambaum and Bill Barnes, the dynamic duo of bibliothecal humor, have added an 11th book to their collection of acerbic and unforgiving Unshelved comic strips, offering wisecracks and biting observations on just about every aspect of patron (and librarian) behavior. Old-school reference librarian Colleen is retired (though she makes occasional appearances to cite broken rules). In her absence are unattended children, meaningless staff-training seminars, user-unfriendly website redesigns, laconic computer users permanently parked at workstations and fickle patrons who would jump ship at the first sighting of advanced technology (iPads and game rentals) at a competing library.

With witty sarcasm and characteristic ribbing, Ambaum and Barnes address a variety of topics in Reads Well with Others, including what authors really mean when they write, great books that are made into awful movies, dwindling library budgets (and resources) and enforcement of cell-phone policies (which always elicits sighs of exasperation and disgust). The strips offer valuable tips on how to hoard advanced copies and other freebies while attending annual book-industry conferences--strategies conference-goers of any stripe can appreciate. With graphic-novel critic and teen librarian Dewey, Mallville Public Library's underachieving and underworked antihero, they aim to debunk the myth that librarians read everything.

Also included among the strips (a mixture of new and previously published Web comics) is an insider's look at the creation and development of Barnes and Ambaum's beloved Mallville family, including some of Barnes's penciled storyboards. In a matter of a few panels, their caustically charming characters winningly vent their frustrations about an underappreciated and misunderstood profession. --Nancy Powell, freelance writer and technical consultant

Overdue Media, $11.95, paperback, 9781937914066

Children's & Young Adult

Last Stop on Market Street

by Matt de la Peña, illus. by Christian Robinson

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With the precision of a poet, Matt de la Peña (The Living) chronicles a boy's heartwarming Sunday morning routine with his nana. Christian Robinson's (Gaston) uplifting palette and culturally diverse cast brightens the rainy-day backdrop.

A bustling, inclined city street that suggests San Francisco hosts a rainbow of row houses and a squat church with citrus-bright stained glass. Out of the church's front doors bursts CJ: "The outside air smelled like freedom, but it also smelled like rain." Where CJ spies "all this wet," his nana sees an opportunity to pull out her orange umbrella. When he asks why they don't have a car, she tells CJ, "We got a bus that breathes fire, and old Mr. Dennis, who always has a trick for you." Robinson paints a dragon on the side of the bus, and the driver pulls a coin from behind CJ's ear. CJ whines about their destination, but Nana builds anticipation about Bobo, the Sunglass Man and Trixie's brand-new hat.

Author and artist create a microcosm of society in that bus, and the serendipitous interactions of unlikely companions. As CJ pines for an iPod, a guitar player starts plucking his strings. A blind man offers a tip for listening, and Nana and CJ take it. Little by little, CJ's attitude shifts: "He wondered how his nana always found beautiful where he never even thought to look." By story's end, readers, like CJ, may well gain a whole new appreciation for the many gifts right in front of them. --Jennifer M. Brown, children's editor, Shelf Awareness

Putnam, $16.99, hardcover, 32p., ages 4-8, 9780399257742

Convergence: The Zodiac Legacy, Book One

by Stan Lee and Stuart Moore, illus. by Andie Tong

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Stan Lee, the force behind Spider Man and X-Men, pens his first prose tale--this page-turning, high-stakes adventure.

Mild-mannered Chinese-American student Steven Lee is on a field trip with his suburban Philadelphia classmates in a Hong Kong museum when he hears screaming from a hidden door. He follows the sound and gets pulled into a clash between a high-tech warmonger named Maxwell and two of his associates, Jasmine and Carlos. They're attempting to keep him from extracting superpowers from the Zodiac via an ancient compass called a shipan. A strange green light administers the energy of the Zodiac's 12 animals, and Maxwell has already absorbed a handful. But Maxwell can only keep the powers of the Dragon, his own sign. (He must distribute the other powers among his associates born under different signs.) Moreover, the Dragon power is split between himself and Jasmine (a Dragon, too). In the ensuing fray, the Tiger energy seeks out Steven--who was born under its sign. As Steven helps Jasmine and Carlos destroy the shipan, they inadvertently release the energies for the homeless Zodiac powers, which search the planet for hosts with matching astrological signs.

Andie Tong's two-color illustrations ratchet up the suspense as the trio hunts down the unwitting hosts before Maxwell and his henchmen can. The artist's cityscapes of Hong Kong and Paris carry as much electricity as the fight scenes. Stan Lee explores issues of newly discovered strengths (an ideal metaphor for adolescence) and complex motives, and sets the scene for the next two episodes in this promising trilogy. --Jennifer M. Brown, children's editor, Shelf Awareness

Hyperion/Disney, $16.99, hardcover, 480p., ages 8-12, 9781423180852

Chasing Freedom: The Life Journeys of Harriet Tubman and Susan B. Anthony

by Nikki Grimes, illus. by Michele Wood

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Poet and author Nikki Grimes (Words with Wings) and artist Michele Wood (I See the Rhythm) together present two fascinating figures from history, as if they were engaged in conversation: Susan B. Anthony and Harriet Tubman.

The historical framework is factual. In 1904 at the 28th annual convention of the New York State Suffrage Association, in Rochester, Anthony introduced the famous conductor on the Underground Railroad, who was a guest speaker. Grimes then imagines a conversation between them in Anthony's home, prior to the convention. Each page number appears against what resembles a quilt square. Woods's acrylic and oil paintings carry this theme throughout the book. As Susan takes Harriet's coat, a vine of leaves threads through the patterns of Susan's gray gown, and diamond motifs dominate Harriet's dress in chocolate brown. This palette connects the pair throughout the book. Harriet's warm rust-colored turban becomes an identifying detail in the images that chart her journey on subsequent pages. Grimes covers a lot of ground, touching on the Temperance, Abolitionist and Women's Suffrage movements, the Quakers' involvement in them, and Tubman's many trips to rescue her own family, then others from captivity. Grimes's conversational tone makes accessible an abundance of information. Some may wish for attribution of sources from which she based her quotes, but four meaty pages of sources will point them to further reading.

Readers may be surprised to learn how closely Frederick Douglass worked with the two women, as well as John Brown and others. An eye-opening, aesthetically pleasing account of two extraordinary women. --Jennifer M. Brown, children's editor, Shelf Awareness

Orchard/Scholastic, $18.99, hardcover, 56p., ages 7-10, 9780439793384
A POWERFUL COMING-OF-AGE YA NOVEL

A mother's death forces a teen girl to reevaluate their tumultuous relationship in this powerful coming-of-age novel for teens. For fans of I am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter.

Kirkus Reviews calls And Then There Was Us by Kern Carter "an emotional story of family and growth." 

After years of physical and verbal abuse from her mother, fourteen-year-old Coi moved in with her father, and together they created a peaceful life. But now, four years later, that peace is shattered when her mother dies. 

While Coi struggles to find kindness in her heart for the woman who did nothing but hurt her, her mother's passing does help reopen the door to her mother's side of the family. It's only through reconnecting with her estranged family members, especially her younger half-sister Kayla, that Coi's long-held views about her mother are challenged. 

And when Coi begins to see visions of her mother in her dreams, she is forced to ask herself what it means to forgive and be forgiven, and, most importantly, what it means to be a family. 

Kern Carter is the author of Boys and Girls Screaming, along with two self-published novels, Thoughts of a Fractured Soul (novella) and Beauty Scars. In addition to his writing, Kern is a filmmaker and also teaches professional writing at a local college, committed to supporting emerging writers and helping them find their voice. He lives in Toronto. 

 

Tundra Books: And Then There Was Us by Kern Carter

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