In this "novel, Trond Sander, a widower nearing
seventy, moves to a bare house in remote eastern Norway, seeking
the life of quiet contemplation that he has always longed for. A
chance encounter with a neighbor--the brother, as it happens, of
his childhood friend Jon--causes him to ruminate on the summer
of 1948, the last he spent with his adored father, who abandoned
the family soon afterward. Trond's recollections center on a
single afternoon, when he and Jon set out to take some horses
from a nearby farm; what began as an exhilarating adventure
ended abruptly and traumatically in an act of unexpected
cruelty. Petterson's spare and deliberate prose has astonishing
force, and the narrative gains further power from the artful
interplay of Trond's childhood and adult perspectives." (New
Yorker)
Reading Level (Grade):
Adult
Review:
The New York Times Book Review v. 112 no. 25
(June 24 2007). McGuane, Thomas, reviewer [with excerpt]
Responsibility: translated by Anne Born
Note(s): Original Norwegian edition, 2003; this translation
first published 2005 in the United Kingdom
Series: Lannen translation series selection
Core Collection
Title:
The Margarets
Personal Author:
Tepper, Sheri S.
Publisher:
Eos
Publication Year:
2007
Pages:
508
ISBN:
978-0-06-117065-2-06-117065-8,
$26.95
Abstract:
"Margaret is the only kid on a research
colony orbiting Mars. Smart, bored and profoundly lonely, she
begins to create alter egos for fun. . . . As Margaret grows
into a smart and lonely teenager her family must return to the
grim, environmentally ravished Earth, where the only
economically viable product for interplanetary export is human
slaves. Facing a series of blind choices that pull her in two
directions, she begins to shed the imaginary Margarets. The
Margarets scatter off to other settled worlds, unaware of their
other selves. Each Margaret struggles to survive by her (or his)
wits, and to understand the growing threats to Earth and
humanity. . . . [This novel] incorporates a grab bag of
creatures, cultures, psychological metaphors, characters,
commentaries and predicaments. The result is a delightful
variation on the kind of novel with disparate characters and
plot threads that somehow come together at the end. In this
tale, they are together in the mind of a child at the
beginning." (Salon.com)
Subject(s):
Science fiction; Mars (Planet); Girls
Reading Level (Grade):
Adult
Core Collection
Title:
Crossing the Sierra de Gredos
Personal Author:
Handke, Peter
Publisher:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication Year:
2007
Pages:
472
ISBN:
978-0-374-28154-0; 0-374-28154-8
Abstract:
In this novel a "powerful female banker is
traveling from her home in an unnamed northern European seaport.
She has commissioned an author living in Spain's La Mancha
region to write her life story, which the novel frames within
her journey to the rather forbidden mountainous zone named in
the novel's title." (Los Angeles Times Book Rev)
"The artistry of Peter Handke's language may well be unsurpassed
among contemporary writers in German. His prose is at once
serpentine and spare, dreamlike and exacting. . . . The
translator, Krishna Winston, sensitively renders the mesmerizing
beauty of his style. In this book, as in much of Handke's
previous work, the most stirring passages disclose the inherent
strangeness of the world." (Bookforum)
Subject(s):
Philosophical novels; Travel; Authors;
Spain; Women
Reading Level (Grade):
Adult
Review(s):
Harper's v. 315 (Aug. 2007). Leonard, John,
reviewer
The New York Times Book Review v. 112 no. 33 (Aug. 19 2007).
Gordon, Neil, reviewer [with excerpt]
Note(s):
Original German edition, 2002
A Most Highly Recommended Title
Title:
The collected stories
Personal Author:
Michaels, Leonard
Publisher:
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication Year:
2007
Pages:
403
ISBN:
ISBN: 978-0-374-12654-4
0-374-12654-2, $26
Abstract:
"Michaels never stopped reflecting on the
condition of being Jewish. Now that he is gone, it is easier to
place him in a broader context, as part of that astonishing
flowering of American Jewish writing that included Bellow,
Malamud, Mailer and Roth, toward which he can be seen as both
filial heir and mischievous critic." (Nation)
Subject(s):
Short stories
Reading Level (Grade):
Adult
Review(s):
The New York Times Book Review v. 112 no. 23
(June 10 2007). Simpson, Mona, reviewer [with excerpt]
The Nation v. 285 no. 2 (July 9 2007). Lopate, Phillip, reviewer
[with excerpt]
Harper's v. 315 (July 2007). Mason, Wyatt, reviewer [with
excerpt]
"New York City filmmaker Mike Jacobs is so tired
of being broke that it seems like a good idea when his friend and
producer, Sebby Laslo, suggests they strike it rich by fixing a
horse race. Sebby enlists two jockeys to do the heavy lifting, but
Mike will have to place the bets with a string of shady bookmakers
because Sebby has run out of credit. First, he needs to establish
his credentials by losing a few bets--that's the easy part. The
hard part comes when the horses who are supposed to win the fixed
race collide and fall en route to the big payoff. One jockey is
left paralyzed, the other is overcome by a need to confess, and
Mike is left holding the bag for thousands in debts that he has no
way of repaying. Just to survive, he'll need to do things he
wouldn't have thought himself capable of doing, but he does them
all the same. It is a descent into darkness that can only end in
calamity, but the reader, swept up in the narrative momentum, can
no more look away than Mike can avoid damnation, if not death.
Dixon has written a cautionary tale that is not easy to enjoy but
even harder to forget." (Booklist)
Subject(s):
Motion picture producers and directors;
Gambling; Horse racing; Crime and criminals
"Written in the form of a journal, which becomes
a novel, then a dictionary of writers' journals, then a lecture on
the writing of such journals, Montano tells of its narrator's
obsession with literature. Middle-aged and married to Rosa, he has
become 'a walking dictionary of quotations', unable to do anything
without it triggering a memory of something he's read or, worse,
something remembered by a writer that he's read, which in turn
recalls a thought from the head of yet another writer. Following
him and his overactive brain from his native Barcelona to Nantes,
Chile, the Azores, Lisbon and Budapest -- via Walter Benjamin,
Kafka, W. G. Sebald, Pessoa and Robert Walser among others -- is
like playing a mental version of Twister. . . . Shunning
narrative, the book continues to seduce with writerly observations
-- both the narrator's, and quotations from other writers."
(Telegraph (London))
Note(s):
Original Spanish edition, 2002
Subject(s):
Authorship; Books and reading; Experimental
stories
"The city of the title . . . is a mountainous
retreat, concealed by vines and tree roots, where alien tourists
now stranded on Earth may assuage nostalgia for their home world,
Betasha. It is to this now largely abandoned hideout that one
particular alien, Lorpas, goes to seek fellowship after being
arrested for vagrancy and escaping to the hills. There he meets
and falls for Allush, a female Betashan who, like Lorpas, was born
on Earth and has blended in so well that rescue is no longer
appealing. Emshwiller alternates between Lorpas' account of his
growing friendship with a bumbling rescuer whom he overpowers and
Allush's tale of return to Betasha as the two meet, separate, and
finally reunite to establish Earth as their new home world."
(Booklist)
"First and foremost, Emshwiller is a poet--with a poet's
sensibility, precision, and magic. She revels in the sheer taste
and sound of words, she infuses them with an extraordinary
vitality and sense of life." (Newsday)
"A chilling and mysterious voice becomes audible
to Sanie shortly after she and her husband Jackson move into the
decaying antebellum mansion that is the Bullard ancestral home in
rural South Carolina. At first, she wonders if the voice might be
a prank played by Jackson's peyote-popping brother Will or his
equally off-kilter sister Louise. But soon Sanie discovers that
the ghostly voice is merely a single piece in the decadent,
baroque puzzle that comprises the Bullard family history."
(Publisher's note)
"Sanie's tale is, ultimately, after the final page is turned, a
little slight. . . . But while you're immersed in its ectoplasmic
toils, you get the full measure of domestic creepiness and occult
horror." (Sci Fi Wkly)
Subject(s):
Ghost stories; Psychological novels; Family
life; South Carolina; Supernatural phenomena; Horror stories
Dewey Decimal Classification:
Fic
Reading Level (Grade):
Adult
Previous
Picksss
Title:
Fieldwork
Personal Author:
Berlinski, Mischa
Publisher:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication Year:
2007
Pages:
320
ISBN:
978037429916-3
0-374-29916-1, $24
Abstract:
The narrative "focuses on Martiya van der Leun,
who has committed suicide in a Thai women's prison, where she was
serving a 50-year sentence for murdering an American missionary. A
young farang (white and foreign) journalist named Mischa Berlinski
learns that Martiya was an American anthropologist who for years
lived with a tribe called the Dyalos to study its mysterious
culture. Mischa finds Martiya's story--and exactly why she
committed the crime--so oddly compelling that he dedicates his
life to understanding Martiya's fate." (Libr J)
"With its offbeat style, Berlinski's consummate
fieldwork--fictional though it may be--produces an intricate
whodunit, both disturbing and entertaining." (Washington Post Book
World)
The Christian Science Monitor
(Eastern edition) v. 99 no. 71 (Mar. 9 2007). Zipp, Yvonne,
reviewer [with excerpt]
Title:
The knitting circle
Personal Author:
Hood, Ann
Publisher:
W. W. Norton & Co.
Publication Year:
2007
Pages:
346
ISBN:
978-0-393-05901-4
0-393-05901-4, $24.95
Abstract:
"After the sudden death of her five-year-old
daughter, Stella, Mary Baxter is advised by her mother that
learning to knit will take her mind off her grief. When she joins
the local knitting circle, she learns that all of its members have
a tragic story as well. As she starts knitting and develops a
group of friends who understand the depths of loss, Mary's grief
begins to heal, allowing her to return to work, repair her
marriage, and learn a terrible secret from her mother." (Libr J)
This novel was "written after Hood's own tragic loss, the death of
her young daughter, and it is not hard to imagine the ways in
which writing this novel must have been both painful and
therapeutic. It is a wondrously simple book about something
complicated: the nearly unendurable process of enduring after a
great loss. The novel, like knitting, seems to make itself up as
it goes along, the threads bound and gathered into a whole. In the
end, there is something where there once was nothing." (Washington
Post Book World)
Subject(s):
Women/Relation to other women; Knitting;
Bereavement; Mothers and daughters; Rhode Island/Providence
Review:
Library Journal (1976)
v. 131 no. 19 (Nov. 15 2006). Ford, Amy, reviewer [with full text]
Title:
The terror: a novel
Personal Author:
Simmons, Dan
Publisher:
Little, Brown and Co.
Publication Year:
2007
Pages:
769
ISBN:
978-0-316-01744-2
0-316-01744-2, $25.99
Abstract:
This historical suspense novel follows the
"difficulties of the dwindling remains of Sir John Franklin's
failed 1840s mission to find the Northwest Passage. However, in
addition to scurvy, frostbite, botulism, snow-blindness, and
threats of mutiny, the crews of HMS Terror and HMS Erebus are
harried by some enormous Thing out on the ice. The story is told
from the viewpoints of several members of the ships' crews, with
emphasis on Terror captain Francis Crozier and Erebus surgeon
Harry Goodsir." (Libr J)
"A deeply absorbing story that combines awe-inspiring myth,
grinding horror and historically accurate adventure." (Seattle
Times)
The New York Times Book Review
v. 112 no. 11 (Mar. 18 2007). Rafferty, Terrence, reviewer [with
excerpt]
Title:
Voices from the street
Personal Author:
Dick, Philip K.
Publisher:
Tor Books
Publication Year:
2007
Pages:
301
ISBN:
978-0-7653-1692-9
0-7653-1692-7, $24.95
Abstract:
A heretofore unpublished 1953 work l of social
realism. "In many ways, the central figure here, Stuart Hadley,
lives the ideal American dream, working as an electronics salesman
and married to a beautiful woman in a tony district of 1950s
Oakland, California. Like many of Dick's iconoclastic
protagonists, however, he is also a dreamer, an idealistic artist,
and ultimately a dropout from lockstep social conformism. The
novel follows Hadley's descent into depression, madness, and
eventual return to sanity. Surprisingly well written for a
formative effort, it is a welcome addition to its author's large
and brilliant canon." (Booklist)
Note(s):
A Tom Doherty Associates book
Subject(s):
California/Oakland; Sales personnel and selling;
Mental depression; Marriage problems; Alienation (Social
psychology)
Library Journal (1976)
v. 131 no. 20 (Dec. 2006). Bergstrom, Jenne, reviewer [with full
text]
Title:
The boy detective fails
Personal Author:
Meno, Joe
Publisher:
Akashic
Publication Year:
2006
Pages:
320
ISBN:
1-933354-10-0 (paperback), $14.95
Abstract:
"In their youth, Billy Argo, his kid sister
Caroline, and their friend Fenton solved a series of puzzling
crimes with only a cheap detective kit and their imaginations.
After Billy goes to college to study criminology, Caroline commits
suicide and guilt-ridden Billy attempts it, ending up heavily
sedated in a mental hospital. Ten years later, he connects with
two other outcast, nerdy sorts to help solve the mysteries going
on in their lives and in that of a kleptomaniac widow who is as
fragile and traumatized as he is. The one mystery he can't solve
is Caroline's death. This is postmodern fiction with a head and a
heart, addressing such depressing issues as suicide, death,
loneliness, failure, anomie, and guilt with compassion, humor, and
even whimsy." (Libr J)
Subject(s):
Detectives, Private; Mentally ill; Brothers and
sisters; Psychological novels; Suicide; New Jersey
Review:
Booklist v. 102 no. 21
(July 2006). Seaman, Donna, reviewer
School Library Journal
v. 52 no. 9 (Sept. 2006). Fortin, Thomas, reviewer
Title:
The last of her kind
Personal Author:
Nunez, Sigrid
Publisher:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication Year:
2006
Pages:
375
ISBN:
0-374-18381-3, $25
Abstract:
This "portrait of countercultural America in the
sixties and seventies opens in 1968, when two girls meet as
roommates at Barnard College. Ann is rich and white and wants to
be neither, confiding, 'I wish I had been born poor'; Georgette
has no illusions about poverty, having just escaped her depressed
home town, where 'whole families drank themselves to disgrace.'
Georgette finds Ann at once despicable and mesmerizing, and she's
stunned--if not entirely surprised--when, years after the end of
their friendship, Ann is arrested for killing a cop. In previous
works, Nunez has proved herself a master of psychological acuity.
Here her ambitions are grander, and the result is a remarkable and
disconcerting vision of a troubled time in American history, and
of its repercussions for national and individual identity." (New
Yorker)
Subject(s):
College students; Women/Relation to other women;
Friendship; Radicals and radicalism; Counter culture; Murderers;
Psychological novels; Sisters
Review:
New York Times (Late New York
Edition) (Jan. 17 2006). Benedict, Elizabeth, reviewer
[with excerpt]
"Francesco is a gambling-addicted bus driver in
Bologna, with a thuggish debt collector on his trail; Leila is a
smart dame with a great pair of legs, who each night looks for a
man to bed, drug, and rob. In perfect noir fashion, the two become
uneasy allies, trying to escape a pair of vicious intelligence
agents after Leila unknowingly swipes a mysterious document from a
victim's apartment. Rigosi somewhat overdoes character quirks--one
agent has a condition that leads him to constantly leak tears as
he slices apart his victims--but an ever-expanding cast of creeps
and criminals keeps the plot accelerating, and he describes the
dripping of blood and the angle of a broken neck as lovingly as
the preparation of a nice eggplant parmigiana." (New Yorker)
Note(s):
Original Italian edition, 2000
Subject(s):
Italy/Bologna; Crime and criminals; Murder
stories; Gambling; Suspense novels
Review:
Booklist v. 102 no. 17
(May 1 2006). Ott, Bill, reviewer
Title:
Farthing
Personal Author:
Walton, Jo
Publisher:
Tor
Publication Year:
2006
Pages:
319
ISBN:
0-765-31421-5, $25.95
Abstract:
"In an alternate reality in which a group of
English nobles overthrew Winston Churchill and made peace with
Adolf Hitler in 1941, a murder is committed at the home of Lord
and Lady Eversley, and suspicion falls on David Kahn, the Jewish
husband of Lucy Eversley. Only Inspector Carmichael of Scotland
Yard believes that something else might be at work and that the
Kahns could, in fact, be victims themselves. . . . An excellent
example of alternate history." (Libr J)
Booklist v. 102 no. 22
(Aug. 2006). Murray, Frieda, reviewer
Review:
Library Journal (1976)
v. 131 no. 12 (July 2006). Cassada, Jackie, reviewer [with full
text]
Title:
The android's dream
Personal Author:
Scalzi, John
Publisher:
Tor
Publication Year:
2006
Pages:
396
ISBN:
978-0-765-30941-9
0-765-30941-6, $24.95
Abstract:
"When a human diplomat causes the death of an
alien counterpart, the aliens threaten war unless Earth's
government can present them with a particular kind of sheep used
in their race's coronation ceremony. War hero and superhacker
Harry Creek, along with his friend Brian Javna (now an artificial
intelligence), tracks down the sheep, only to discover that it is,
in fact, Robin Baker, a pet store owner whose DNA contains
remnants of sheep genetic material. While Creek and Javna attempt
to find a way around their dilemma, other forces are searching for
Baker--and they don't care whether she's dead or alive. . . . . A
tongue-in-cheek sf adventure that delivers serious action and
intrigue as well as clever comedic barbs aimed at diplomatic airs,
sf cults, and other foibles of the modern era." (Libr J)
Note(s):
A Tom Doherty Associates book
Subject(s):
Life on other planets; Science fiction; Satire
Review:
The New York Times Book Review
v. 111 no. 52 (Dec. 24 2006). Itzkoff, Dave, reviewer [with
excerpt]
The author "blends fact, fiction, and
supposition in a suspenseful tale based on the 1910 transatlantic
pursuit of Dr. Hawley Crippen for the murder and brutal
dismemberment of his wife, Cora." (Libr J)
"Boyne starts with the basic facts. . . but he has altered the
story to suit his dramatic needs and authorial whims. The result
of his reinvention is a dark comedy that is supremely readable,
always suspenseful, sometimes laugh-out-loud funny and, finally, a
monumental piece of misogyny. In Boyne's sardonic telling, Cora
Crippen was a monster who richly deserved to die, and her
longsuffering husband was a man more sinned against than sinning."
(Washington Post Book World)
"This satiric novel chronicles the reluctant
coming of age of a privileged young man who has just entered the
prestigious Indian Administrative Service. Posted to a small town
deep in the interior, he finds himself a foreigner in his own
country, wary of cholera, defenseless against mosquitoes, and
shocked by the sight of a tribal woman: 'They exist, he shrieked
silently, outside arty films about tribal exploitation and
agrarian reform.' In revolt, he sneaks out of meetings, pretends
to be the son of Antarctic explorers, and smokes copious amounts
of pot. He's an avatar of the Western slacker: overeducated,
bored, plagued with doubts, and incapable of action. Still,
Chatterjee's story is uniquely Indian, as he plumbs his hero's
fear of being 'just one more urban Indian bewitched by America's
hard sell in the Third World.'" (New Yorker)
Note(s):
First published 1988 in India
Series:
New York Review Books classics
Subject(s):
India/1947-; Satire
Review:
The New York Times Book Review
v. 111 no. 27 (July 2 2006). Kapur, Akash, reviewer [with excerpt]
Review:
Library Journal (1976)
v. 131 no. 6 (Apr. 1 2006). Chadwell, Faye A., reviewer [with full
text]
Review:
American Book Review v.
28 no. 1 (Nov./Dec. 2006). King, Bruce, reviewer [with excerpt,
full text]
Title:
Twilight: a novel
Personal Author:
Gay, William
Publisher:
MacAdam/Cage
Publication Year:
2006
Pages:
224
ISBN:
978-1-59692-058-3
1-59692-058-0, $25
Abstract:
A "story set in rural Tennessee in 1951. Teenage
Kenneth Tyler is on the run from Granville Sutter, a monstrously
evil but wickedly efficient hit man who has been hired to retrieve
some incriminating photos the boy has stolen from the local
mortician, who has a penchant for doing unspeakable things to and
with the corpses in his professional care." (Booklist)
The "absence of a soothing depth--of motive, reasons,
understanding--is one of the great achievements of the novel. It
sets up a central tension for the reader, who deaires to know
more, while the writer resolutely adheres to the truth of his
universe--that such comforts aren't available and that the
quiverings of the individual consciousness aren't substantial
enough in the face of life's darkly malevolent forces." (Paste)
Subject(s):
Undertakers and undertaking; Good and evil;
Adolescence; Hired killers; Sexual perversion; Eccentrics and
eccentricities; Brothers and sisters
"Sixteen-year-old Ree Dolly has a plan. She's
going to join the army as soon as she can free herself from her
complicated family obligations. Unfortunately, her father, part of
a large extended Dolly family crystal meth enterprise, is missing.
Her mother's mind is gone, and two little brothers worship at
Ree's feet. Ree gets word that her father has skipped bail; if he
doesn't meet his court date, the family loses its home, and
there's nowhere to go. Ree begins a journey through the savage
poverty of a brutally cold Ozarks winter to deliver her father
before his court date." (Libr J)
"Like his characters, and especially his teen characters,
Woodrell's prose mixes tough and tender so thoroughly yet so
delicately that we never taste even a hint of false bravado, on
the one hand, or sentimentality, on the other. And Ree is one of
those heroines whose courage and vulnerability are both
irresistible and completely believable--think of not just Mattie
Ross in True Grit but also Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird or even
Eliza Naumann in Bee Season. One runs out of superlatives to
describe Woodrell's fiction." (Booklist)
Subject(s):
Adolescence; Girls; Fugitives; Fathers and
daughters; Drug traffic; Mountain life; Brothers and sisters;
Ozark Mountains region
Title:
Dark Mondays: stories
Personal Author:
Baker, Kage
Publisher:
Night Shade Books
Publication Year:
2006
Pages:
231
ISBN:
1-59780-051-1, $26.95
Link to Book Part(s)
Abstract:
In this collection, the "supernatural
matter-of-factly touches the shabby lives of people in small,
isolated towns, providing resolution and revelation. . . . In "The
Maid on the Shore," a sprawling novella set in the 17th-century
West Indies, English pirates are helped to bloody victory against
the Spanish by a beautiful girl who embodies the fury of war.
Though Baker's uncanny plot-turns often feel inorganic to her
stories, she grapples vigorously with moral and philosophical
conundrums." (Publ Wkly)
Contents Note:
In addition to the novella The maid on the
shore, this collection contains the following short stories: The
two old women; Portrait with flames; Monkey Day; Calamari Curls;
Katherine's story; Oh, false young man!; So this guy walks into a
lighthouse; Silent Leonardo
Subject(s):
Short stories; Fantasies; Supernatural phenomena
Title:
Mineral spirits: a novel
Personal Author:
Sharfeddin, Heather
Publisher:
Bridge Works
Publication Year:
2006
Pages:
250
ISBN:
978-1-882593-98-9
1-882593-98-7, $21.95
Abstract:
"Freshly elected as the sheriff in a one-lawman
town in Montana, Kip Edelson is immediately put to task when
10-year-old Gray Dausman discovers a rotting corpse down by the
river. As Edelson attempts to discern the identity of the victim,
he becomes increasingly convinced that it is none other than the
boy's missing mother, and he reluctantly takes Gray under his wing
even as his own marriage evaporates before him. When Edelson
stumbles upon an illicit drug ring involving the local tavern
owner and various other shady locals, the identity of the corpse
takes on a new, unexpected significance." (Booklist)
The author "blends Western and mystery genres into a fine, heady
concoction." (Libr J)
Subject(s):
Sheriffs; Boys; Montana; Murder stories; Western
stories