Week of Friday, September 19, 2025
I consider myself to be a work in progress, and I'm often inspired by stories of how others reshaped and redefined themselves over time. Openness to change and fresh perspectives is a quality I greatly admire, so a title such as the "wise" and "warmhearted" Here We Go: Lessons for Living Fearlessly from Two Traveling Nanas by Eleanor Hamby and Sandra Hazelip certainly piques my interest; as does Art Work: On the Creative Life by Sally Mann, in which the famous photographer shares lessons on "how to get shit done" in a world of distraction and rejection; as well as Replaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy by Mary Roach, an "informative, entertaining" survey of advances in regenerative medicine. But self-improvement can also be exhausting, and so "gratifyingly silly stories," like the ones in Silvia Borando's picture book Short Stories, serve as a good reminder for not taking everything so seriously all the time.
Isabella's Not Dead
by Beth Morrey
Isabella's Not Dead by Beth Morrey (The Love Story of Missy Carmichael; Delphine Jones Takes a Chance) is a darkly funny novel about friendship, reinvention, and the strange limbo of midlife. Gwen Mortimer, 53, is feeling increasingly invisible. Her children are becoming more self-reliant, she's lost her job, and even her podcasting husband, Angus, seems more engaged with his microphone and his beloved dog than with her.
When a reunion of her secondary school's hockey team highlights the absence of her former best friend, Isabella, whom no one has been able to contact in 15 years, Gwen seizes on a new purpose: to find out why Isabella ghosted them. Although some of their teammates think she must have died, Gwen is certain that Isabella's not dead--even if a Ouija board seems to be sending messages that suggest otherwise.
What follows is a heartfelt and often hilarious journey across England, Scotland, and Italy, as Gwen tracks down Isabella's family, colleagues, and other friends. Along the way, she uncovers not only clues to Isabella's vanishing act but also long-buried truths about herself.
Morrey's wise writing is laced with a wry humor that captures the absurdities of aging, marriage, and memory. Gwen's relationships with her gangly sons and her difficult mother-in-law are sharply observed. But what truly sets Isabella's Not Dead apart is Morrey's nuanced examination of how friendships can shift, fracture, and sometimes disappear entirely--and how that loss can shape people just as much as love. --Jessica Howard, former bookseller, freelance book reviewer
Discover: In this darkly funny mystery novel, a woman searches for the friend who ghosted her 15 years earlier.
The Book of I
by David Greig
There's bloodshed aplenty when the Vikings go head-to-head with Christians in Scottish playwright David Greig's phenomenal debut historical novel, The Book of I. It's "a good day for a massacre" in the spring of 825 A.D., when Norwegian warrior Grimur arrives on Helgi Gustafsson's "red-sailed wave horse" at the Christian monastery on the small, remote isle of Iona, a "spit of sea, granite, bog and sand." The brutal Vikings are seeking the silver reliquary of Saint Colm's bones.
Their "satanic butchery" leads to the total destruction of the abbey and the slaughter of 70 monks. In fine Grand Guignol fashion, the abbot refuses to disclose the location of the sacred bones and is drawn and quartered between four ponies; in "five, or maybe eight, minutes, it was over." One young monk, Brother Martin, survives in the privy, up to his knees in urine and excrement. Another survivor is the smith's now-widow, Una, who crafts medicinal mead. Helgi's retinue believe that Grimur has been felled and dig a "quick grave," where Martin discovers him later. And in the aftermath, the trinity of Grimur, Martin, and Una explore love, sacred and profane, creating a found family based on faith, redemption, and community.
Summer slides into fall as Grieg's narrative depicts how the unlikely unit adapts to a newly discovered sense of self. Poetic style tinctured with tragicomedy ("What do you call a Viking without a boat?... Dead.") adds buoyancy to the language and elevates sentences with iambic breeziness and imagery. Despite grim material, Greig leavens this extraordinary novel with dark humor and bristling, lyrical prose. --Robert Allen Papinchak, freelance book critic
Discover: Grim thrills and bloody chills abound in David Greig's deeply rewarding, incendiary imagining of the devastating destruction of Scotland's remote sixth-century Iona Abbey.
Happiness & Love
by Zoe Dubno
In Zoe Dubno's dark and entertainingly splenetic debut novel, Happiness & Love, a nameless narrator spends the length of a dinner party mentally eviscerating her hosts and others who are part of a rarefied world of art, affluence, and narcissism.
The novel opens where it remains: at the Manhattan loft of a wealthy, artistic couple. The narrator, who once lived with the couple, is a writer who learned a few days earlier of the drug-overdose death of a mutual friend: "Each and every person at the dinner had been at Rebecca's funeral that day. And yet this was not a dinner in her honor." The party's guest of honor is an actress whose arrival everyone spends the book's first half anticipating. During this time, the narrator evaluates her company, whom she regards as corrosive enough to have driven her to spend the previous five years abroad.
Happiness & Love has no chapters or paragraph breaks; it's one continuous skein of invective. (In an afterword, Dubno says the book is loosely based on Austrian writer Thomas Bernhard's 1984 novel, Woodcutters.) As the narrator mentally throws her barbs, many hilarious and most in the direction of her hosts (one is "a self-involved predacious remora"), readers will gradually come to understand that Happiness & Love is a grief novel spiked with guilt. In one of her rare guileless moments, the narrator notes that, "had I not abandoned Rebecca, had I not condemned her for her weakness, she may have been here at the Bowery tonight instead of me." --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer
Discover: In this dark and entertainingly splenetic debut novel set at a Manhattan dinner party, the narrator spends the book's length mentally eviscerating her hosts and others.
Good and Evil and Other Stories
by Samanta Schweblin, transl. by Megan McDowell
Celebrated Argentinian author Samanta Schweblin and translator Megan McDowell, who co-won the 2022 National Book Award for Translated Literature for Seven Empty Houses, reunite for their fifth collaboration, Good and Evil and Other Stories, an exceptional six-story collection. Despite the seemingly simple title, little of Schweblin's fiction is ever quite straightforward; her perplexingly peculiar, uncannily startling narratives are poised to delight and challenge.
Complicated, strained relationships between family members repeat and resonate here. In "An Eye in the Throat," a young child loses his voice (and almost his life) after swallowing a battery, but his father is the one who loses his ability to communicate his stifling guilt and desperate love for his son. When Schweblin adds animals to her narratives, inexplicable and mystical events occur. In "Welcome to the Club," a woman struggles between her life with a husband and two daughters (and a borrowed, escape-prone rabbit) and the lure of the mossy bottom of the nearby open water. In "William in the Window," a Shanghai writers' residency gathers an internationally diverse group of 10 authors; when they congregate one evening for the Irish writer's birthday, they also share in the news of the death of her cat.
Schweblin (Mouthful of Birds) again demonstrates her irrefutable mastery for arousing unease, always eschewing easy labels or judgments. Her ending "Notes on the Stories" is a delicious enhancement. To bestow "good" or "evil" verdicts on any of her characters--or their unsettling situations--is a purposefully impossible task, a dazzling reminder that the gray areas of in-between are where realities exist. --Terry Hong
Discover: Samanta Schweblin's wondrous six-story collection, Good and Evil and Other Stories, evades simplicity to reveal intricately complicated relationships.
If You're Seeing This, It's Meant for You
by Leigh Stein
Gothic mystery collides with the social-media age in Leigh Stein's roller-coaster of a novel, If You're Seeing This, It's Meant for You. The gothic mansion here is a deteriorating Los Angeles architectural landmark serving as a hype house for social-media influencers. Dayna, in the wake of an embarrassingly public breakup that plays out on Reddit, reluctantly agrees to manage the house despite her complicated past with it and its owner.
Part of Dayna's motivation to return is curiosity about the disappearance of the house's most popular influencer, a tarot reader named Becca. This curiosity is shared by the other residents of the house, so they all decide to investigate in the way they know best: a social-media campaign dramatizing the search.
The setting is delightfully unnerving, populated by characters with both ridiculous and relatable foibles. This includes Jake, who plumbs his many charms to cater to his target demographic of middle-aged female followers, and Olivia, an orphan with a "tragic past," who posts a lot of crying content but is genuinely haunted by guilt over her parents' deaths. They all come together to create a novel that's funny, horrifying, and eerily insightful.
Stein (Land of Enchantment; Self Care) deftly mixes uncanny creepiness with the absurdity of social-media jargon. When one of the characters becomes increasingly untethered from reality, comparing herself to obscure biblical references, another says, "I don't know what that is, but I think you're experiencing burnout, which is extremely common." The novel's deadpan humor, combined with the sharp commentary on the strange psychic damage of living lives online, makes for an enthralling read. --Carol Caley, writer
Discover: Gothic mystery collides with the social-media age as a houseful of influencers search for a missing tarot reader in this funny, horrifying, and eerily insightful novel.
Mercy
by Joan Silber
Who would turn down a show of leniency? Certainly not the characters in Joan Silber's Mercy. That some of them get it and some of them don't adds to the complexity of this work, which contains multiple protagonists and cleverly interlocking stories. The novel has two fulcrums, one of which is the New York City emergency room that otherwise unrelated characters have the misfortune to need. In the first set of stories, it's 1973, and Ivan and Eddie are longtime pals whose adventures are dominated by hardcore drug use, predominantly heroin. As Ivan puts it, "My true home was where my beloved substance was." When Eddie overdoses, Ivan rushes his unconscious friend to the ER, only to take off into the January night and leave him stranded.
At the same time, 10-year-old Cara slips on a snowy fire escape outside her apartment and has to go to the same ER because she has "broken and splintered [her] tibia in a fairly major way." Part of the richness of this novel is the way Silber (Secrets of Happiness) deepens these stories, from Eddie's actress girlfriend, who goes on to a successful if turbulent Hollywood career, to Cara's friend Nini, who attends grad school for anthropology and gets a choice fieldwork assignment thanks to the married British professor she's sleeping with. All of which leads to the novel's second fulcrum: the concept of forgiveness in all its manifestations. It all gets quite complicated, just like the notion of mercy itself, but the result is this elegantly rewarding work. --Michael Magras, freelance book reviewer
Discover: Mercy by Joan Silber is an elegant fusion of interlocking stories about characters in need of forbearance, including two drug-addicted buddies and two young women who weather their own challenges.
Crooks
by Lou Berney
Spanning half a century, Crooks by literary crime writer Lou Berney (Double Barrel Bluff; The Long and Faraway Gone) examines the criminal tendencies of one family in a novel that is as much a character study as it is an adventure through various demimondes of the United States.
Crooks begins in the shiny new mob-controlled Las Vegas of the early 1960s, where low-level gangster Buddy Mercurio falls in love with Lillian Ott, a beautiful petty thief. The two marry, have children, and continue to hustle until a death threat forces them to skip town and move to Oklahoma. There, Buddy opens the first disco in the state and makes a killing, not least from the funds he skims off the top. The narrative then shifts to the five Mercurio children and examines the ways in which their criminal DNA influences their lives. Jeremy, the favorite son, becomes a well-paid gigolo in 1980s Hollywood; Tallulah gets involved in human trafficking in 1990s Moscow; Ray, a mob muscle man in Las Vegas, attempts to leave violence behind; Alice, considered the family's genius, fails in her attempts to stay clean in her work at an East Coast law firm; and Piggy, the youngest, documents the family saga as a writer.
Berney's trademark humor and insight into the human condition are on display here as the Mercurios find themselves caught in both perilous situations and moral dilemmas while they struggle to reconcile family loyalty with a life on the straight and narrow. Despite their failings, the Mercurios are relatable, even charming, and they make Crooks an engaging and lively read. --Debra Ginsberg, author and freelance editor
Discover: Lou Berney brings his trademark wit and insight to Crooks, an engaging novel about two generations of the Mercurio crime family.
Mystery & Thriller
The Wasp Trap
by Mark Edwards
The Wasp Trap is an absolutely thrilling, tautly plotted puzzle of a novel by Mark Edwards. The first timeline of this double-locked-room mystery takes place in July 1999. A group of recent college graduates are gathered at a country estate outside London by a charismatic psychology professor to work around the clock on a dating website. In truth, they also work at developing a test to identify psychopaths (their mentor's first interest). "The lothario. The salesman. The affluent couple, the joker and the local girl. Finally, me, the wordsmith, whose role was to write it all down. If any of us were a psychopath, I already had a good idea who it would be." The bulk of the novel is narrated by Will, an aspiring writer who often feels trapped on the outside.
Twenty-five years later, to commemorate the death of their former employer, the "affluent couple" of the original project hosts their old friends for a lavish dinner party in their high-security Notting Hill townhouse. But immediately the evening shifts from awkward to nightmarish, part home invasion and part sinister game. The group is commanded to reveal a secret from the storied summer of '99. Each dinner guest denies knowing what information is sought, but each, of course, does harbor secrets. The once tight-knit group fractures amid secret and not-so-secret sexual tensions, financial pressures, and old jealousies, especially with a suspected psychopath or two in their midst.
Offering twists and turns and surprises through his novel's final pages, Edwards executes a highly satisfying thriller with this intriguing blend of terror and nostalgia for youth and freer, more hopeful times. --Julia Kastner, blogger at pagesofjulia
Discover: Six estranged friends and colleagues gather at a sumptuous dinner party to find themselves terrorized by old secrets in this gratifying tale of suspense and psychopaths.
Graphic Books
Death in Trieste
by Jason
Ziggy Stardust-era David Bowie appears as either an image or a character in all three black-and-white graphic stories that make up Death in Trieste by mononymous Norwegian Eisner Award winner Jason (The Left Bank Gang; I Killed Adolf Hitler). That Bowie, like most of the book's characters, is a human-animal hybrid is one of the less strange aspects of this pleasingly odd endeavor.
In "The Magritte Affair," a crime story largely set in Brussels, a couple of burglars steal a portrait of Ziggy Stardust from a house and leave in its place what looks like surrealist painter René Magritte's The Son of Man. In the more languid "Death in Trieste," set in 1925 Berlin, a time-traveling Bowie's encounter with Marlene Dietrich is just one storyline revolving around characters who embrace Dadaism (someone explains the concept to an uninitiated Bowie). And in "Sweet Dreams," an asteroid is headed toward London. (Bowie is, fittingly, in outer space in this story.) Possibly in the asteroid's path are members of 1980s musical acts Eurythmics and Ultravox, as well as other famous faces from the era's British music scene.
Throughout Death in Trieste, Jason uses spare and lean black lines on stark white; the book may contain some challenging ideas, but he gives readers plenty of neutral space to get their bearings. Everything here is marvelously surreal and silly, with much superhero-comics-style fighting ("BAM") and the occasional metafictional touch, as when one character in "The Magritte Affair" describes another as "the hat seller from page 14, panel 2!" --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer
Discover: Characters take human-animal hybrid form in three marvelously surreal and silly graphic short stories featuring, among others, dadaists, Marlene Dietrich, and a time-traveling David Bowie.
Biography & Memoir
Art Work: On the Creative Life
by Sally Mann
Fifty years in the trenches of the art world thickens the skin and teaches a lot of lessons. American photographer Sally Mann (Hold Still) imparts some of that wisdom in Art Work, an appealingly edgy memoir that mixes sage advice with irreverent prose. This book, "written by an old woman primarily for young artists and writers," is meant to help them "avoid some of the pits into which I fell." To that end, she focuses not on her work but "the other things that both buttress the art-making life and hinder it," including constant distractions and the need for a support network. It's a book, Mann writes, about "how to get shit done."
With this volume, Mann has given young artists a gift that is neither pessimistic nor Pollyannaish. She acknowledges the role of talent, but she's forthright about the need for good luck, as when the man next to her on a plane in the 1970s just happened to be a wealthy jeweler who "believed in my work way before I did" and ultimately gave her a much-needed grant. More advice follows, such as the importance of being organized and the best ways of handling rejection. And any artist who thinks they're uniquely plagued by hindrances should read the story of the trailer Mann bought as an artist's retreat and the tenants from hell who rented it. "Somehow, despite all the distractions and the despair, art gets made," Mann writes. Artists will reach the same conclusion after reading this iconoclastic book. --Michael Magras, freelance book reviewer
Discover: Art Work by photographer Sally Mann is a winningly irreverent book that offers advice on how young artists can create their best work and deal with pitfalls such as rejection, distractions, and more.
The Season: A Fan's Story
by Helen Garner
Sports fans will find much to relate to in The Season, a memoir from Australian novelist Helen Garner (The Children's Bach; How to End a Story). At 80, "the age at which my mother died demented," Garner needed hearing aids and was losing her eyesight but loved being "a hands-on nanna who by some unimaginable miracle was invited to buy the house next door, knock down the fence, and become part of family life." She wanted to become better acquainted with her 15-year-old grandson, Amby, who played Australian football, or footy, as it's known. She asked him if she could attend his training sessions and matches. He agreed. So, with a "brand-new notebook hidden in the back pocket of my overalls," she penned her observations from the sidelines during the seven-month season.
The result is this tender book, a "record of a season we are spending together before he turns into a man and I die." Fans of Garner's work will recognize familiar elements, from the spare prose to doubts about her writing, as when she asks, regarding this memoir, "Am I wasting my time?" Although one's appreciation for the book may be enhanced by familiarity with Australian football, laypeople will still respond to the emotions on display, such as teenager Amby's frustrations with romance and, most prominently, Garner's concern for his safety, such as when she sees players smashing into each other, including a head butt that "makes me sick to my stomach," looks at muscular Amby, and thinks, "I wish he could be bulletproof." Fans of families will understand. --Michael Magras, freelance book reviewer
Discover: In the tender memoir The Season, novelist Helen Garner records her observations and emotions as she spends seven months watching her 15-year-old grandson play Australian football.
Don't Call It a Comeback: What Happened When I Stopped Chasing PRs, and Started Chasing Happiness
by Keira D'Amato, with Evelyn Spence
Distance runner Keira D'Amato's upbeat memoir, Don't Call It a Comeback, chronicles her physical and mental journey as an athlete, from her early years as a cross-country star to her unconventional pro career after becoming a mother. With honesty, heart, and plenty of humor, D'Amato encourages readers to go after their dreams while also pursuing joy, noting, "I was chasing happiness, but happiness was the chase."
D'Amato begins with "Round One," the years she spent as a top-notch runner in high school and college, which ended after she sustained several injuries. After marriage, motherhood, and a real estate career, D'Amato tried running again, building her fitness from scratch. Slowly, with the help of her marathon-runner husband and her community, she began racing again--this time for fun.
As she charts the miles she's covered in her roles as a military wife, real estate professional, and athlete, D'Amato repeatedly urges readers to find satisfaction in the goals they're pursuing, even when hard effort is called for. She writes frankly about her bad days, including the gut-wrenching experience of stepping off the course during the 2024 Olympic trials. D'Amato is no stranger to self-doubt, disappointment, and other tough emotions, but she believes (and insists) that playfulness and fun are possible--and necessary--even in difficult times.
Filled with entertaining anecdotes and heartfelt tributes to D'Amato's teammates, coaches, and loved ones, Don't Call It a Comeback is an inspiring yet practical account of running happy--and, yes, running fast. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams
Discover: Runner Keira D'Amato's upbeat memoir chronicles her journey from postpartum lapsed runner to American marathon record holder--and happier person.
History
Milena and Margarete: A Love Story in Ravensbrück
by Gwen Strauss
In Gwen Strauss's novel-like Milena and Margarete, two remarkable women endured the horrors of a concentration camp together while falling deeply in love. In an "act of recovery and imagination," Strauss (The Nine) gives this multilayered account of the forbidden "passionate friendship" between the German Margarete Buber-Neumann and the Czech journalist Milena Jesenská, who first met as political prisoners in the all-female Ravensbrück concentration camp in 1940. Connecting over their shared experience of disillusionment with the Communist Party, they began exchanging letters and meeting for brief walks near the camp's high wall, nicknamed "the Wailing Wall," that had electrified wires on top.
Strauss confronts history's silence on these taboo female relationships by "reading between the lines" of Buber-Neumann and Jesenská's experience, piecing together Buber-Neumann's later writings to conclude that the two shared a "physical, tender, and profound" love. Strauss juxtaposes the women's moments of light and hope (they planned to write a book together after the war) with the painful refrain of suffering, torture, and death at the hands of Nazi camp officials. The novelistic dialogue Strauss employs to dramatize conversations is the "imagination" half of the narrative's recovery, but it is affecting, nonetheless. For four years, "they had built their little world together inside" a place of hellish torment; indeed, "to have found love in a concentration camp is extraordinary." Milena and Margarete is a heartrending story of love in an impossible place that also gives voice to the hidden stories of women loving women. --Peggy Kurkowski, book reviewer in Denver
Discover: In Milena and Margarete, Gwen Strauss reconstructs the history of two women whose passionate friendship and love sustained them through four years in a Nazi prison camp.
Essays & Criticism
I Write to Find Out What I Am Thinking: Collected Nonfiction
by Joan Didion
Joan Didion (1934-2021) wrote two justifiably celebrated grief memoirs: The Year of Magical Thinking (2005), prompted by the 2003 death of her husband, writer John Gregory Dunne, and its tragic companion, Blue Nights (2011), about the 2005 death of their daughter. I Write to Find Out What I Am Thinking packages those memoirs with two lesser-known titles, fusing the last four books Didion published in her lifetime into one meaty compendium.
South and West: From a Notebook (2017) features two pieces no less interesting for their incompleteness. "Notes on the South" offers Didion's observations gathered during a 1970 road trip around the southern United States ("The Civil War was yesterday, but 1960 is spoken of as if it were about three hundred years ago"). "California Notes" collects her 1976 jottings about fellow Golden State daughter Patty Hearst; these abandoned notes would seed Didion's 2003 memoir, Where I Was From.
Let Me Tell You What I Mean (2021) is manna for fans of Journalist Joan. The book's 12 essays include two pieces written decades apart that capture the evolution of Didion's profile work. Whereas stalactite-sharp objectivity guides 1968's "Pretty Nancy," about then first lady of California Nancy Reagan, Didion plays her hand in 2000's "Everywoman.com," about another much-mocked public figure: Martha Stewart "has branded herself not as Superwoman but as Everywoman, a distinction that seems to remain unclear to her critics."
Only one thing links the thematically disparate books bundled here: Didion's exacting sentences, so well preserved that they seem to have been set on ice. --Nell Beram, author and freelance writer
Discover: The last four books Joan Didion published in her lifetime--two grief memoirs, a collection of decades-spanning essays, and a bundled-together pair of unfinished pieces--make up this meaty compendium.
Body, Mind & Spirit
Here We Go: Lessons for Living Fearlessly from Two Traveling Nanas
by Eleanor Hamby and Dr. Sandra Hazelip, with Elisa Petrini
In their early 80s, longtime best friends Eleanor Hamby and Dr. Sandra Hazelip became Internet famous as the "TikTok Traveling Grannies." But they had already been traveling together--on a budget and to various far-flung locations--for years. In their warmhearted joint memoir, Here We Go, Hamby and Hazelip chronicle their 2023 round-the-world journey (undertaken in 80 days, in tribute to Jules Verne) and share the story of their enduring friendship and their advice for approaching the world with curiosity, openness, and joy.
Hailing from modest backgrounds in Texas and Oklahoma, Hamby and Hazelip initially met through a medical mission center in Zambia, cofounded by Hamby's late husband, Kelly. After her own husband's death, Hazelip also became involved with the mission, and the women became close friends. Their shared love of travel--and affection for trains--led to their first journey together, on the Trans-Siberian Railway, and subsequently to many others. Here We Go includes highlights from their numerous travels (the moai of Easter Island, the tango culture of Buenos Aires, even a trip to Antarctica). Their shared philosophies of companionship and travel are: say yes to new experiences, be flexible when circumstances change, and assume the best in people (but use your wits). This mindset has opened doors (literal and otherwise) across the world and resulted in memorable encounters, new relationships, and even--to the authors' surprise--media fame. For readers looking for unusual travel inspiration or practical friendship advice, Here We Go is a wise, entertaining guide to seeing the world with fresh eyes and an open heart. --Katie Noah Gibson, blogger at Cakes, Tea and Dreams
Discover: Octogenarians and "TikTok Traveling Grannies" Eleanor Hamby and Sandra Hazelip share travel stories and friendship advice in their warmhearted joint memoir.
Science
Replaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy
by Mary Roach
With books like Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal, Mary Roach has earned a well-deserved reputation for delivering useful scientific information to a general readership with impressive style and wit. She continues on that path with Replaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy, a lively survey of the state of the art in the field of regenerative medicine--a collection of disciplines that, in the aggregate, function as the equivalent of a human auto body shop.
Each of Replaceable You's chapters focuses on a discrete body part or system, such as hair follicles and the rectum. With Roach as an inquisitive, intelligent guide, readers learn about topics like the evolution of the technology for joint replacements. Roach isn't afraid to step out from behind her computer and observe cutting-edge research up close. Among other places, her travels took her to Sichuan, China, where researchers are working to overcome traditional Chinese reluctance to donate organs by exploring ways of adapting pig organs to human beings, and to a clinic in Tbilisi, Georgia, attempting to track down a doctor who uses fingers for penis transplants.
In the chapter on fashioning a vagina out of a colon, Roach comments on the "remarkable and sometimes surreal adaptability--the agreeableness--of the human body." But as she cautions in her chapter on 3D printed organs, citing Carnegie Mellon biomedical engineer Adam Feinberg, when it comes to implanting entire functional bioprinted organs in patients, we are "somewhere around the Wright brothers stage." Despite that caveat, anyone interested in an informative, entertaining exploration of the fast-moving developments in these fields will enjoy taking that trip with Mary Roach. --Harvey Freedenberg, freelance reviewer
Discover: In a survey of the history and state of the art of regenerative medicine, Mary Roach leads readers on a fascinating journey through the science of replacing failing and failed human body parts.
Performing Arts
Such Great Heights: The Complete Cultural History of the Indie Rock Explosion
by Chris DeVille
The popularity of "college rock" or "alternative rock" exploded after the turn of the 21st century, further blurring the lines between commercial music and the independent rock music scene that had formed a countercultural identity for so many of its ardent listeners. Chris DeVille, who is now the managing editor at Stereogum, grew up in the heart of that scene and is perfectly and passionately positioned to describe its evolution in the fun and comprehensive Such Great Heights.
DeVille's personal narrative is the engine of the book, which takes readers through his transformation from a teenage fan poring over liner notes to a prominent voice in the music journalism world. He paints a vibrant picture of the transition from the scrappy days of early-aughts music blogs and nascent social media, when a single post could launch a band into the stratosphere, to the fractured and data-driven landscape of modern streaming services. "The harder it got for bands to make a living through traditional means like selling records and going on tour, the less of a scandal it became to license your music for commercial purposes."
The book's title is, of course, a nod to the 2003 hit record by indie royalty band the Postal Service. DeVille uses the song to encapsulate the era's blend of earnest emotion and electronic sheen. He charts the rise of an exhaustive list of artists from a dazzling array of overlapping subgenres through the changing intersection of art and commerce that has characterized this century thus far. Such Great Heights is a magnificent read and an inspiration for countless playlists. --Elizabeth DeNoma, executive editor, DeNoma Literary Services, Seattle, WA
Discover: Music journalist Chris DeVille's Such Great Heights is a fun, comprehensive work covering an inflection point in the dominance of independent popular music.
Poetry
Terminal Surreal
by Martha Silano
Martha Silano's posthumous eighth collection, Terminal Surreal, incorporates science and nature imagery in a mischievous and moving verse account of her final years with ALS.
The shock and sorrow of a terminal diagnosis were eased by the quotidian pleasures of observing Pacific Northwest nature, especially birds: "I open/ my curtains to the crows, to a scrub jay in the maple." Silano (Last Train to Paradise) proposes neologisms for this conjunction of the world's beauty and her ache at leaving it: "WonderPain. MarvelWoe./ WowLoss." Her outlook is reminiscent of Mary Oliver's as she advises, "Kneel at least once a day,/ preferably at dusk, preferably// in front of someone or something that sustains you."
Fascination with science recurs, including "Why I Want to Be a Noble Gas" and a detail of the poet "reading a book about muons, gluons, positrons,/ and quarks." Silano also reflects on her relationships with her children and muses on her legacy. Most pieces are free-form, though there are three abecedarians. Rich alliteration and wordplay enliven the conversational register: "Did you say permission or persimmon? Either way,/ I will be your plankton, what keeps you phosphorescent"; "Grateful for Xanax, cuz what did people do without/ antianxiety meds? Love that it's a palindrome!"
Maintaining a balanced tone, Silano acknowledges her decline and ponders all she'll miss, yet manages to find the humor and ridiculousness in her situation. Her winsome philosophical work is a gift. "What doesn't die?/ The closest I've come to an answer/ is poetry." --Rebecca Foster, freelance reviewer, proofreader and blogger at Bookish Beck
Discover: The 70 poems of Martha Silano's posthumous collection focus on nature and relationships as she commemorates the joys and ironies of her last years with ALS.
Blue Opening
by Chet'la Sebree
In a note to readers at the start of Blue Opening, poet Chet'la Sebree explains that "this collection, which emerged like life from the ether, is for those who, too, scramble and search, who dive into the unknown." Sebree's powerful collection plumbs those depths, each poem an exploration of how things emerge from the unknown, of origins and roots and beginnings. The book's three sections all open with a numbered poem titled "Root Logic," each one an etymological examination of a word: womb, breast, and brain. Though each is a distinct piece, the numbering makes them feel like linked stanzas, uniting the book across their shared form and structure.
Sebree makes creative use of numbering throughout, as seen in "Five Facts About Lupus," where each page features numbered, brief stanzas. In addition to this fragmentation, the poem is further destabilized by its sequence: the predictable (1, followed by 2, followed by 2a) supplanted by the unexpected, where 2a is followed by 1a, and 2d & e chase after 3. This level of care, of attention to the way design and content overlap to create meaning, is what sets Sebree's collection apart, asking readers to give it the same level of careful attention.
The poems revel in a raw physicality, as in the prose poem "Home Remedy" which dances between alliterative phrasing and a gritty reality: "A keratin cord curls itself between pubic hairs still damp from the shower--a single comma curdling out." With her kinetic idea-play and word work, Sebree invites readers to join her, awestruck at all the unknowable wonders and griefs of being human. --Sara Beth West, freelance reviewer and librarian
Discover: Poet Chet'la Sebree's collection offers a dense but light-filled examination of faith and desire and grief, all the unknowable wonders of being human.
Children's & Young Adult
Short Stories
by Silvia Borando, transl. by Felicita Sala
Ten super-pithy, gratifyingly silly stories introduce early readers to the allure of micro-tales, accompanied by droll illustrations in candy-bright colors.
With exquisite comedic timing, Italian author and illustrator Silvia Borando (If I Met a Bear) creates picture book magic by combining a handful of evocative words with simple cartoon illustrations done in black felt pen and colored digitally. Total word-counts for most of the stories in Borando's Short Stories hover around 20. In the first story, which begins and ends before the title page, there is a mostly blank double-page spread in orange and red, depicting a wide sky and an expanse of grass. The next spread has the same backdrop, now inhabited. A big blue carefree-looking elephant, crisply outlined, strolls along on the left side: "Once upon a time there was an elephant." On the right stands a tiny black ant: "and there was an ant." Turning the page, readers see the elephant standing where the ant had been a moment earlier: "'What ant?' asked the elephant. The End." Other stories feature a prickly hedgehog at a birthday party with balloons ("Party's over"), a chatty frog and a bored chameleon, and a snail and a centipede who want to go somewhere... as soon as the centipede puts its shoes on.
Borando's use of three-act structure--a format that includes the classic "Once upon a time," a denouement, and a decisive "The End"--allows young readers to anticipate the humor without guessing the outcome. Translator and author/illustrator Felicita Sala (A Lost Cause) efficiently changes the Italian to English, ensuring that there is not a single excess word in this fun-size collection. --Emilie Coulter, freelance writer and editor
Discover: Crisp, cartoonish animal illustrations, a few concise words, and plenty of white space are the delightful ingredients that combine to create 10 laugh-out-loud micro-stories for early readers.
The Last Resort
by Erin Entrada Kelly, illus. by Naomi Franquiz
An 11-year-old girl with a tendency toward overreaction begins seeing ghosts in the spooky, spine-tingling middle-grade mystery The Last Resort by two-time Newbery Medalist Erin Entrada Kelly (The First State of Being; Hello, Universe).
Lila Clement is starting seventh grade and struggling with her best friend trio: Lexi and Ava are calling her "childish," "immature," and a "drama queen." Lila is counting on having the summer to solidify their friendship before school starts, but her parents tell her that her estranged grandfather has died and the family needs to go to Ohio. Grandpa Clem ran the small Castle Hill Inn and has left it to her father, so the family will be away for a few weeks to attend the funeral and settle the estate. Lila feels flattened. The family stays at the inn as they struggle to mourn someone they barely knew, and Lila's life becomes distinctly more complicated when she starts seeing ghosts, including Grandpa Clem. She is a "high channel," Grandpa Clem tells her, and he shouldn't be here--"the portal didn't open." He must have been murdered, he tells Lila, and he needs her help.
The Last Resort, intended to be a digitally interactive title, is a fun classic haunted house story in which any ghost may be friend or foe. Ghosts are brought (back) to life through Naomi Ranquiz's brilliant black-and-white character sketches, reminiscent of Tim Burton and Disney's Haunted Mansion. QR codes embedded in the illustrations should allow readers to further explore Lila's world through their devices. [Interactive elements were not reviewed by Shelf Awareness.] First in a multi-authored series, The Last Resort is a delightfully frightful and absorbing mystery. --Kyla Paterno, freelance reviewer
Discover: Eleven-year-old Lila begins to see ghosts, including her recently deceased grandfather, in this spooky, sensory middle-grade mystery.
Wombat
by Philip Bunting
Lovable round-faced marsupials take center stage in the cheerful, bouncy board book edition of Wombat by Philip Bunting (The Gentle Genius of Trees).
"Wombat," the first page announces. A cartoonishly wide-eyed version of the thick-bodied, brown-furred animal stands next to a yellow flower. "Twobats," the facing page adds confidently, as the first wombat tries to hand the now-plucked flower to a blushing, identical companion. Unfortunately, a newcomer popping up between them makes "threebats" and causes a slight case of stink-eye in the would-be gifter. More-supials follow, and then the book shifts to play with other concepts: shapes like Squarebat, the aptly named Splatbat, and all three primary colors plus the queasily green Vombat. The story circles back around to conclude the romantic plot when the first pair reunite, the flower finally passing from paw to paw. The charming gift changes their relationship status from "likebat" to "lovebat," a development that culminates in a tiny, diapered mini-bat with a single curled hair sprouting from its chubby-cheeked noggin.
Bunting's expressive characters have no visible mouths themselves but make smiles an easy proposition for the reader. The spare, rhythmic text will rock grownups and littles through multiple rereads and could become a chant to know by heart. The book's form factor leans all the way into its topic with pages die-cut into the shape of the titular animal's face, earning extra adorability points for presentation. Adults with toddlers should keep this sweet, silly romp-bat in their pouches for quick giggles. --Jaclyn Fulwood, youth services manager, Allen County Public Library
Discover: Two wombats fall in love with a surrealist twist in this silly, bouncy board book with ears.
The Poisoned King
by Katherine Rundell, illus. by Ashley Mackenzie
The Archipelago must once again be saved in The Poisoned King, a high-energy and imaginative sequel to Katherine Rundell's beloved Impossible Creatures.
When a tiny dragon summons Christopher Forrester back to the magical world he left a year earlier, it is not for joyous occasions: "The great dragons are dying in their dozens. Nobody knows why." Christopher arrives on the Archipelago's shores and is informed by a sphinx friend that his destiny is linked to that of Anya Argen, reluctant princess of the island of Dousha and friend to the talkative royal gaganas (miracle-working birds from Russian folklore). Anya, however, is fleeing her home--her uncle poisoned her grandfather, pinned the crime on her father, and attempted to murder Anya herself in a bid to steal the throne. The death of the dragons and the murder of Anya's grandfather are connected, but if the children don't figure out the antidote to the poisons used in all the murders, the creatures of the Archipelago may be doomed.
Rundell expertly shapes another magical adventure in The Poisoned King. Though only the first few chapters are through Christopher's point-of-view and not much of the world originally explored in Impossible Creatures appears, many favorite side characters return; the Archipelago is made both familiar and fresh in the eyes of its heroine, a rageful, fearsome girl who chooses kindness over harsh revenge. Fine-lined black-and-white illustrations by Ashley Mackenzie give face to the fantastical creatures and elements in Rundell's imaginative world.
Fans of Impossible Creatures and of stories like Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass will likely be deeply enchanted by this return to the Archipelago. --Nicole Brinkley, bookseller and writer
Discover: Reluctant princess Anya receives Christopher's help saving the dragons of the Archipelago and freeing her imprisoned father in this enchanting, mysterious sequel.
Now in Paperback
The Writer's Life
Reading with... Yiming Ma
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photo: Southspringbreeze |
Yiming Ma was born in Shanghai and spent a decade working in tech and finance in New York, Toronto, London, Berlin, and South Africa. He attended Stanford University for his MBA and holds an MFA from Warren Wilson College, where he was the Carol Houck Smith Scholar. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Guardian, LitHub, Hazlitt, and the Florida Review. His story "Swimmer of Yangtze" won the 2018 Guardian 4th Estate Short Story Prize. His debut novel is These Memories Do Not Belong to Us (Mariner Books), a hauntingly beautiful and prescient debut novel set in a future where a renamed China is the sole global superpower.
Handsell readers your book in 25 words or less:
In a world where memories are sold and surveilled, governed by a renamed China, how does one survive while keeping their mother's banned memories safe?
On your nightstand now:
Headshot by Rita Bullwinkel, The Memory Police by Yōko Ogawa, We Were the Universe by Kimberly King Parsons, A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan, Your House Will Pay by Steph Cha, The Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson, Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff, The Audacity by Ryan Chapman, What Strange Paradise by Omar El Akkad, River East, River West by Aube Rey Lescure.
A lovely mix of books by author friends I may be speaking with during my tour, and books I'm in the middle of falling in love with again.
Favorite book when you were a child:
The Wheel of Time series. I grew up in Shanghai watching Chinese martial arts dramas known as wuxia, so reading fantasy series such as the Wheel of Time was probably the closest thing after my family moved to New York and then Toronto. Naturally, I am absolutely devastated that Amazon canceled the television series after the incredible season finale. The series had just found its footing and I want to give a special shoutout to Natasha O'Keeffe, the actress who played the Forsaken Lanfear, for bringing the character to life beyond my wildest expectations.
Book you're an evangelist for:
Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang. In particular, the Nebula Award-winning novella from the collection that was adapted into the movie Arrival starring Amy Adams, but also Hell Is the Absence of God. I love how emotionally resonant Chiang's works are, even with all the science embedded within them, and in the titular novella, how everything comes full circle.
Recently, I was gratified when Debutiful's Adam Vitcavage brought up Chiang himself when reviewing my book for the second half of his Most Anticipated List: "It was reminiscent of the first time I read Ted Chiang's Story of Your Life. It made me believe that books can change my brain's chemistry."
That's also how I feel about Chiang's works every time I have the privilege to read a new story from him every one or two years.
Book you've bought for the cover:
The paperback edition of The Vegetarian by Han Kang from Portobello Books (now Granta Books). That severed wing of a white bird above the bloody veins resembling a leaf is seared in my memories. I think I must have recommended that book to over 30 people by now.
Book that changed your life:
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro. I still vividly remember reading this novel in a tiny upstairs dessert café in London's Chinatown, the day after I moved to the city for a new job. I couldn't leave until I finished, drinking multiple bowls of almond dessert. The restraint in Ishiguro's prose was nothing short of haunting when juxtaposed with the novel's horrific secrets and the psychological states of its characters.
Ishiguro was the author who most inspired me to take a year off between my career working in education/tech and my graduate degree at Stanford, in order to dedicate time to writing my first stories. One of those eventually became "Swimmer of Yangtze" and won the Guardian 4th Estate Short Story Prize two years afterward.
Favorite line from a book:
"1. Suppose I were to begin by saying that I had fallen in love with a color. Suppose I were to speak this as though it were a confession; suppose I shredded my napkin as we spoke. It began slowly. An appreciation, an affinity. Then, one day, it became more serious."
Those opening lines of Maggie Nelson's Bluets changed me. With each word, I felt as if I was silently falling further into her river of language, until the moment I realized that the current had captured me completely, swiftly carrying me into the depths of her obsessions.
Bluets also taught me that fragmentary structures can often capture the non-linear or recursive nature of grief and other complex emotions better than more traditional forms. This was instructive as I wrote certain Memory Epics within These Memories Do Not Belong to Us.
Book you most want to read again for the first time:
A Wild Sheep Chase. Or any early novel by Haruki Murakami. When I lived in Tokyo, I used to imagine running into him, the way I once did with the Michelin-starred chef Jiro Ono in a public bathroom in Ginza. My wife always jokes about how often Murakami describes the ears of women in his novels, but I find his early work both surreal and mesmerizing, unexpectedly offering me permission to play more with my loneliest characters. One of my favorite movies is the Korean psychological thriller Burning directed by Lee Chang-dong, which was adapted from one of Murakami's short stories.
Final dedications:
Each of the 11 banned memories in These Memories Do Not Belong to Us is written in a different style. I owe much to all the authors featured in this interview (Chiang, Ishiguro, Nelson, Kang), and many more, for helping bring this novel to life.
Special thanks also to the authors who pushed the constellation novel structure, such as A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan, Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell, The Power by Naomi Alderman, and more recently, How High We Go in the Dark by Sequoia Nagamatsu, who kindly wrote my book a blurb.
If you enjoyed any of those titles, I think there's a good chance you'll enjoy These Memories Do Not Belong to Us too.
Book Candy
Book Candy
The Onion's book-to-film headline of the day: "Emerald Fennell assures fans Wuthering Heights will be faithful adaptation of Twilight."
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"Hear Joey Ramone sing a piece by John Cage adapted from James Joyce's Finnegans Wake," courtesy of Open Culture.
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Mental Floss recalled "8 times authors took revenge in their fiction."
The Elements
by John Boyne
John Boyne's 15th novel for adults is one of his finest yet, a masterful compilation of four distinct yet related stories that tackle the weighty issue of sexual abuse in modern times from multiple perspectives. Which is not to suggest it is a mystery or thriller, though it contains elements of both, nor an imagining of one event as seen through multiple points of view; instead, in Boyne's skilled hands, The Elements is a kaleidoscopic literary novel that examines the far-reaching ripple effect of sexual violence as understood by characters with varying relationships to it: as enabler, accomplice, predator, and victim.
Originally published in Boyne's native Ireland and the United Kingdom as four standalone novellas, the four stories in The Elements are at once self-contained and interconnected, with a character from each pulled forward as the narrator of the subsequent story. In "Water," a well-to-do wife and mother from Dublin re-christens herself as Willow Hale, following the collapse of her orderly world. Fleeing Dublin for a coastal island with a population numbering in the hundreds, Willow mourns the death of one daughter and estrangement from another while raging against her soon-to-be-ex-husband for the crimes he committed against students in his care. A young boy from the island eventually flees for mainland Ireland, becoming the narrator of "Earth." Evan dreams of becoming an artist but is forced to use his body to support himself: first as a farmhand, then in the beds of older men, then as a star soccer player. "I was reared in the mud and the dirt," he notes, and yet winds up in a high-rise apartment, deep in unrequited love for his straight best friend and with a highly questionable understanding of consent. In "Fire," Boyne boldly takes readers into the mind of Freya, a surgeon who works with fire victims, as she carefully selects young boys to coax back to her apartment. One of those boys, Aaron, re-appears as the narrator of "Air," now the father of a recalcitrant teenager forced to fly halfway across the world to visit his grieving mother on that same sparsely populated island off the coast of Ireland. His mother, filled with despair when she first lived on the island, lamented: "The elements--water, earth, fire, air--are our greatest friends, our animators. They feed us, warm us, give us life, and yet conspire to kill us at every juncture."
Boyne has spoken publicly about his own experience of abuse as a young man, and called the writing of this novel both "dark" and "cathartic." It's an experience that is paralleled as a reader; The Elements is difficult to read and equally difficult to put down once begun. Each story is compelling in its own right, probing questions of complicity and power, storytelling and secrets, the lies we tell each other and the lies we tell ourselves. Taken together, the four combine into a powerful and moving examination of what it means to be human. Can one be complicit in and party to and victim of violence, sometimes all at once? Where is the line between understandable and unforgivable, and what happens when that line is crossed? Boyne probes the inner worlds of narrators living within this complexity and violence, and also with a desire for justice and love. Willow, on seeing Evan fleeing the small island that raised him harshly, reflects, "I hope that he will not know pain or betrayal or disappointment, but of course he will, because he's alive and that's the price we pay." The Elements honors this reality while also holding that these pains are not all that exists.
Making small talk with a writer at a party, the narrator of "Air" questions the author about happy endings. Her take is that the happy ending is not necessary for the characters--but that "readers need to feel that there's hope. For them." This same could said of The Elements itself: Boyne may not offer happy endings as we traditionally understand them, but does not leave readers without hope--for themselves. He skillfully brings each story back around by the end to tie up some loose ends and offer brief glimmers into the outcomes of characters left behind. In these glimmers, The Elements manages to offer readers the same hope Aaron's author friend envisions. Through each of these four narrators--themselves often unreliable in accounting for their own actions--the novel invites readers into a place of nuance and complexity, where right and wrong collide and intertwine and don't always fade back to black and white. Brutal, honest, and masterfully crafted from start to finish, The Elements is a literary feat from one of Ireland's most beloved contemporary writers. --Kerry McHugh
On Crime and Complicity
An Interview With John Boyne
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John Boyne (photo: Rich Gilligan) |
John Boyne has written more than two dozen novels, including the widely acclaimed The Heart's Invisible Furies and A Ladder to the Sky, and the young adult novel The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, which has been adapted for film, theater, ballet, and opera performances. His 15th novel for adults, The Elements (Holt), weaves together four interconnected stories in a dark and powerful work exploring sexual abuse from varied perspectives. Boyne lives and writes in Ireland.
This book has both difficult subject matter and a unique structure. How do you talk about it, when talking to others?
The idea, at the start, was that there would be four standalone stories, with a character from one becoming the narrator of the next one. But they would be connected by this theme of sexual abuse, and I would work from the enabler to the accomplice to the perpetrator to the victim in four separate narratives. So it's a novel which contains those four connected stories, all on the same theme, with characters that drift in and out. And ultimately, it works in a cyclical way back to the place where it started.
It was an interesting twist, to end up--at least in terms of setting--back where the novel begins.
This is a particularly long book when you put all four stories together, and I liked the idea of wrapping up some of the loose ends. The fourth story, "Air," is mostly set on a plane, and when I thought about where I would send that plane, it felt like the place to finish was to go back to the island that features in the beginning in "Water." The island isn't named in the book, though it's somewhat based on one of the small Aran Islands off the West Coast of Galway.
I visited a Gaeltacht [an Irish-language district] on those islands when I was a teenager, and with only about 400 residents, not much Wi-Fi, it feels removed from the world. In that way, the island is similar to the airplane: two people stuck together, with not many others around them but not entirely alone, either.
Outside of the United States and Canada, these four stories were published as standalone novellas prior to being published as The Elements. What was it like for you to be writing the later stories after the earlier ones were already out in the world?
I started with "Water," and presented it to my U.K. editor with the idea that I had that I wanted to write each of the four elements, one every six months or so, published as a small hardback. That's how it started; "Water" was published while I was still writing the third, "Fire." Which meant I had to live with everything I had written so far. Like serialized authors in the 19th century: once you've committed to something in print, there's no going back and rewriting it. That was a challenge--quite a nice challenge as a writer--as it wasn't something I'd done before.
Your past works span a wide range of time periods and themes. Was the research process much different for this book, given the very contemporary setting? Did it feel different to be writing in the present day than your more historical novels?
This was probably the most emotional, with the possible exception of The Heart's Invisible Furies. And it was easily the most difficult, particularly when writing "Fire" and keeping the voice of Freya as an abuser in my head.
Many have said that this novel is very dark, and it is, but at the same time, something that is dark to write can still, in a weird way, be enjoyable. You can still leave your computer every evening and feel that you're achieving something, that the story is moving along, that there is authenticity in the characters, that there is a story to be told and you are the person to tell it. I like the writing process, but with this one, I'll be honest and say that when I got to the end of the whole thing, what I felt was a sense of relief. Partially in finishing, but also in feeling like now I've written myself out of the subject. Because it's so personal, I poured every part of myself into it, all of those emotions.
You've spoken before about your own experience of abuse. Given the personal connection to this topic, how did you care for yourself in the writing of these stories?
I think the self-care was writing it in the first place, rather than choosing not to. I found it incredibly cathartic. I wanted to understand not just why a person does these things, but why society often lets them get away with it. The thing I often say about Ireland is in the years that I was growing up, there were a very small minority of people who were committing these crimes, but a vast majority knew they were going on. One thing that runs through a lot of my novels is the idea of complicity. There's a crime itself, and there's also why we allow it. When do we intervene? Are we afraid for ourselves? How do we respond in such moments?
That question of complicity feels alive in the question of narrative, too: Who is controlling the narrative, and how does a public narrative vary from the internal narrative a character might have about themselves?
In many ways, they're all sort of lying to themselves as well as to others. There are all sort of unreliable narrators here. And each of them is questioning things in their own experiences, something they are forced to confront about their own lives, their own behavior. I wanted readers to be on board with the narrators, generally believe them. But also suspect a few things, and realize each narrator is not completely telling the truth here.
None of us want to believe that we're bad in any way. But realistically, there are things that we each feel really proud of and some things we feel ashamed of. We're human. We don't always get it right. We make mistakes, and we don't always correct those mistakes, and sometimes we don't want to confront those mistakes. Freya as a narrator, and as an abuser, is the only one as a narrator who is very aware of what she is doing, and unapologetic about it. The other three are hiding things, even from themselves.
Given the subject matter of this book, I have to ask: How do you feel about content warnings in novels?
To be honest, I think readers are adults. This isn't a book that's going to be read by children. I don't want to open a book myself and be given a content warning, because to me, it feels a bit like speaking down to the reader, not trusting the material emotions. Readers can assume that if you're going to read a piece of literature, you're going to be challenged. That's its job. Not everything is going to please everybody. I always look at these pieces from myself as a reader more than a writer. I want to get to the end of the book, and I don't want the characters to be kind of all tied up in a nice bow, I want to feel they're a bit more ambiguous because I think we all are, and I like reading things that leaves me feeling complex emotions. I guess I do my best to do that as a writer myself. --Kerry McHugh
Rediscover
Rediscover: Thomas Perry
Thomas Perry, the author of 31 mystery and thriller novels, died suddenly on September 15 at age 78. His first book, The Butcher's Boy, won the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best First Novel in 1983. He launched his popular and critically acclaimed series about Jane Whitefield in 1995 with Vanishing Act; it was chosen as one of the "100 Favorite Mysteries of the Century" by the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association and was included in Parade's list of "101 Best Mystery Books of All Time." The last book in the series, The Tree of Light and Flowers, will be published in March 2026. Perry also wrote many stand-alone mysteries, including Death Benefits, Pursuit (which won a Gumshoe Award in 2002), Dead Aim, Night Life, and Fidelity. He received many awards, including the Barry for Best Thriller of the Year for Hero earlier this month.
Mysterious Press said Perry "was beloved by all who knew and worked with him and was part of the Mysterious Press family for a quarter of a century."
Many of Perry's books were acquired by Hollywood studios, most recently The Old Man, a limited-run TV series starring Jeff Bridges and John Lithgow that premiered on FX in 2022. A second series made its debut in 2024. His novel Strip has completed filming as Bear Country, starring Russell Crowe.
Otto Penzler, who published Perry for 25 years, spoke for all those at the Mysterious Press who worked with him, especially Luisa Cruz Smith, his editor for the past four books, stating, "Tom was not only one of the most distinguished writers of crime fiction for more than four decades, he was an unfailingly kind and thoughtful gentlemen that it was a joy and honor to know. We all will miss him, as will his countless fans in all parts of the world."
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