Category: News

  • April 2018 Books to Read

    April 2018 Books to Read

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    April 2018 Books to Read!

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    I fulfilled my goal of having a great winter, and I hope you had a great one, too! Still, once spring comes around, I perk up quite a bit and I love to go sit in the garden with a book. The list below is so exciting I wish that all I had to do this month was sit down in the garden and read!

    Which ones have I missed that you’re excited about?

    The links to Amazon.com are affiliate links, so if you purchase the book (or any item) by going there from this page, we’ll make a bit of money for the site. Do not feel obligated, of course — we’ll keep going regardless! Release dates are based on the U.S. release date.

    April 3

    Stream Systems: The Collected Short Fiction of Gerald Murnane
    by Gerald Murnane
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Farrar, Straus and Giroux:

    Never before available to readers in this hemisphere, these stories — originally published from 1985 to 2012 — offer an irresistible compendium of the work of one of contemporary fiction’s greatest magicians.

    While the Australian master Gerald Murnane’s reputation rests largely on his longer works of fiction, his short stories stand among the most brilliant and idiosyncratic uses of the form since Borges, Beckett, and Nabokov. Brutal, comic, obscene, and crystalline, Stream System runs from the haunting “Land Deal,” which imagines the colonization of Australia and the ultimate vengeance of its indigenous people as a series of nested dreams; to “Finger Web,” which tells a quietly terrifying, fractal tale of the scars of war and the roots of misogyny; to “The Interior of Gaaldine,” which finds its anxious protagonist stranded beyond the limits of fiction itself.

    No one else writes like Murnane, and there are few other authors alive still capable of changing how?and why?we read.

    Border Districts
    by Gerald Murnane
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Farrar, Straus and Giroux:

    “The mind is a place best viewed from borderlands . . .”

    Border Districts, purportedly the Australian master Gerald Murnane’s final work of fiction, is a hypnotic, precise, and self-lacerating “report” on a life led as an avid reader, fumbling lover, “student of mental imagery,” and devout believer?but a believer not in the commonplaces of religion, but rather in the luminescence of memory and its handmaiden, literature.

    In Border Districts, a man moves from a capital city to a remote town in the border country, where he intends to spend the last years of his life. It is time, he thinks, to review the spoils of a lifetime of seeing, a lifetime of reading. Which sights, which people, which books, fictional characters, turns of phrase, and lines of verse will survive into the twilight? A dark-haired woman with a wistful expression? An ancestral house in the grasslands? The colors in translucent panes of glass, in marbles and goldfish and racing silks? Feeling an increasing urgency to put his mental landscape in order, the man sets to work cataloging this treasure, little knowing where his “report” will lead and what secrets will be brought to light.

    Border Districts is a jewel of a farewell from one of the greatest living writers of English prose.

    See What Can Be Done: Essays, Criticism, and Commentary
    by Lorrie Moore
    Knopf

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Knopf:

    A welcome surprise: more than fifty prose pieces, gathered together for the first time, by one of America’s most revered and admired novelists and short-story writers, whose articles, essays, and cultural commentary–appearing in The New York Review of Books, The New York Times Book Review, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Guardian, Harper’s Magazine, and elsewhere–have been parsing the political, artistic, and media idiom for the last three decades.

    From Lorrie Moore’s earliest reviews of novels by Margaret Atwood and Nora Ephron, to an essay on Ezra Edelman’s 2016 O.J. Simpson documentary, and in between: Moore on the writing of fiction (the work of V. S. Pritchett, Don DeLillo, Philip Roth, Joyce Carol Oates, Alice Munro, Stanley Elkin, Dawn Powell, Nicholson Baker, et al.) . . . on the continuing unequal state of race in America . . . on the shock of the shocking GOP . . . on the dangers (and cruel truths) of celebrity marriages and love affairs . . . on the wilds of television (The Wire, Friday Night Lights, Into the Abyss, Girls, Homeland, True Detective, Making a Murderer) . . . on the (d)evolving environment . . . on terrorism, the historical imagination, and the world’s newest form of novelist . . . on the lesser (and larger) lives of biography and the midwifery between art and life (Anaïs Nin, Marilyn Monroe, John Cheever, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Eudora Welty, Bernard Malamud, among others) . . . and on the high art of being Helen Gurley Brown . . . and much, much more.

    Varina
    by Charles Frazier
    Ecco

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Ecco:

    In his powerful new novel, Charles Frazier returns to the time and place of Cold Mountain, vividly bringing to life the chaos and devastation of the Civil War.

    Her marriage prospects limited, teenage Varina Howell agrees to wed the much-older widower Jefferson Davis, with whom she expects the secure life of a Mississippi landowner. Davis instead pursues a career in politics and is eventually appointed president of the Confederacy, placing Varina at the white-hot center of one of the darkest moments in American history—culpable regardless of her intentions.

    The Confederacy falling, her marriage in tatters, and the country divided, Varina and her children escape Richmond and travel south on their own, now fugitives with “bounties on their heads, an entire nation in pursuit.”

    Intimate in its detailed observations of one woman’s tragic life and epic in its scope and power, Varina is a novel of an American war and its aftermath. Ultimately, the book is a portrait of a woman who comes to realize that complicity carries consequences.

    First Person
    by Richard Flanagan
    Knopf

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Knopf:

    From the Man Booker Prize-winning author of The Narrow Road to the Deep North, the hypnotic tale of a ghost writer writing the memoir of a notorious con man, and the chilling events that unfold as their lives become increasingly intertwined.

    Kif Kehlmann, a young, penniless writer, is rung in the middle of the night by the notorious con man and corporate criminal, Siegfried Heidl. About to go to trial for defrauding the banks of $700 million, Heidl offers Kehlmann the job of ghost writing his memoir. He has six weeks to write the book, for which he’ll be paid $10,000.

    But as the writing gets under way, Kehlmann begins to fear that he is being corrupted by Heidl. As the deadline draws closer, he becomes ever more unsure if he is ghost writing a memoir, or if Heidl is rewriting him–his life, his future. Everything that was certain grows uncertain as he begins to wonder: Who is Siegfried Heidl–and who is Kif Kehlmann?

    As time runs out, as Kehlmann’s world feels it is hurtling toward a catharsis, one question looms above all others: What is the truth?

    By turns compelling, comic, and chilling, this is a haunting journey into the heart of our age.


    April 10

    Cove
    by Cynan Jones
    Catapult

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Catapult:

    “Cynan Jones is utterly brilliant. The writing in Cove is so delicate and cruel and insightful. I don’t understand why no statues have been erected in his honour yet.” ?Eimear McBride, The Times Literary Supplement

    Out at sea, in a sudden storm, a man is struck by lightning. When he wakes, injured and adrift on a kayak, his memory of who he is and how he came to be here is all but shattered. He will need to rely on his instincts, resilience, and imagination to get safely back to the woman he dimly senses is waiting for his return. This is an extraordinary, visceral portrait of a man locked in a struggle with the forces of nature.

    Woman of the Ashes
    by Mia Couto
    translated from the Portuguese by David Brookshaw
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Farrar, Straus and Giroux:

    The first in a trilogy about the last emperor of southern Mozambique by one of Africa’s most important writers.

    Southern Mozambique, 1894. Sergeant Germano de Melo is posted to the village of Nkokolani to oversee the Portuguese conquest of territory claimed by Ngungunyane, the last of the leaders of the state of Gaza, the second-largest empire led by an African. Ngungunyane has raised an army to resist colonial rule and with his warriors is slowly approaching the border village. Desperate for help, Germano enlists Imani, a fifteen-year-old girl, to act as his interpreter. She belongs to the VaChopi tribe, one of the few who dared side with the Portuguese. But while one of her brothers fights for the Crown of Portugal, the other has chosen the African emperor. Standing astride two kingdoms, Imani is drawn to Germano, just as he is drawn to her. But she knows that in a country haunted by violence, the only way out for a woman is to go unnoticed, as if made of shadows or ashes.

    Alternating between the voices of Imani and Germano, Mia Couto’s Woman of the Ashescombines vivid folkloric prose with extensive historical research to give a spellbinding and unsettling account of war-torn Mozambique at the end of the nineteenth century.

    Circe
    by Madeline Miller
    Little, Brown and Company

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Little, Brown and Company:

    In the house of Helios, god of the sun and mightiest of the Titans, a daughter is born. But Circe is a strange child–not powerful, like her father, nor viciously alluring like her mother. Turning to the world of mortals for companionship, she discovers that she does possess power–the power of witchcraft, which can transform rivals into monsters and menace the gods themselves.

    Threatened, Zeus banishes her to a deserted island, where she hones her occult craft, tames wild beasts and crosses paths with many of the most famous figures in all of mythology, including the Minotaur, Daedalus and his doomed son Icarus, the murderous Medea, and, of course, wily Odysseus.

    But there is danger, too, for a woman who stands alone, and Circe unwittingly draws the wrath of both men and gods, ultimately finding herself pitted against one of the most terrifying and vengeful of the Olympians. To protect what she loves most, Circe must summon all her strength and choose, once and for all, whether she belongs with the gods she is born from, or the mortals she has come to love.

    With unforgettably vivid characters, mesmerizing language and page-turning suspense, Circe is a triumph of storytelling, an intoxicating epic of family rivalry, palace intrigue, love and loss, as well as a celebration of indomitable female strength in a man’s world.

    The Kremlin Ball
    by Curzio Malaparte
    translated from the Italian by Jenny McPhee
    NYRB Classics

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from NYRB Classics:

    Perhaps only the impeccably perverse imagination of Curzio Malaparte could have conceived of The Kremlin Ball, which might be described as Proust in the corridors of Soviet power. Malaparte began this impertinent portrait of Russia’s Marxist aristocracy while he was working on The Skin, his story of American-occupied Naples, and after publishing Kaputt, his depiction of Europe in the hands of the Axis, thinking of this book as a another “picture of the truth” and a third panel in a great composition depicting the decadence of twentieth-century Europe. The book is set at the end of the 1920s, when the great terror may have been nothing more than a twinkle in Stalin’s eye, but when the revolution was accompanied by a growing sense of doom. In Malaparte’s vision it is from his nightly opera box, rather than the Kremlin, that Stalin surveys Soviet high society, its scandals and amours and intrigues among beauties and bureaucrats, including legendary ballerina Marina Semyonova and Olga Kameneva, sister of the exiled Trotsky, who though a powerful politician is so consumed by dread that everywhere she goes she gives off a smell of rotting meat. Unfinished at the time of Malaparte’s death, this extraordinary court chronicle of Communist life (for which Malaparte also contemplated the title God is a Killer) was only published posthumously in Italy over fifty years after Malaparte’s death and appears in English now for the first time ever.

    Macbeth
    by Jo Nesbo
    translated from the Norwegian by Don Bartlett
    Hogarth Shakespeare

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Hogarth Shakespeare:

    Set in the 1970s in a run-down, rainy industrial town, Jo Nesbo’s Macbeth centers around a police force struggling to shed an incessant drug problem. Duncan, chief of police, is idealistic and visionary, a dream to the townspeople but a nightmare for criminals. The drug trade is ruled by two drug lords, one of whom — a master of manipulation named Hecate — has connections with the highest in power, and plans to use them to get his way.

    Hecate’s plot hinges on steadily, insidiously manipulating Inspector Macbeth: the head of SWAT and a man already susceptible to violent and paranoid tendencies. What follows is an unputdownable story of love and guilt, political ambition, and greed for more, exploring the darkest corners of human nature, and the aspirations of the criminal mind.


    April 17

    Villa Amalia
    by Pascal Quignard
    translated from the French by Chris Turner
    Seagull Books

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Seagull Books:

    Musician Ann Hidden suspects her partner, Thomas, isn’t telling her everything. So one dark night, she secretly follows him to an unfamiliar house in the Paris suburbs, where he disappears inside with an unknown woman. But before she can even begin to process what looks like a betrayal, she gets another surprise—an old schoolmate, Georges Roehlinger, appears, berating her for spying the from the bushes.

    ?With Georges’s help, Ann takes radical action: while Thomas is away, she resolves to secretly sell their shared house and get rid of all the physical manifestations of their sixteen years together. Thomas returns to find her gone, the locks changed, and his few possessions packed up and sent to his office. Ann, meanwhile, has fled the country and started a new, hidden life. But our past is never that easy to escape, and Ann’s secrets eventually seek her out.

    Fox
    by Dubravka Ugresic
    translated from the Croatian by Ellen Elias-Bursac and David Williams
    Open Letter Books

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Open Letter Books:

    With characteristic wit and narrative force, Fox takes us from Russia to Japan, through Balkan minefields and American road trips, and from the 1920s to the present, as it explores the power of storytelling and literary invention, notions of betrayal, and the randomness of human lives and biographies.

    Using the duplicitous and shape-shifting fox of Eastern folklore as a motif, Ugresic constructs a novel that reinvents itself over and over, blending nuggets of literary trivia (like how Nabokov named the Neonympha dorothea dorothea butterfly after the woman who drove him cross-country), with the timeless story of a woman trying to escape her hometown and find love to magical effect.

    Propelled by literary footnotes and “minor” characters, Fox is vintage Ugresic, recovering the voices of those on the margins with a verve that’s impassioned, learned, and hilarious.

    Basic Black with Pearls
    by Helen Weinzweig
    NYRB Classics

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from NYRB Classics:

    A brilliant, lost feminist classic that is equal parts domestic drama and international intrigue.

    Shirley and Coenraad’s affair has been going on for decades, but her longing for him is as desperate as ever. She is a Toronto housewife; he works for an international organization known only as the Agency. Their rendezvous take place in Tangier, in Hong Kong, in Rome and are arranged by an intricate code based on notes slipped into issues of National Geographic. He recognizes her by her costume: a respectable black dress and string of pearls; his appearance, however, is changeable. But something has happened, the code has been discovered, and Coenraad sends Shirley (who prefers to be known as “Lola Montez”) to Toronto, the last place she wants to go. There the trail leads her through the sites of her impoverished immigrant childhood and sends her, finally, to her own house, where she discards her pearls and trades in her basic black for a dress of vibrant multicolored silk.

    Helen Weinzweig published her first novel when she was fifty-eight. Basic Black with Pearls, her second, won the Toronto Book Award and has since come to be recognized as a feminist landmark. Here Weinzweig imbues the formal inventiveness of the nouveau roman with psychological poignancy and surprising humor to tell a story of simultaneous dissolution and discovery.

    The Farm
    by Hector Abad
    translated from the Spanish by Anne McLean
    Archipelago Books

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Archipelago Books:

    Closely knit Colombian siblings’ internal rifts threaten to tear apart the hard-won legacy their father fought to establish against guerilla and paramilitary violence. An intimate and transgressive novel that confirms Héctor Abad as one of the great writers of Latin American literature today.

    Pilar, Eva, and Antonio Ángel are the last heirs of La Oculta, a farm hidden in the mountains of Colombia. The land has survived several generations. It is the landscape of their happiest memories but it is also where they have had to face the siege of violence and terror, restlessness and flight.

    In The Farm, Héctor Abad illuminates the vicissitudes of a family and of a people, as well as of the voices of these three siblings, recounting their loves, fears, desires, and hopes, all against a dazzling backdrop. We enter their lives at the moment when they are about to lose the paradise on which they built their dreams and their reality.

    The Only Story
    by Julian Barnes
    Knopf

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Knopf:

    From the Man Booker Prize-winning author of The Sense of an Ending, a novel about a young man on the cusp of adulthood and a woman who has long been there, a love story shot through with sheer beauty, profound sadness, and deep truth.

    Most of us have only one story to tell. I don’t mean that only one thing happens to us in our lives: there are countless events, which we turn into countless stories. But there’s only one that matters, only one finally worth telling. This is mine.

    One summer in the sixties, in a staid suburb south of London, Paul comes home from university, aged nineteen, and is urged by his mother to join the tennis club. In the mixed-doubles tournament he’s partnered with Susan Macleod, a fine player who’s forty-eight, confident, ironic, and married, with two nearly adult daughters. She is also a warm companion, their bond immediate. And they soon, inevitably, are lovers. Clinging to each other as though their lives depend on it, they then set up house in London to escape his parents and the abusive Mr. Mcleod.

    Decades later, Paul looks back at how they fell in love, how he freed Susan from a sterile marriage, and how–gradually, relentlessly–everything fell apart, and he found himself struggling to understand the intricacy and depth of the human heart. It’s a piercing account of helpless devotion, and of how memory can confound us and fail us and surprise us (sometimes all at once), of how, as Paul puts it, “first love fixes a life forever.”


    April 24

    You Think It, I’ll Say It: Stories
    by Curtis Sittenfeld
    Random House

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Random House:

    Curtis Sittenfeld has established a reputation as a sharp chronicler of the modern age who humanizes her subjects even as she skewers them. Now, with this first collection of short fiction, her “astonishing gift for creating characters that take up residence in readers’ heads” (The Washington Post) is showcased like never before.

    Throughout the ten stories in You Think It, I’ll Say It, Sittenfeld upends assumptions about class, relationships, and gender roles in a nation that feels both adrift and viscerally divided. In “The World Has Many Butterflies,” married acquaintances play a strangely intimate game with devastating consequences. In “Vox Clamantis in Deserto,” a shy Ivy League student learns the truth about a classmate’s seemingly enviable life. In “A Regular Couple,” a high-powered lawyer honeymooning with her husband is caught off guard by the appearance of the girl who tormented her in high school. And in “The Prairie Wife,” a suburban mother of two fantasizes about the downfall of an old friend whose wholesome lifestyle empire may or may not be built on a lie.

    With moving insight and uncanny precision, Curtis Sittenfeld pinpoints the questionable decisions, missed connections, and sometimes extraordinary coincidences that make up a life. Indeed, she writes what we’re all thinking—if only we could express it with the wit of a master satirist, the storytelling gifts of an old-fashioned raconteur, and the vision of an American original.

    The Emissary
    by Yoko Tawada
    translated from the Japanese by Margaret Mitsutani
    New Directions

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from New Directions:

    Japan, after suffering from a massive irreparable disaster, cuts itself off from the world. Children are so weak they can barely stand or walk: the only people with any get-go are the elderly. Mumei lives with his grandfather Yoshiro, who worries about him constantly. They carry on a day-to-day routine in what could be viewed as a post-Fukushima time, with all the children born ancient?frail and gray-haired, yet incredibly compassionate and wise. Mumei may be enfeebled and feverish, but he is a beacon of hope, full of wit and free of self-pity and pessimism. Yoshiro concentrates on nourishing Mumei, a strangely wonderful boy who offers “the beauty of the time that is yet to come.”

    A delightful, irrepressibly funny book, The Emissary is filled with light. Yoko Tawada, deftly turning inside-out “the curse,” defies gravity and creates a playful joyous novel out of a dystopian one, with a legerdemain uniquely her own.

    Elmore Leonard: Westerns
    Last Stand at Sabre River
    Hombre
    -Valdez Is Coming
    -Forty Lashes Less One
    -Stories
    The Library of America

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from The Library of America:

    One of the great storytellers of our time, Elmore Leonard perfected his craft writing Westerns, a genre he loved. These tales–some adapted into such outstanding films as Hombre, Valdez Is Coming, and 3:10 to Yuma–are unexcelled for their wiry tautness, sharp characterizations, and jolts of unexpected humor. For sheer stripped-down narrative tension Leonard never did anything better, and the fresh twists he finds in resolving the genre’s classic confrontations reveal a master at work. Whether describing a Civil War veteran coming back to find his homestead stolen (Last Stand at Saber River), a man raised by Apaches treated with contempt by the white settlers who will ultimately depend on him for their survival (Hombre), a local constable, tricked into killing an innocent man, fighting back against the powerful man who duped him (Valdez Is Coming), or two convicts in a desert prison–one African American and the other half-Apache–plotting a near-impossible escape (Forty Lashes Less One), Leonard’s westerns are tough, suspenseful, convincing, and beautifully spare in style.

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  • The Criterion Collection Announces June 2018 Releases

    The Criterion Collection Announces June 2018 Releases

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    The Criterion Collection has announced its releases for June 2018, which includes four new titles and one upgrade I’ve been particularly antsy about since I sold my DVD of it a few years ago. I can finally get the film back on my shelf!

    The blurbs are from The Criterion Collection’s website (so are the links) — go there to see the details on the supplements.


    June 12, 2018

    Manila in the Claws of Light (1975)
    d. Lino Brocka

    Lino Brocka’s Insiang (my review here) is one of my favorite personal discoveries of last year. I’ve heard as much good about this film as well, so this is a must.

    From The Criterion Collection:

    Lino Brocka broke through to international acclaim with this candid portrait of 1970s Manila, the second film in the director’s turn to more serious-minded filmmaking after building a career on mainstream films he described as “soaps.” A young fisherman from a provincial village arrives in the capital on a quest to track down his girlfriend, who was lured there with the promise of work and hasn’t been heard from since. In the meantime, he takes a low-wage job at a construction site and witnesses life on the streets, where death strikes without warning, corruption and exploitation are commonplace, and protests hint at escalating civil unrest. Mixing visceral, documentary-like realism with the narrative focus of Hollywood noir and melodrama, Manila in the Claws of Lightis a howl of anguish from one of the most celebrated figures in Philippine cinema.


    June 19, 2018

    El Sur (1983)
    d. Victor Erice

    Erice’s beautiful film The Spirit of the Beehive is a DVD-only release I’d like to see come out on Blu-ray. When I finished that film I immediately sat down to watch Erice’s El Sur, and I liked it almost as much. I’m very glad to see it finally getting a release!

    From The Criterion Collection:

    Ten years after making his mark on Spanish cinema with The Spirit of the Beehive, Víctor Erice returned to filmmaking with this adaptation of a novella by Adelaida García Morales, which deepens the director’s fascination with childhood, fantasy, and the legacy of his country’s civil war. In the North of Spain, Estrella grows up captivated by her father, a doctor with mystical powers—and by the enigma of his youth in the South, a near-mythical region whose secrets seem to haunt him more and more as time goes on. Though Erice’s original vision also encompassed a long section set in the South itself, which was never made, El Sur remains an experience of rare perfection and satisfaction, drawing on painterly cinematography by José Luis Alcaine to evoke the enchantments of memory and the inaccessible, inescapable mysteries of the past.


    June 19, 2018

    Bowling for Columbine (2002)
    d. Michael Moore

    Criterion teased that they were working on this release before the latest push for gun control in America, so this is not just a convenient release. Of course, given how frequent these tragedies are, this film is perpetually relevant. I’m not the biggest fan of Moore’s rhetorical techniques as he seems to use the very ones he criticizes, but I do think this is an important documentary so I’m glad to see it getting a new release.

    From The Criterion Collection:

    In the wake of the Columbine High School massacre in 1999, the intrepid documentarian Michael Moore set out to investigate the long, often volatile love affair between Americans and their firearms, uncovering the pervasive culture of fear that keeps the nation locked and loaded. Equipped with a camera and a microphone, Moore follows the trail of bullets from Littleton, Colorado, and Flint, Michigan, all the way to Kmart’s Michigan headquarters and NRA president Charlton Heston’s Beverly Hills mansion, meeting shooting survivors, militia members, mild-mannered Canadians, and musician Marilyn Manson along the way. An unprecedented popular success that helped usher in a new era in documentary filmmaking, the Oscar-winning Bowling for Columbine is a raucous, impassioned, and still tragically relevant journey through the American psyche.


    June 26, 2018

    Female Trouble (1974)
    d. John Waters

    I’ve never seen a John Waters film. His fans, whom I respect, have never suggested I do.

    From The Criterion Collection:

    Glamour has never been more grotesque than in Female Trouble, which injects the Hollywood melodrama with anarchic decadence. Divine, director John Waters’ larger-than-life muse, engulfs the screen with charisma as Dawn Davenport—who progresses from a teenage nightmare hell-bent on getting cha-cha heels for Christmas to a fame monster whose egomaniacal impulses land her in the electric chair—in the ultimate expression of the film’s lurid mantra, “Crime is beauty.” Shot in Baltimore on 16 mm, with a cast drawn from Waters’ beloved troupe of regulars, the Dreamlanders (including Mink Stole, David Lochary, Mary Vivian Pearce, Edith Massey, and Cookie Mueller), this film, the director’s favorite of his work with Divine, comes to life through the tinsel-toned vision of production designer Vincent Peranio and costume designer/makeup artist Van Smith. An endlessly quotable fan favorite, Female Trouble offers up perverse pleasures that never fail to satisfy.


    June 26, 2018

    The Virgin Spring (1960)
    d. Ingmar Bergman

    I’ve been waiting for Criterion to upgrade their old DVD of this film for years! I sold my box set Ingmar Bergman: Four Masterworks: Smiles of a Summer Night, The Seventh Seal, Wild Strawberries, and The Virgin Spring because each of the other three films were available in better editions. I’m so relieved it’s going to be back on my shelf, because it is one of my favorites. It’s also one of the first films I reviewed on The Mookse and the Gripes (see here).

    From The Criterion Collection:

    Winner of the Academy Award for best foreign-language film, Ingmar Bergman’s The Virgin Spring is a harrowing tale of faith, revenge, and savagery in medieval Sweden. With austere simplicity, the director tells the story of the rape and murder of the virgin Karin, and her father Töre’s ruthless pursuit of vengeance, set in motion after the killers visit the family’s farmhouse. Starring frequent Bergman collaborator and screen icon Max von Sydow, the film is both beautiful and cruel in its depiction of a world teetering between paganism and Christianity.

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  • 2018 Man Booker International Prize Longlist

    2018 Man Booker International Prize Longlist

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    The 2018 Man Booker International Prize Longlist

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    Earlier today the longlist for the 2018 Man Booker International Prize was announced. I’ve read a couple of them and have others on my list. Over at The Mookse and the Gripes Goodreads group, there is already a good amount of discussion (here), so I recommend checking the list out and joining in that conversation.

    The Seventh Function of Language, by Laurent Binet, translated from the French by Sam Taylor
    Purchase from Amazon

    The Imposter, by Javier Cercas, translated from the Spanish by Frank Wynne
    Purchase from Amazon

    Vernon Subutex 1, by Virginie Despentes, translated from the French by Frank Wynne
    Purchase from Amazon

    Go, Went, Gone, by Jenny Erpenbeck, translated from the German by Susan Bernofsky
    Purchase from Amazon

    The White Book, by Han Kang, translated from the Korean by Deborah Smith
    Purchase from Amazon

    Die, My Love, by Ariana Harwicz, translated from the Spanish by Sarah Moses & Carolina Orloff
    Purchase from Amazon

    The World Goes On, by László Krasznahorkai, translated from the Hungarian by John Batki, Ottilie Mulzet & George Szirtes
    Purchase from Amazon

    Like a Fading Shadow, by Antonio Muños Molina, translated from the Spanish by Camilo A. Ramirez
    Purchase from Amazon

    The Flying Mountain, by Christoph Ransmayr, translated from the German by Simon Pare
    Purchase from Amazon

    Frankenstein in Baghdad, by Ahmed Saadawi, translated from the Arabic by Jonathan Wright
    Purchase from Amazon

    Flights, by Olga Tokarczuk, translated from the Polish by Jennifer Croft
    Purchase from Amazon

    The Stolen Bicycle, by Wu Ming-Yi, translated from the Chinese by Darryl Sterk
    Purchase from Amazon

    The Dinner Guest, by Gabriela Ybarra, translated from the Spanish by Natasha Wimmer
    Purchase from Amazon


    Judges:

    • Lisa Appignanesi OBE (Chair)
    • Michael Hofmann
    • Hari Kunzru
    • Tim Martin
    • Helen Oyeyemi

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  • 2018 Women’s Prize for Fiction Longlist

    2018 Women’s Prize for Fiction Longlist

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    The 2018 Women’s Prize for Fiction Longlist

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    Earlier this evening the longlist for the 2018 Women’s Prize for Fiction was announced (you can see the complete press release here). This is a promising list. I’d love to hear your thoughts!

    H(A)PPY by Nicola Barker
    Purchase from Amazon

    The Idiot by Elif Batuman
    Purchase from Amazon

    Three Things About Elsie by Joanna Cannon
    Purchase from Amazon

    Miss Burma by Charmaine Craig
    Purchase from Amazon

    Manhattan Beach by Jennifer Egan
    Purchase from Amazon

    The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gowar
    Purchase from Amazon

    Sight by Jessie Greengrass
    Purchase from Amazon

    Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
    Purchase from Amazon

    When I Hit You: Or, A Portrait of the Writer as a Young Wife by Meena Kandasamy
    Purchase from Amazon

    Elmet by Fiona Mozley
    Purchase from Amazon

    The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy
    Purchase from Amazon

    See What I Have Done by Sarah Schmidt
    Purchase from Amazon

    A Boy in Winter by Rachel Seiffert
    Purchase from Amazon

    Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie
    Purchase from Amazon

    The Trick to Time by Kit de Waal

    Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward
    Purchase from Amazon

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  • March 2018 Books to Read

    March 2018 Books to Read

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    March 2018 Books to Read!

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    Wow, there are a lot of exciting books coming out this March! I’ve already read a few, and they are exciting — I hope to review them soon. In the meantime, please luxuriate in the riches below!

    Which ones have I missed that you’re excited about?

    The links to Amazon.com are affiliate links, so if you purchase the book (or any item) by going there from this page, we’ll make a bit of money for the site. Do not feel obligated, of course — we’ll keep going regardless! Release dates are based on the U.S. release date.

    March 6

    Tomb Song
    by Julián Herbert
    translated from the Spanish by Christina MacSweeney
    Graywolf Press

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Graywolf Press:

    Sitting at the bedside of his mother as she is dying from leukemia in a hospital in northern Mexico, the narrator of Tomb Song is immersed in memories of his unstable boyhood and youth. His mother, Guadalupe, was a prostitute, and Julián spent his childhood with his half brothers and sisters, each from a different father, moving from city to city and from one tough neighborhood to the next.

    Swinging from the present to the past and back again, Tomb Song is not only an affecting coming-of-age story but also a searching and sometimes frenetic portrait of the artist. As he wanders the hospital, from its buzzing upper floors to the haunted depths of the morgue, Julián tells fevered stories of his life as a writer, from a trip with his pregnant wife to a poetry festival in Berlin to a drug-fueled and possibly completely imagined trip to another festival in Cuba. Throughout, he portrays the margins of Mexican society as well as the attitudes, prejudices, contradictions, and occasionally absurd history of a country ravaged by corruption, violence, and dysfunction.

    Inhabiting the fertile ground between fiction, memoir, and essay, Tomb Song is an electric prose performance, a kaleidoscopic, tender, and often darkly funny exploration of sex, love, and death. Julián Herbert’s English-language debut establishes him as one of the most audacious voices in contemporary letters.

    Awayland
    by Ramona Ausubel
    Riverhead Books

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Riverhead Books:

    Acclaimed for the grace, wit, and magic of her novels, Ramona Ausubel introduces us to a geography both fantastic and familiar in eleven new stories, some of them previously published in The New Yorker and The Paris Review. Elegantly structured, these stories span the globe and beyond, from small-town America and sunny Caribbean islands to the Arctic Ocean and the very gates of Heaven itself. And though some of the stories are steeped in mythology, they remain grounded in universal experiences: loss of identity, leaving home, parenthood, joy, and longing.

    Crisscrossing the pages of Awayland are travelers and expats, shadows and ghosts. A girl watches as her homesick mother slowly dissolves into literal mist. The mayor of a small Midwestern town offers a strange prize, for stranger reasons, to the parents of any baby born on Lenin’s birthday. A chef bound for Mars begins an even more treacherous journey much closer to home. And a lonely heart searches for love online–never mind that he’s a Cyclops.

    With her signature tenderness, Ramona Ausubel applies a mapmaker’s eye to landscapes both real and imagined, all the while providing a keen guide to the wild, uncharted terrain of the human heart.

    Trick
    by Domenico Starnone
    translated from the Italian by Jhumpa Lahiri
    Europa Editions

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Europa Editions:

    Trick is a stylish drama about ambition, family, and old-age that goes beyond the ordinary and predictable. Imagine a duel between two men. One, Daniele Mallarico, is a successful illustrator who, in the twilight of his years, feels that his reputation and his artistic prowess are fading. The other, Mario, is Daniele’s four-year-old grandson. Daniele has been living in a cold northern city for years, in virtual solitude, focusing obsessively on his work, when his daughter asks if he would come to Naples for a few days and babysit Mario while she and her husband attend a conference. Shut inside his childhood home?an apartment in the center of Naples that is filled with the ghosts of Mallarico’s past?grandfather and grandson match wits as Daniele heads toward a reckoning with his own ambitions and life choices.

    Outside the apartment, pulses Naples, a wily, violent, and passionate city whose influence can never be shaken.

    Trick is a gripping, brilliantly devised drama, “an extremely playful literary composition,” as Jhumpa Lahiri describes it in her introduction, by the Strega Prize-winning novelist whom many coinsider to be one of Italy’s greatest living writers.

    Berlin Alexanderplatz
    by Alfred Döblin
    translated from the Germany by Michael Hofmann
    NYRB Classics

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from NYRB Classics:

    The inspiration for Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s epic film and that The Guardian named one of the “Top 100 Books of All Time,” Berlin Alexanderplatz is considered one of the most important works of the Weimar Republic and twentieth century literature.

    Berlin Alexanderplatz, the great novel of Berlin and the doomed Weimar Republic, is one of the great books of the twentieth century, gruesome, farcical, and appalling, word drunk, pitchdark. In Michael Hofmann’s extraordinary new translation, Alfred Döblin’s masterpiece lives in English for the first time.

    As Döblin writes in the opening pages:

    The subject of this book is the life of the former cement worker and haulier Franz Biberkopf in Berlin. As our story begins, he has just been released from prison, where he did time for some stupid stuff; now he is back in Berlin, determined to go straight. 

    To begin with, he succeeds. But then, though doing all right for himself financially, he gets involved in a set-to with an unpredictable external agency that looks an awful lot like fate. 

    Three times the force attacks him and disrupts his scheme. The first time it comes at him with dishonesty and deception. Our man is able to get to his feet, he is still good to stand. 

    Then it strikes him a low blow. He has trouble getting up from that, he is almost counted out. And finally it hits him with monstrous and extreme violence.

    Cloudbursts: Collected and New Stories
    by Thomas McGuane
    Knopf

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Knopf:

    From one of our most acclaimed writers, a sumptuous gathering of his singular work in the short form–forty-five stories, including seven entirely new pieces appearing for the first time in book form.

    For more than four decades, Thomas McGuane has been heralded as an unrivaled master of the short story. Now the arc of that achievement appears in one definitive volume. Set in the seedy corners of Key West, the remote shore towns of the Bahamas, and McGuane’s hallmark Big Sky country, with its vast and unforgiving landscape, these are stories of people on the fringes of society, whose twisted pasts meddle with their chances for companionship. Moving from the hilarious to the tragic and back again, McGuane writes about familial dysfunction, emotional failure, and American loneliness, celebrating the human ability to persist through life’s absurdities.


    March 13

    The Right Intention
    by Andrés Barba
    translated from the Spanish by Lisa Dillman
    Transit Books

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Transit Books:

    Nothing is simple for the men and women in Andrés Barba’s stories. As they go about their lives, they are each tested by a single, destructive obsession. A runner puts his marriage at risk while training for a marathon; a teenager can no longer stand the sight of meat following her parents’ divorce; a man suddenly fixates on the age difference between him and his younger male lover. In four tightly wound novellas, Andrés Barba establishes himself as a master of the form.

    Heretics
    by Leonardo Padura
    translated from the Spanish by Anna Kushner
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Farrar, Straus and Giroux:

    A sweeping novel of art theft, anti-Semitism, contemporary Cuba, and crime from a renowned Cuban author, Heretics is Leonardo Padura’s greatest detective work yet.

    In 1939, the Saint Louis sails from Hamburg into Havana’s port with hundreds of Jewish refugees seeking asylum from the Nazi regime. From the docks, nine-year-old Daniel Kaminsky watches as the passengers, including his mother, father, and sister, become embroiled in a fiasco of Cuban corruption. But the Kaminskys have a treasure that they hope will save them: a small Rembrandt portrait of Christ. Yet six days later the vessel is forced to leave the harbor with the family, bound for the horrors of Europe. The Kaminskys, along with their priceless heirloom, disappear.

    Nearly seven decades later, the Rembrandt reappears in an auction house in London, prompting Daniel’s son to travel to Cuba to track down the story of his family’s lost masterpiece. He hires the down-on-his-luck private detective Mario Conde, and together they navigate a web of deception and violence in the morally complex city of Havana.

    In Heretics, Leonardo Padura takes us from the tenements and beaches of Cuba to Rembrandt’s gloomy studio in seventeenth-century Amsterdam, telling the story of people forced to choose between the tenets of their faith and the realities of the world, between their personal desires and the demands of their times. A grand detective story and a moving historical drama, Padura’s novel is as compelling, mysterious, and enduring as the painting at its center.

    The Sparsholt Affair
    by Alan Hollinghurst
    Knopf

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Knopf:

    From the winner of the Man Booker Prize, a masterly novel that spans seven transformative decades as it plumbs the complex relationships of a remarkable family; an immediate best seller upon its publication in England, hailed by the Observer as “perhaps Hollinghurst’s most beautiful novel yet.”

    In 1940, David Sparsholt arrives at Oxford, his sights set on joining the Royal Air Force. Handsome, athletic, charismatic, he is unaware of his powerful effect on others—especially on Evert Dax, the lonely and romantic son of a celebrated novelist who is destined to become a writer himself. With the world at war, and the Blitz raging in London, Oxford exists at a strange remove: a place of quiet study, but also of secret liaisons under the cover of blackouts. A friendship develops between David and Evert that will influence their lives for decades to come.

    Hollinghurst’s astonishing new novel evokes across three generations the intimate relationships of a group of friends brought together by art, literature and love.  We witness shifts in taste and morality through a series of vividly rendered episodes: a Sparsholt holiday in Cornwall; eccentric gatherings at the Dax family home; the adventures of David’s son Johnny, a painter in 1970s London. With tenderness, wit and keen insight, The Sparsholt Affair explores the social and sexual revolutions of the past century, even as it takes us straight to the heart of our current age.

    Richly observed, emotionally charged, this is a dazzling novel of fathers and sons; of family and legacy; and of the longing for permanence amid life’s inevitable transience, by the writer acclaimed in The Wall Street Journal as “one of the best novelists at work today.”

    The Life to Come
    by Michelle de Kretser
    Catapult

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Catapult:

    Set in Australia, France, and Sri Lanka, The Life to Come is about the stories we tell and don’t tell ourselves as individuals, as societies, and as nations. Driven by a vivid cast of characters, it explores necessary emigration, the art of fiction, and ethnic and class conflict.

    Pippa is an Australian writer who longs for the success of her novelist teacher and eventually comes to fear that she “missed everything important.” In Paris, Celeste tries to convince herself that her feelings for her married lover are reciprocated. Ash makes strategic use of his childhood in Sri Lanka, but blots out the memory of a tragedy from that time and can’t commit to his trusting girlfriend, Cassie. Sri Lankan Christabel, who is generously offered a passage to Sydney by Bunty, an old acquaintance, endures her dull job and envisions a brighter future that “rose, glittered, and sank back,” while she neglects the love close at hand.

    The stand-alone yet connected worlds of The Life to Come offer meditations on intimacy, loneliness, and our flawed perception of reality. Enormously moving, gorgeously observant of physical detail, and often very funny, this new novel by Michelle de Kretser reveals how the shadows cast by both the past and the future can transform and distort the present. It is teeming with life and earned wisdom? exhilaratingly contemporary, with the feel of a classic.


    March 20

    Encircling 2: Origins
    by Carl Frode Tiller
    translated from the Norwegian by Barbara J. Haveland
    Graywolf

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Graywolf:

    Book two of The Encircling Trilogy continues piecing together the fractured identity of David, the absent central figure who has lost his memory. Three very different friends write letters about his childhood on the backwater island of Otterøya. Ole, a farmer struggling to right his floundering marriage, recalls days in the woods when an act of pretending went very wrong. Tom Roger, a rough-edged outsider slipping into domestic violence, shares a cruder side of David as he crows about their exploits selling stolen motorcycles and spreads gossip about who David’s father might be. But it is Paula, a former midwife now consigned to a nursing home, who has the most explosive secret of all, one that threatens to undo everything we know about David.

    With a carefully scored polyphony of voices and an unwavering attention to domestic life, Carl Frode Tiller shows how deeply identity is influenced by our friendships. The Encircling Trilogy is an innovative portrayal of one man’s life that is both starkly honest and unnervingly true.

    Journeying
    by Claudio Magris
    translated from the Italian by Anne Milano Appel
    Yale University Press

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Yale University Press:

    A writer of enormous erudition and wide-ranging travels, Claudio Magris selects for this volume writings penned during trips and wanderings over the span of several decades. He has traveled through these years with many beloved companions, to whom he dedicates the book, and sought the kind of journey “that occurs when you abandon yourself to [the gentle current of time] and to whatever life brings.”

    Taken together Magris’s essays share a clearly identified theme. They represent the motif of the journey in all its aspects—literary, metaphysical, spiritual, mythical, philosophical, historical—as well as the author’s comprehensive understanding of the subject or, one might say, of his own way of being in the world. Traveling from Spain to Germany to Poland, Norway, Vietnam, Iran, and Australia, he records particular moments and places through a highly personal lens. A writer’s writer and a reader’s traveler, Magris proves that wandering is equal part wondering.

    The Valley of the Fallen
    by Carlos Rojas
    translated from the Spanish by Edith Gorssman
    Yale University Press

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Yale University Press:

    This historical novel by one of Spain’s most celebrated authors weaves a tale of disparate time periods: the early years of the nineteenth century, when Francisco de Goya was at the height of his artistic career, and the final years of Generalissimo Franco’s Fascist rule in the 1970s. Rojas re-creates the nineteenth-century corridors of power and portrays the relationship between Goya and King Fernando VII, a despot bent on establishing a cruel regime after Spain’s War of Independence. Goya obliges the king’s request for a portrait, but his depiction not only fails to flatter but reflects a terrible darkness and grotesqueness. More than a century later, transcending conventional time, Goya observes Franco’s body lying in state and experiences again a dark and monstrous despair.

    Rojas’s work is a dazzling tour de force, a unique combination of narrative invention and art historical expertise that only he could have brought to the page.

    The Linden Tree
    by César Aira
    translated from the Spanish by Chris Andrews
    New Directions

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from New Directions:

    The Linden Tree was written in 2003. In it the narrator, who could be Aira himself (born the same year, in the same place, a writer who is now also living PBK in Buenos Aires) revisits down his childhood memories. Beginning with an enigmatically beautiful black father who gathered linden flowers to make a sleep-inducing tea, and continuing on to an irrational and physically deformed mother of European descent, the narrator also catalogs his best childhood friends and the many gossiping neighbors. Aira creates a colorful mosaic of an epoch in Argentina when the poor, under the guiding hand of Eva Pero´n, aspired to a newfound middle class. Moving from anecdote to anecdote, alternating between the touching, amusing, and sometimes surreal, we are comforted by the fact that for Aira “everything is allegory.”

    This is a charming novella?evocative, reflexive, amusing, intelligent?that invites the reader to look further into Aira’s great body of work.

    The Italian Teacher
    by Tom Rachman
    Viking

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from Viking:

    A masterful novel about the son of a great painter striving to create his own legacy, by the bestselling author of The Imperfectionists.

    Conceived while his father, Bear, cavorted around Rome in the 1950s, Pinch learns quickly that Bear’s genius trumps all. After Bear abandons his family, Pinch strives to make himself worthy of his father’s attention–first trying to be a painter himself; then resolving to write his father’s biography; eventually settling, disillusioned, into a job as an Italian teacher in London. But when Bear dies, Pinch hatches a scheme to secure his father’s legacy–and make his own mark on the world.

    With his signature humanity and humor, Tom Rachman examines a life lived in the shadow of greatness, cementing his place among his generation’s most exciting literary voices.


    March 27

    The Chandelier
    by Clarice Lispector
    translated from the Portuguese by Benjamin Moser
    New Directions

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from New Directions:

    Fresh from the enormous success of her debut novel Near to the Wild Heart, Hurricane Clarice let loose something stormier with The Chandelier. In a body of work renowned for its potent idiosyncratic genius, The Chandelier in many ways has pride of place. “It stands out,” her biographer Benjamin Moser noted, “in a strange and difficult body of work, as perhaps her strangest and most difficult book.” Of glacial intensity, consisting almost entirely of interior monologues?interrupted by odd and jarring fragments of dialogue and action?the novel moves in slow waves that crest in moments of revelation. As Virginia seeks freedom via creation, the drama of her isolated life is almost entirely internal: from childhood, she sculpts clay figurines with “the best clay one could desire: white, supple, sticky, cold. She got a clear and tender material from which she could shape a world. How, how to explain the miracle …” While on one level simply the story of a woman’s life, The Chandelier’s real drama lies in Lispector’s attempt “to find the nucleus made of a single instant … the tenuous triumph and the defeat, perhaps nothing more than breathing.” The Chandelier pushes Lispector’s lifelong quest for that nucleus into deeper territories than any of her other amazing works.

    The Solitary Twin
    by Harry Mathews
    New Directions

    Buy from Amazon.com here.

    Here is the blurb from New Directions:

    John and Paul were also visitors to the town. They were twins, as identical as can be. They wore the same clothes, chino trousers and open-neck sweaters, in John’s case adorned with a faded maroon neckerchief. Both were addicted to the shellfish harvested year-round from the rocks and sands of the coast: little clams, winkles, cockles, crabs, and above all sea urchins–their dessert, as both said. They drank only McEwan’s India pale ale and smoked the same thin black Brazilian cigars …

    So begins the great writer Harry Mathews’s final novel, The Solitary Twin, a rollicking yet incredibly moving story of two young men who come to a picturesque beach town. Seen prismatically through the viewpoints of the town’s residents, they offer a variety of worldviews. Yet are they really twins or a single person?

    Harry Mathews, the first American member of the French avant-garde literary society Oulipo, and long associated with the New York School of Poets, passed away this year, and The Solitary Twin is his last novel. “I believe this novel is his finest,” his friend John Ashbery wrote.

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  • Mookse Madness 2018 Schedule

    Mookse Madness 2018 Schedule

    [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”no” equal_height_columns=”no” menu_anchor=”” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” class=”” id=”” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_position=”center center” background_repeat=”no-repeat” fade=”no” background_parallax=”none” parallax_speed=”0.3″ video_mp4=”” video_webm=”” video_ogv=”” video_url=”” video_aspect_ratio=”16:9″ video_loop=”yes” video_mute=”yes” overlay_color=”” video_preview_image=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” padding_top=”” padding_bottom=”” padding_left=”” padding_right=””][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ layout=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” border_position=”all” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding_top=”” padding_right=”” padding_bottom=”” padding_left=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” center_content=”no” last=”no” min_height=”” hover_type=”none” link=””][fusion_imageframe image_id=”20947″ style_type=”none” stylecolor=”” hover_type=”none” bordersize=”” bordercolor=”” borderradius=”” align=”none” lightbox=”no” gallery_id=”” lightbox_image=”” alt=”” link=”https://mookseandgripes.com/reviews” linktarget=”_self” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_offset=””]https://mookseandgripes.com/reviews/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Header-2-1-e1493098728843.jpg[/fusion_imageframe][fusion_text]

    Over at the Goodreads Group I’ve posted the most important information about Mookse Madness 2018: the brackets and schedule! I wanted to do the same here, in case some of you who are interested haven’t made it over that way yet.

    Click here to see the bracket, which includes all match-up and calendar information in graphic form. I will be updating this as the tournament proceeds.

    Mookse Madness Groups

    These were organized by a strict system. To get the groups I organized the stories by author’s first name and then went down the list — 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4, etc. Once the groups were created, I seeded them by author’s birth year. The oldest author on our list? Balzac, who, born in 1799, is our only pre-1800s author. The youngest? Maile Meloy, born in 1972.

    Bracket 1: The Nutshell

    1. Saki: “The Open Window”
    2. Katherine Mansfield: “The Fly”
    3. Jean Rhys: “La Grosse Fifi”
    4. Vladimir Nabokov: “Signs and Symbols”
    5. Elizabeth Bowen: “The Demon Lover”
    6. Frank O’Connor: “Michael’s Wife”
    7. Julio Cortázar: “The Island at Noon”
    8. John McGahern: “The Beginning of an Idea”
    9. Annie Proulx: “Them Old Cowboy Songs”
    10. Tim O’Brien: “The Things They Carried”
    11. Ian McEwan: “Dead as They Come”
    12. Amy Bloom: “The Story”
    13. Alice Eliot Dark: “In the Gloaming”
    14. Louise Erdrich: “Sister Godzilla”
    15. Neil Gaiman: “Shoggoth’s Old Peculiar”
    16. Claire Keegan: “Foster”

    Bracket 2: The Breviloquent

    1. Honoré de Balzac: “A Passion in the Desert”
    2. Willa Cather: “Paul’s Case”
    3. Sherwood Anderson: “Death in the Woods”
    4. Franz Kafka: “In the Penal Colony”
    5. Jorge Luis Borges: “The Lottery of Babylon”
    6. Elizabeth Taylor: “A Dedicated Man”
    7. Isaac Asimov: “Nightfall”
    8. Kurt Vonnegut: “Harrison Bergeron”
    9. Alice Munro: “The Bear Came Over the Mountain”
    10. Andre Dubus: “A Father’s Story”
    11. Deborah Eisenberg: “Mermaids”
    12. Tobias Wolf: “In the Garden of the North American Martyrs”
    13. Roald Dahl: “A Man from the South”
    14. George Saunders: “The Semplica-Girl Diaries”
    15. Jhumpa Lahiri: “A Temporary Matter”
    16. Maile Meloy: “Travis, B.”

    Bracket 3: The Petite

    1. Edgar Allan Poe: “The Tell-Tale Heart”
    2. Kate Chopin: “A Pair of Silk Stockings”
    3. Guy de Maupassant: “The Necklace”
    4. Isaac Babel: “The Story of My Dovecoat”
    5. William Faulkner: “A Rose for Emily”
    6. Eudora Whelty: “Death of a Travelling Salesman”
    7. Robert Aickman: “The Inner Room”
    8. Leonora Carrington: “The Debutante”
    9. Truman Capote: “A Tree of Night”
    10. Alistair MacLeod: “The Boat”
    11. Margaret Atwood: “Rape Fantasies”
    12. Bharati Mukherjee: “The Management of Grief”
    13. Stephen Millhauser: “Eisenheim the Illusionist”
    14. Joy Williams: “The Skater”
    15. Andrea Barrett: “Servants of the Map”
    16. Jill McCorkle: “Intervention”

    Bracket 4: The Laconic

    1. Ambrose Bierce: “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”
    2. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: “The Yellow Wallpaper”
    3. Jack London: “To Build a Fire”
    4. Katherine Anne Porter: “The Grave”
    5. H.P. Lovecraft: “The Call of Cthulhu”
    6. Tillie Olsen: “I Stand Here Ironing”
    7. Mavis Gallant: “Dede”
    8. Flannery O’Connor: “A Good Man Is Hard to Find”
    9. William Trevor: “The Piano Tuner’s Wives”
    10. Ursula K. LeGuin: “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas”
    11. Edna O’Brien: “Sister Imelda”
    12. John Gardner: “Redemption”
    13. Joyce Carol Oates: “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been”
    14. Angela Carter: “The Bloody Chamber”
    15. Roberto Bolaño: “Gomez Palacio”
    16. Lorrie Moore: “People Like That Are the Only People Here”

    Mookse Madness 2018 Calendar

    The following is our calendar of events. Last year the matches were open for three days (four at the beginning!), and I felt that was too long; consequently, this year each match will be for two days only! The first round is going to be busy and messy. We have to get through 32 matches as quickly as possible, with four opening each day for over a week. That’s why we call this madness! Things will slow down — a bit — after that. For the schedule of each and every match, see the full bracket linked to above.

    Round 1: 64 Books
    Feb. 26: 1. The Open Window v. 16. Foster
    Feb. 26: 8. Harrison Bergeron v. 9. The Bear Came Over the Mountain
    Feb. 26: 4. The Story of My Dovecoat v. 13. Eisenheim the Illusionist
    Feb. 26: 6. I Stand Here Ironing v. 11. Sister Imelda

    Feb. 27: 7. The Island at Noon v. 10. The Things They Carried
    Feb. 27: 7. Nightfall v. 10. A Father’s Story
    Feb. 27: 3. The Necklace v. 14. The Skater
    Feb. 27: 8. A Good Man Is Hard to Find v. 9. The Piano Tuner’s Wives

    Feb. 28: 6. Michael’s Wife v. 11. Dead as They Come
    Feb. 28: 5. The Lottery of Babylon v. 12. In the Garden of the North American Martyrs
    Feb. 28: 1. The Tell-Tale Heart v. 16. Intervention
    Feb. 28: 2. The Yellow Wallpaper v. 15. Gomez Palacio

    Mar. 1: 5. The Demon Lover v. 12. The Story
    Mar. 1: 3. Death in the Woods v. 14. The Semplica-Girl Diaries
    Mar. 1: 5. A Rose for Emily v. 12. The Management of Grief
    Mar. 1: 5. The Call of Cthulhu v. 12. Redemption

    Mar. 2: 3. La Grosse Fifi v. 14. Sister Godzilla
    Mar. 2: 2. Paul’s Case v. 15. A Temporary Matter
    Mar. 2: 7. The Inner Room v. 10. The Boat
    Mar. 2: 3. To Build a Fire v. 14. The Bloody Chamber

    Mar. 3: 8. The Beginning of an Idea v. 9. Them Old Cowboy Songs
    Mar. 3: 6. A Dedicated Man v. 11. Mermaids
    Mar. 3: 2. A Pair of Silk Stockings v. 15. Servants of the Map
    Mar. 3: 7. Dede v. 10. The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas

    Mar. 4: 2. The Fly v. 15. Shoggoth’s Old Peculiar
    Mar. 4: 4. In the Penal Colony v. 13. A Man from the South
    Mar. 4: 6. Death of a Travelling Salesman v. 11. Rape Fantasies
    Mar. 4: 4. The Grave v. 13. Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been

    Mar. 5: 4. Signs and Symbols v. 13. In the Gloaming
    Mar. 5: 1. A Passion in the Desert v. 16. Travis, B.
    Mar. 5: 8. The Debutante v. 9. A Tree of Night
    Mar. 5: 1. An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge v. 16. People Like That Are the Only People Here

    Round 2: 32 Stories. Matches begin on March 8
    Round 3: 16 Stories. Matches begin on March 18
    Round 4: 8 Stories. Matches begin on March 24
    Round 5: 4 Stories. Matches begin on March 30
    Round 6: The Finals, The Championship Match: April 3


    For me, the toughest matches are in The Laconic group. And two of my all-time favorite stories — “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” and “The Piano Tuner’s Wives” — are fighting in the first round! That’s just awful! It’s what we sign up for, though, I suppose, when we do something this silly. Please join in!

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  • The Criterion Collection Announced May 2018 Releases

    The Criterion Collection Announced May 2018 Releases

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    The Criterion Collection has announced its releases for May 2018! It includes five new titles and two upgrades I’ve been hoping for.

    The blurbs are from The Criterion Collection’s website (so are the links) — go there to see the details on the supplements.


    May 8, 2018

    Moonrise (1948)
    d. Frank Borzage

    From The Criterion Collection:

    A small-town fable about violence and redemption, Moonrise is the final triumph of Frank Borzage, one of Hollywood’s most neglected masters. Stigmatized from infancy by the fate of his criminal father, young Danny (Dane Clark) is bruised and bullied until one night, in a fit of rage, he kills his most persistent tormenter. As the police close in around him, Danny makes a desperate bid for the love of the dead man’s fiancée (Gail Russell), a schoolteacher who sees the wounded soul behind his aggression. With this postwar comeback, Borzage recaptured the inspiration that had animated his long and audacious early career, marrying the lyrical force of his romantic sensibility with the psychological anguish of film noir in a stunning vindication of faith in the power of love.


    May 15, 2018

    The Other Side of Hope (2017)
    d. Aki Kaurismäki

    From The Criterion Collection:

    This wry, melancholic comedy from Aki Kaurismäki, a response to the ongoing global refugee crisis, follows two people searching for a place to call home. Khaled (Sherwan Haji), a displaced Syrian, lands in Helsinki as a stowaway; meanwhile, middle-aged Finnish salesman Wikström (Sakari Kuosmanen) leaves his wife and his job and buys a conspicuously unprofitable seafood restaurant. Khaled is denied asylum but decides not to return to Aleppo—and the paths of the two men cross fortuitously. As deadpan as the best of the director’s work, and with a deep well of empathy for its down-but-not-out characters (many of them played by members of Kaurismäki’s loyal stock company), The Other Side of Hope is a bittersweet tale of human kindness in the face of official indifference.


    May 22, 2018

    Graduation (2016)
    d. Christian Mungiu

    From The Criterion Collection:

    Blending rigorous naturalism with the precise construction of a thriller, this Cannes award–winning drama from Cristian Mungiu sheds light on the high stakes and ethical complexities of life in contemporary Romania. As his daughter nears high-school graduation, Romeo (Adrian Titieni), an upstanding doctor, counts on her winning a competitive scholarship that will send her to university in England. But when an injury sustained during a sexual assault compromises her performance on an important exam, Romeo’s best-laid plans for her threaten to crumble, leading him to seek favors in a world that runs on backscratching and bribery. Suffused with quiet dread, Graduation takes a humane and deeply ambiguous look at how corrosive rampant corruption is to moral convictions.


    May 22, 2018

    Beyond the Hills (2012)
    d. Christian Mungiu

    From The Criterion Collection:

    With this arresting drama based on notorious real-life events, Cristian Mungiu mounts a complex inquiry into faith, fanaticism, and indifference. At a desolate Romanian monastery, a young novice nun, Voichi?a (Cosmina Stratan), reunites with her former companion Alina (Cristina Flutur), who plans to take her to Germany. But Voichi?a proves unwilling to abandon her calling, and Alina becomes increasingly desperate to reclaim her devotion, putting the outsider at odds with the monastery’s ascetic priest—and precipitating a painfully misguided, brutal attempt to save her soul. A naturalistic tragedy with the dark force of a folktale, anchored by the fraught dynamic between cinema newcomers Flutur and Stratan (who shared the best actress prize at Cannes), Beyond the Hills bears powerful witness to individuals at cross-purposes and institutions ill-equipped to help those most in need.


    May 22, 2018

    Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters (1985)
    d. Paul Schrader

    From The Criterion Collection:

    Paul Schrader’s visually stunning, collagelike portrait of the acclaimed Japanese author and playwright Yukio Mishima (played by Ken Ogata) investigates the inner turmoil and contradictions of a man who attempted the impossible task of finding harmony among self, art, and society. Taking place on Mishima’s last day, when he famously committed public seppuku, the film is punctuated by extended flashbacks to the writer’s life as well as by gloriously stylized evocations of his fictional works. With its rich cinematography by John Bailey, exquisite sets and costumes by Eiko Ishioka, and unforgettable, highly influential score by Philip Glass, Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters is a tribute to its subject and a bold, investigative work of art in its own right.


    May 29, 2018

    Midnight Cowboy (1969)
    d. John Schlesinger

    From The Criterion Collection:

    One of the British New Wave’s most versatile directors, John Schlesinger came to New York in the late-1960s to make Midnight Cowboy, a picaresque story of friendship that captured a city in crisis and sparked a new era of Hollywood movies. Jon Voight delivers a career-making performance as Joe Buck, a wide-eyed hustler from Texas hoping to score big with wealthy city women; he finds a companion in Enrico “Ratso” Rizzo, an ailing swindler with a bum leg and a quixotic fantasy of escaping to Florida, played by Dustin Hoffman in a radical departure from his breakthrough in The Graduate. A critical and commercial success despite controversy over what the MPAA termed its “homosexual frame of reference,” Midnight Cowboy became the first X-rated film to receive the best picture Oscar, and decades on, its influence still reverberates through cinema.


    May 29, 2018

    Au hasard Balthazar (1966)
    d. Robert Bresson

    From The Criterion Collection:

    A profound masterpiece from one of the most revered filmmakers in the history of cinema, Au hasard Balthazar, directed by Robert Bresson, follows the donkey Balthazar as he is passed from owner to owner, some kind and some cruel but all with motivations outside of his understanding. Balthazar, whose life parallels that of his first keeper, Marie, is truly a beast of burden, suffering the sins of humankind. But despite his powerlessness, he accepts his fate nobly. Through Bresson’s unconventional approach to composition, sound, and narrative, this simple story becomes a moving parable about purity and transcendence.

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  • Mookse Madness 2018

    Mookse Madness 2018

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    Last March over at the Mookse and Gripes Goodreads group we had a bit of fun with the first run of Mookse Madness. I set up a competition unoriginally based on NCAA Basketball’s March Madness, pitting 64 books against each other in a single elimination tournament. There were four sections, each with 16 books: 1800s, 1900-1949, 1950-1989, and 1990-present. The winner? Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, which beat Middlemarch in a tough finals match. I was surprised, but not sad, that these two met in the finals, for it meant that somewhere down the line books like 2666The Master and MargaritaThe Age of InnocenceThe Rings of Saturn. And though he won the Nobel Prize last year, Ishiguro’s The Remains of the Day failed to make the finals in Mookse Madness!

    We are doing the tournament again this year, but not with novels this time. This is Mookse Madness: Short Stories. Here is the thread that announced the list and where you can find further information.

    Below are the 64 short stories that will be fighting against each other for the championship in our second season, and for the first time I’m revealing the four groups (or brackets, as we call them in the U.S. at this time of year). What we have is a list of classic and contemporary stories, no author getting more than one on the list (even if many deserve it), and the story selected may not be the one that author is most famous for.

    Our goal is modest. It is not to figure out what the all-time greatest short story is. To the extent there is a greatest short story, it’s likely not on the list. If it is on the list, it’s likely many of us will fail to see its virtues. No, as a group our goal is simply to engage with a variety of stories, having fun and hopefully lively, vigorous, and courteous conversations about stories in our literary culture and what one means to us personally, facilitated by this completely bonkers format that forces us to compares apples to oranges, just to see what there is to see. This is particularly hard, but fun, when two favorites face off. It forces us to make a choice and really think about that choice. Or not! One can simply flip a coin — there are no rules!

    It would be impossible to make a list that everyone is happy with, so I didn’t try too hard. But a bit on how this list was — well, more like, was not — formulated. I tried to select authors folks are likely to have come across and stories I thought people could get behind and enjoy. To reiterate: this list was not made with the intention of defining the most worthy or the most representative or the most exemplary or the most important short stories. The list was not made with the intent of shedding light on unfairly neglected authors and their masterpieces. I went to many many lists of “best of” (and the group’s own suggestions), and while doing so I purposefully made a list that contains an equal number of male and female authors, but that was about the only hard and fast criterion. A casualty of this approach is most other kinds of diversity. I didn’t, for example, check year or country of origin or race, and I’d be happy if we addressed this failing and what, as a culture, we’re missing out on when such stories and authors rarely if ever get general cultural attention.

    When the time came to start slashing, I did away with some that probably should have been on the list — like Carver and Cheever: sometimes the greats stumble at the finish and fail to get into the tournament. Feel free to chat about surprising exclusions or inclusions below or, better yet, over at the group thread! The list will not change (but go ahead and winge appropriately!).

    I know the most helpful thing will be the diagram of the matches and the schedule, but I’ll get those up within the week. For now, see what you think of the list. Read these stories! Join in the fun! Tell your friends!

    I hope this yields some great conversations but also some great discoveries!

    Bracket 1:

    • Amy Bloom: “The Story”
    • Elizabeth Bowen: “The Demon Lover”
    • Julio Cortázar: “The Island at Noon”
    • Alice Eliot Dark: “In the Gloaming”
    • Louise Erdrich: “Sister Godzilla”
    • Neil Gaiman: “Shoggoth’s Old Peculiar”
    • Claire Keegan: “Foster”
    • Katherine Mansfield: “The Fly”
    • Ian McEwan: “Dead as They Come”
    • John McGahern: “The Beginning of an Idea”
    • Tim O’Brien: “The Things They Carried”
    • Frank O’Connor: “Michael’s Wife”
    • Vladimir Nabokov: “Signs and Symbols”
    • Annie Proulx: “Them Old Cowboy Songs”
    • Jean Rhys: “La Grosse Fifi”
    • Saki: “The Open Window”

    Bracket 2:

    • Sherwood Anderson: “Death in the Woods”
    • Isaac Asimov: “Nightfall”
    • Honoré de Balzac: “A Passion in the Desert”
    • Jorge Luis Borges: “The Lottery of Babylon”
    • Willa Cather: “Paul’s Case”
    • Roald Dahl: “A Man from the South”
    • Andre Dubus: “A Father’s Story”
    • Deborah Eisenberg: “Mermaids”
    • Franz Kafka: “In the Penal Colony”
    • Jhumpa Lahiri: “A Temporary Matter”
    • Maile Meloy: “Travis, B.”
    • Alice Munro: “The Bear Came Over the Mountain”
    • George Saunders: “The Semplica-Girl Diaries”
    • Elizabeth Taylor: “A Dedicated Man”
    • Kurt Vonnegut: “Harrison Bergeron”
    • Tobias Wolf: “In the Garden of the North American Martyrs”

    Bracket 3:

    • Robert Aickman: “The Inner Room”
    • Margaret Atwood: “Rape Fantasies”
    • Isaac Babel: “The Story of My Dovecoat”
    • Andrea Barrett: “Servants of the Map”
    • Truman Capote: “A Tree of Night”
    • Leonora Carrington: “The Debutante”
    • Kate Chopin: “A Pair of Silk Stockings”
    • William Faulkner: “A Rose for Emily”
    • Alistair MacLeod: “The Boat”
    • Guy de Maupassant: “The Necklace”
    • Jill McCorkle: “Intervention”
    • Stephen Millhauser: “Eisenheim the Illusionist”
    • Bharati Mukherjee: “The Management of Grief”
    • Edgar Allan Poe: “The Tell-Tale Heart”
    • Eudora Whelty: “Death of a Travelling Salesman”
    • Joy Williams: “The Skater”

    Bracket 4:

    • Roberto Bolaño: “Gomez Palacio”
    • Ambrose Bierce: “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”
    • Angela Carter: “The Bloody Chamber”
    • Mavis Gallant: “Dede”
    • John Gardner: “Redemption”
    • Charlotte Perkins Gilman: “The Yellow Wallpaper”
    • Ursula K. LeGuin: “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas”
    • Jack London: “To Build a Fire”
    • H.P. Lovecraft: “The Call of Cthulhu”
    • Lorrie Moore: “People Like That Are the Only People Here”
    • Joyce Carol Oates: “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been”
    • Edna O’Brien: “Sister Imelda”
    • Flannery O’Connor: “A Good Man Is Hard to Find”
    • Tillie Olsen: “I Stand Here Ironing”
    • Katherine Anne Porter: “The Grave”
    • William Trevor: “The Piano Tuner’s Wives”

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  • February 2018 Books to Read

    February 2018 Books to Read

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    February 2018 Books to Read!

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    After a few months that are relatively slow publishing-wise, there are a lot of books coming out in February that have caught my eye that I wanted to direct your attention to.

    Which ones have I missed that you’re excited about?

    The links to Amazon.com are affiliate links, so if you purchase the book (or any item) by going there from this page, we’ll make a bit of money for the site. Do not feel obligated, of course — we’ll keep going regardless! Release dates are based on the U.S. release date, but I’ve linked to U.K. pages as well.

    February 6

    The Neighborhood
    by Mario Vargas Llosa
    translated from the Spanish by Edith Grossman
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from Farrar, Straus and Giroux:

    From the Nobel Laureate comes a politically charged detective novel weaving through the underbelly of Peruvian privilege. In the 1990s, during the turbulent and deeply corrupt years of Alberto Fujimori’s presidency, two wealthy couples of Lima’s high society become embroiled in a disturbing vortex of erotic adventures and politically driven blackmail.

    One day Enrique, a high-profile businessman, receives a visit from Rolando Garro, the editor of a notorious magazine that specializes in salacious exposés. Garro presents Enrique with lewd pictures from an old business trip and demands that he invest in the magazine. Enrique refuses, and the next day the pictures are on the front page. Meanwhile, Enrique’s wife is in the midst of a passionate and secret affair with the wife of Enrique’s lawyer and best friend. When Garro shows up murdered, the two couples are thrown into a whirlwind of navigating Peru’s unspoken laws and customs, while the staff of the magazine embark on their greatest exposé yet.

    Ironic and sensual, provocative and redemptive, the novel swirls into the kind of restless realism that has become Mario Vargas Llosa’s signature style. A twisting, unpredictable tale, The Neighborhood is at once a scathing indictment of Fujimori’s regime and a crime thriller that evokes the vulgarity of freedom in a corrupt system.

    Feel Free
    by Zadie Smith
    Penguin Press

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from Penguin Press:

    Since she burst spectacularly into view with her debut novel almost two decades ago, Zadie Smith has established herself not just as one of the world’s preeminent fiction writers, but also a brilliant and singular essayist. She contributes regularly to The New Yorker and the New York Review of Books on a range of subjects, and each piece of hers is a literary event in its own right.

    Arranged into five sections–In the World, In the Audience, In the Gallery, On the Bookshelf, and Feel Free–this new collection poses questions we immediately recognize. What is The Social Network–and Facebook itself–really about? “It’s a cruel portrait of us: 500 million sentient people entrapped in the recent careless thoughts of a Harvard sophomore.” Why do we love libraries? “Well-run libraries are filled with people because what a good library offers cannot be easily found elsewhere: an indoor public space in which you do not have to buy anything in order to stay.” What will we tell our granddaughters about our collective failure to address global warming? “So I might say to her, look: the thing you have to appreciate is that we’d just been through a century of relativism and deconstruction, in which we were informed that most of our fondest-held principles were either uncertain or simple wishful thinking, and in many areas of our lives we had already been asked to accept that nothing is essential and everything changes–and this had taken the fight out of us somewhat.”

    Gathering in one place for the first time previously unpublished work, as well as already classic essays, such as, “Joy,” and, “Find Your Beach,” Feel Free offers a survey of important recent events in culture and politics, as well as Smith’s own life. Equally at home in the world of good books and bad politics, Brooklyn-born rappers and the work of Swiss novelists, she is by turns wry, heartfelt, indignant, and incisive–and never any less than perfect company. This is literary journalism at its zenith.


    February 13

    Albert Murray: Collected Novels & Poems
    by Albert Murray
    The Library of America

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from The Library of America:

    One of the leading cultural critics of his generation, Albert Murray was also the author of an extraordinary quartet of semi-autobiographical novels, vivid impressionistic portraits of black life in the Deep South in the 1920s and ’30s and in prewar New York City. Train Whistle Guitar (1974) introduces Murray’s recurring narrator and protagonist, Scooter, a “Southern jackrabbit raised in a briarpatch” too nimble ever to receive a scratch. Scooter’s education in books, music, and the blue-steel bent-note blues-ballad realities of American life continues in The Spyglass Tree (1991), Murray’s “Portrait of the Artist as a Tuskegee Undergraduate.” The Seven League Boots (1996) follows Scooter as he becomes a bass player in a touring band not unlike Duke Ellington’s, and The Magic Keys (2005), in which Scooter at last finds his true vocation as a writer in Greenwich Village, is an elegaic reverie on an artist’s life. Editors Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Paul Devlin round out the volume with a selection of Murray’s remarkable poems, including 11 unpublished pieces from his notebooks, and two rare examples of his work as a short story writer.

    The Endless Summer
    by Madame Nielsen
    translated from the Danish by Gaye Kynoch
    Open Letter

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from Open Letter:

    A passionate love story about a Danish woman and a much younger Portuguese artist, The Endless Summer confronts ideas of time, sexuality, and tragedy in a style reminiscent of both Proust and Lars Von Trier.

    Emotional and visceral, the novel drifts through time and space, relating the lives, loves, and dissolutions of everyone who surrounds this unexpected couple, including the woman’s former husband who holds the family at gunpoint, her daughter and her lovers, who include a boy who finds himself and his true sexual identity in America, and the young boy who “is perhaps a girl, but does not yet know it,” who narrates it all.

    Propelled by a captivating story, the real charm of the novel resides in its impeccable style and atmosphere, which gathers a sense of longing, a slight nostalgia for times that ache with possibility, while knowing that even the endless summer doesn’t last forever.

    All for Nothing
    by Walter Kempowski
    translated from the German by Anthea Bell
    NYRB Classics

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from NYRB Classics:

    In East Prussia, January 1945, the German forces are in retreat and the Red Army is approaching. The von Globig family’s manor house, the Georgenhof, is falling into disrepair. Auntie runs the estate as best she can since Eberhard von Globig, a special officer in the German army, went to war, leaving behind his beautiful but vague wife, Katharina, and her bookish twelve-year-old son, Peter. As the road fills with Germans fleeing the occupied territories, the Georgenhof begins to receive strange visitors–a Nazi violinist, a dissident painter, a Baltic baron, even a Jewish refugee. Yet in the main, life continues as banal, wondrous, and complicit as ever for the family, until their caution, their hedged bets, and their denial are answered by the wholly expected events they haven’t allowed themselves to imagine.

    All for Nothing, published in 2006, was the last novel by Walter Kempowski, one of postwar Germany’s most acclaimed and popular writers.

    Love
    by Hanne Ørstavik
    translated from the Norwegian by Martin Aitken
    Archipelago Books

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from Archipelago Books:

    A mother and son move to a village in northern Norway, each ensconced in their own world. Their distance has fatal consequences.

    Love is the story of Vibeke and Jon, a mother and son who have just moved to a small place in the north of Norway. It’s the day before Jon’s birthday, and a travelling carnival has come to the village. Jon goes out to sell lottery tickets for his sports club, and Vibeke is going to the library. From here on we follow the two individuals on their separate journeys through a cold winter’s night – while a sense of uneasiness grows. Love illustrates how language builds its own reality, and thus how mother and son can live in completely separate worlds. This distance is found not only between human beings, but also within each individual. This novel shows how such distance may have fatal consequences.


    February 20

    Memoirs from Beyond the Grave 1768 – 1800
    by François-René de Chateaubriand
    translated from the French by Alex Andriesse
    NYRB Classics

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from NYRB Classics:

    Written over the course of four decades, François-René de Chateaubriand’s epic autobiography has drawn the admiration of Baudelaire, Flaubert, Proust, Barthes, and Sebald. Here, in the first books of his massive Memoirs, spanning the years 1768 to 1800, Chateaubriand looks back on the already bygone world of his youth. He recounts the history of his aristocratic family and the first rumblings of the French Revolution. He recalls playing games on the beaches of Saint-Malo, wandering in the woods near his father’s castle in Combourg, hunting with King Louis XVI at Versailles, witnessing the first heads carried on pikes through the streets of Paris, meeting with George Washington in Philadelphia, and falling hopelessly in love with a young woman named Charlotte in the small Suffolk town of Bungay. The volume ends with Chateaubriand’s return to France after seven years of exile in England.

    In this new edition (the first unabridged English translation of any portion of the Memoirs to be published in more than a century), Chateaubriand emerges as a writer of great wit and clarity, a self deprecating egotist whose meditations on the meaning of history, memory, and morality are leavened with a mixture of high whimsy and memorable gloom.

    What Are We Doing Here?: Essays
    by Marilynne Robinson
    Farrar, Straus and Giroux

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from Farrar, Straus and Giroux:

    Marilynne Robinson has plumbed the human spirit in her renowned novels, including Lila, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, and Gilead, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award. In this new essay collection she trains her incisive mind on our modern political climate and the mysteries of faith. Whether she is investigating how the work of great thinkers about America like Emerson and Tocqueville inform our political consciousness or discussing the way that beauty informs and disciplines daily life, Robinson’s peerless prose and boundless humanity are on full display. What Are We Doing Here? is a call for Americans to continue the tradition of those great thinkers and to remake American political and cultural life as “deeply impressed by obligation [and as] a great theater of heroic generosity, which, despite all, is sometimes palpable still.”


    February 27

    A Long Way from Home
    by Peter Carey
    Knopf

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from Knopf:

    The two-time Booker Prize-winning author now gives us a wildly exuberant, wily new novel that circumnavigates 1954 Australia, revealing as much about the country/continent as it does about three audacious individuals who take part in the infamous 10,000-mile race, the Redex Trial.

    Irene Bobs loves fast driving. Her husband is the best car salesman in southeastern Australia. Together they enter the Redex Trial, a brutal race around the ancient continent, over roads no car will ever quite survive. With them is their lanky, fair-haired navigator, Willie Bachhuber, a quiz show champion and failed schoolteacher who calls the turns and creeks crossings on a map that will remove them, without warning, from the white Australia they all know so well. This is a thrilling high-speed story that starts in one way, and then takes you someplace else. It is often funny, more so as the world gets stranger, and always a page-turner even as you learn a history these characters never knew themselves.

    Set in the 1950s, this is a world every American will recognize: black, white, who we are, how we got here, and what we did to each other along the way.

    Imaginary Lives
    by Marcel Schwob
    translated from the French by Chris Clarke
    Wakefield Press

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from Wakefield Press:

    Imaginary Lives remains, over 120 years since its original publication in French, one of the secret keys to modern literature: under-recognized, yet a decisive influence on such writers as Apollinaire, Borges, Jarry and Artaud, and more contemporary authors such as Roberto Bolaño and Jean Echenoz. Drawing from historical influences such as Plutarch and Diogenes Laërtius, and authors more contemporary to him such as Thomas De Quincey and Walter Pater, Schwob established the genre of fictional biography with this collection: a form of narrative that championed the specificity of the individual over the generality of history, and the memorable detail of a vice over the forgettable banality of a virtue.

    These 22 portraits present figures drawn from the margins of history, from Empedocles the “Supposed God” and Clodia the “Licentious Matron” to the pirate Captain Kidd and the Scottish murderers Messrs. Burke and Hare. In his quest for unique lives, Schwob also formulated an early conception of the anti-hero, and discarded historical figures in favor of their shadows. These “imaginary lives” thus acquaint us with the “Hateful Poet” Cecco Angiolieri instead of his lifelong rival, Dante Alighieri; the would-be romantic pirate Major Stede Bonnet instead of the infamous Blackbeard who would lead him to the gallows; the false confessor Nicolas Loyseleur rather than Joan of Arc whom he cruelly deceived; or the actor Gabriel Spenser in place of the better-remembered Ben Jonson who ran a sword through his lung.

    The Children’s Crusade
    by Marcel Schwob
    translated from the French by Kit Schluter
    Wakefield Press

    Buy from Amazon.com here.
    Buy from Amazon UK here.

    Here is the blurb from Wakefield Press:

    Marcel Schwob’s 1896 novella The Children’s Crusade retells the medieval legend of the exodus of some 30,000 children from all countries to the Holy Land, who traveled to the shores of the sea, which?instead of parting to allow them to march on to Jerusalem?instead delivered them to merchants who sold them into slavery in Tunisia or delivered them to a watery death. It is a cruel and sorrowful story mingling history and legend, which Schwob recounts through the voices of eight different protagonists: a goliard, a leper, Pope Innocent III, a cleric, a qalandar and Pope Gregory IX, as well as two of the marching children, whose naive faith eventually turns into growing fear and anguish.

    Though it is a tale drawn from the early 13th century, Schwob presents it through a modern framework of shifting subjectivity and fragmented coherency, and its subject matter and its succession of different narrative perspectives has been seen as an influence on and precursor to such diverse works as Alfred Jarry’s The Other Alcestis, Ryunosuke Akutagawa’s “In a Grove,” William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying and Jerzy Andrzejewski’s The Gates of Paradise. It is a tale told by many yet understood by few, a mosaic surrounding a void, describing a world in which innocence must perish.

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  • National Book Critics Circle Award Finalists

    National Book Critics Circle Award Finalists

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    The National Book Critics Circle Award finalists for the publishing year 2017 — deep breath — have been announced!

    Fiction:

    • Exit West, by Mohsin Hamid ¦ Amazon
    • The Ninth Hour, by Alice McDermott ¦ Amazon
    • The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, by Arundhati Roy ¦ Amazon
    • Improvement, by Joan Silber ¦ Amazon
    • Sing, Unburied, Sing, by Jesmyn Ward ¦ Amazon

    Nonfiction:

    • Gulf: The Making of An American Sea, by Jack Davis ¦ Amazon
    • The Evangelicals: The Struggle to Shape America, by Frances FitzGerald ¦ Amazon
    • The Future Is History: How Totalitarianism Reclaimed Russia, by Masha Gressen ¦ Amazon
    • Border: A Journey to the Edge of Europe, by Kapka Kassabova ¦ Amazon
    • A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived: The Human Story Retold Through Our Genes, by Adam Rutherford ¦ Amazon

    Biography:

    • Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder, by Caroline Frasier ¦ Amazon
    • The Invention of Angela Carter: A Biography, by Edmund Gordon ¦ Amazon
    • The Kelloggs: The Battling Brothers of Battle Creek, by Howard Markel ¦ Amazon
    • Gorbachev: His Life and Times, by William Taubman ¦ Amazon
    • Hoover: An Extraordinary Life in Extraordinary Times, by Kenneth Whyte ¦ Amazon

    Autobiography:

    • The Best We Could Do: An Illustrated Memoir, by Thi Bui ¦ Amazon
    • Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body, by Roxane Gay ¦ Amazon
    • Admissions: A Life in Brain Surgery, by Henry Marsh ¦ Amazon
    • The Girl from the Metropol Hotel: Growing Up in Communist Russia, by Ludmilla Petrushevskaya and translated from the Russian by Anna Summers ¦ Amazon
    • Nine Continents: A Memoir In and Out of China, by Xioulu Guo ¦ Amazon

    Poetry:

    • Fourth Person Singular, by Nuar Alsadir ¦ Amazon
    • Earthling, by James Longenbach ¦ Amazon
    • Whereas, by Layli Long Soldier ¦ Amazon
    • The Darkness of Snow, by Frank Ormsby ¦ Amazon
    • Directions for Use, by Ana Ristovic and translated from the Serbian by Steven Teref and Maja Teref ¦ Amazon

    Criticism: 

    • You Play the Girl: On Playboy Bunnies, Stepford Wives, Train Wrecks & Other Mixed Messages, by Carina Chocano ¦ Amazon
    • The Art of Death: Writing the Final Story, by Edwidge Danticat ¦ Amazon
    • Guidebook to Relative Strangers: Journeys into Race, Motherhood and History, by Camille Dungy ¦ Amazon
    • Tell Me How It Ends: An Essay in Forty Questions, by Valeria Luiselli ¦ Amazon
    • Bunk: The Rise of Hoaxes, Humbug, Plagiarists, Phonies, Post-Facts and Fake News, by Kevin Young ¦ Amazon

    Nona Balakian Citation for Excellence in Reviewing: Charles Finch

    Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award: John McPhee

    John Leonard First Book Prize: Her Body and Other Parties, by Carmen Maria Machado

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