APL Recommends

Books from our Booklists

Best Fiction 2003

Cover of the book As meat loves salt
By Maria McCann.
Set during the 17th century English revolution, Jacob Cullen flees his wedding to avoid murder charges only to join Cromwell's army where he begins a relationship with Christopher and togther they try and begin a farming colony.
Cover of the book Brownsville : stories
By Oscar Casares.
A debut anthology of short stories captures the colorful lives of the inhabitants of Brownsville, Texas, a predominantly Mexican American town along the Mexican border.
Cover of the book The clearing
By Tim Gautreaux.
Returning from the Great War a changed man, Byron Aldirdge drifts away from his privileged and charmed life to take a job as a constable in a remote Louisiana sawmill, while his younger brother, taking over management of the mill, struggles to understand him, in an atmospheric novel of the family, justice and obligation.
Cover of the book The curious incident of the dog in the night-time
By Mark Haddon.
Despite his overwhelming fear of interacting with people, Christopher, a mathematically-gifted, autistic, fifteen-year-old boy, decides to investigate the murder of a neighbor's dog and uncovers secret information about his mother.
Cover of the book Drop City
By T. Coraghessan Boyle.
T.C. Boyle has proven himself to be a master storyteller who can do just about anything. But even his most ardent admirers may be caught off guard by his ninth novel, for Boyle has delivered something completely unexpected: a serious and richly rewarding character study that is his most accomplished and deeply satisfying work to date. It is 1970, and a down-at-the-heels California commune has decided to relocate to the last frontier-the unforgiving landscape of interior Alaska-in the ultimate expression of going back to the land. The novel opposes two groups of characters: Sess Harder, his wife Pamela, and other young Alaskans who are already homesteading in the wilderness and the brothers and sisters of Drop City, who, despite their devotion to peace, free love, and the simple life, find their commune riven by tensions. As these two communities collide, their alliances shift and unexpected friendships and dangerous enmities are born as everyone struggles with the bare essentials of life: love, nourishment, and a roof over one's head. Drop City is not a satire or a nostalgic look at the sixties, though its evocation of the period is presented with a truth and clarity that no book on that era has achieved. This is a surprising book, a rich, allusive, and nonsentimental look at the ideals of a generation and their impact on today's radically transformed world. Above all, it is a novel infused with the lyricism and take-no-prisoners storytelling for which T.C. Boyle is justly famous.
Cover of the book Evidence of things unseen : a novel
By Marianne Wiggins.
Falling in love during the Second World War, a soldier and a glassblower's daughter eventually have a son, who in adulthood finds his own love affair impacted by the fallout of the atomic age.
Cover of the book The fortress of solitude : a novel
By Jonathan Lethem.
Their friendship compromised by the belief systems of the racially charged 1970s, Dylan Ebdus and Mungus Rude share a series of misadventures based on their mutual obsession with comic book heroes.
Cover of the book The great fire
By Shirley Hazzard.
In war-torn Asia and stricken Europe, men and women, still young but veterans of harsh experience, must reinvent their lives and expectations, and learn, from their past, to dream again. Some will fulfill their destinies, others will falter. At the center of the story, a brave and brilliant soldier find that survival and worldly achievement are not enough. His counterpart, a young girl living in occupied Japan and tending her dying brother, falls in love, and in the process discovers herself.
Cover of the book The king is dead
By Jim Lewis.
Combining elements of a nineteenth-century epic with the intimacy of contemporary storytelling, the author traces the doomed romance between an aide to the governor of Tennessee and a beautiful but ultimately unfaithful woman.
Cover of the book The known world
By Edward P. Jones.
When a plantation proprietor and former slave--now possessing slaves of his own--dies, his household falls apart in the wake of a slave rebellion and corrupt underpaid patrollers who enable free black people to be sold into slavery.
Cover of the book Loving Che
By Ana Menéndez.
An elderly woman looks back on the world of revolutionary Cuba as she recalls her secret affair with revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara, in the story of a young Cuban woman who searches for details about her birth mother.
Cover of the book The namesake
By Jhumpa Lahiri.
When his Indian immigrant parents give him an odd name, a boy must struggle towards manhood suffering the burdens of this name as well as the conflicting loyalties of his heritage.
Cover of the book Love
By Toni Morrison.
The epitome of a group of women's ideals about love, fatherhood, and friendship, wealthy hotel owner Bill Cosey finds his life compromised by his troubled past and his feelings about a spellbinding woman named Celestial.
Cover of the book Old school : a novel
By Tobias Wolff.
Determined to fit in at his New England prep school, the narrator has learned to mimic the bearing and manners of his adoptive tribe while concealing as much as possible about himself. His final year, however, unravels everything he's achieved, and steers his destiny in directions no one could have predicted. The school's mystique is rooted in Literature, and for many boys this becomes an obsession, editing the review and competing for the attention of visiting writers whose fame helps to perpetuate the tradition. Robert Frost, soon to appear at JFK's inauguration, is far less controversial than the next visitor, Ayn Rand. But the final guest is one whose blessing a young writer would do almost anything to gain.
Cover of the book The pleasure of my company : a novel
By Steve Martin.
Daniel, a troubled man who lives alone, detached from the world, passes his time filling out contest applications and counting ceiling tiles, until his attachment to Clarissa and Teddy helps him rediscover the outside world.
Cover of the book Vernon God Little
By D.B.C. Pierre.
In a small Texas town, fifteen-year-old Vernon finds himself in trouble after his best friend Jesus kills sixteen of his classmates before committing suicide, as he becomes the target of vengeful townspeople and the media.
Cover of the book We need to talk about Kevin
By Lionel Shriver.
Eva never really wanted to be a mother and certainly not the mother of the unlovable boy who murdered seven of his fellow high school students, a cafeteria worker, and a much-adored teacher who tried to befriend him, all two days before his sixteenth birthday. Now, two years later, it is time for her to come to terms with marriage, career, family, parenthood, and Kevin's horrific rampage in a series of startlingly direct correspondences with her estranged husband, Franklyn.
Cover of the book What was she thinking? : notes on a scandal
By Zoë Heller.
When her new friend and co-worker, Sheba Hart, begins a passionate affair with a male student, schoolteacher Barbara Covett decides to defend Sheba and unknowingly reveals secrets they both hide.
Cover of the book You are not a stranger here
By Adam Haslett.
A collection of short stories features characters confronting the concerns of both classic literature and contemporary life, from an aging inventor who visits his gay son to an orphaned boy who finds solace in a classmate's violence.

APL Recommends Blog

Tuesday, June 18

I just got back from the windy city. We spent four nights seeing the shows (comedy), and five days seeing the sites, one of which is the Adler Planetarium (left). We went to the planetarium to be inside on an overcast day, and to sit and rest our weary tourist feet. There are exhibits to walk through, but there are theaters, too, where you can sit down, lean back in the dark, and tour the stars.

Planetaria have changed since James Dean ached to run with the in crowd at Griffith Observatory. There’s no longer a big bronze ball in the center of the room projecting light through the “stars” drilled in it. Everything is digital, and the planets and the galaxies and the constellations—now photographed in stunning detail courtesy NASA and Hubble—swoop into view and out again.

Hubble photos are one of the great things our tax dollars have paid for, and here are a lot of them:

Friday, June 14

I know I’ve told you all about this before but the English major nerd that is me cannot stop myself from telling you that we are two shorts days away from Bloomsday, my favorite literary holiday. Are there other literary holidays? I have no idea. But they’d have to try really hard to be my new favorite.

Bloomsday takes place every year on June 16th in honor of James Joyce and his epic novel Ulysses. The date is the same at the date of the action in the novel. It’s also the date that Joyce had his first outing with his wife-to-be. Sweet, isn’t it?

Now, I have to admit to having mixed feelings about Ulysses. I rarely recommend it to anyone even though I think it’s both beautiful and intriguing. This is because, despite its beauty, it’s also the most difficult book I’ve ever read. Difficult enough that I read it with two supporting texts – one to explain literary allusions that Joyce may or may not have been making intentionally and one to tell you what is happening plot-wise because sometimes it’s difficult to tell. The difficulty can be intimidating but at some point it can also become bothersome to some readers. They find themselves asking if it’s really necessary to write a book with so many references and made up words. But I’d say, if you aren’t taking it for a class and don’t expect to write any papers on it, you can read it without all the extra stuff and get a great deal of enjoyment from the book. Or you might try checking out an audio version of it to see how it sounds when someone else reads it for you.

Here are some related works that you might also find interesting:

Monday, June 10

Summer vacation is here!  And for many of us, that means a trip to somewhere else!  When I was a kid, my parents would bundle me and sister off to my grandparents' house in Washington State.  It was lovely up there--we picked blackberries, visited the beach, went hiking in the many parks all around their house, and got thoroughly spoiled by our grandparents.  I was a voracious reader, so whenever I went anywhere, I'd fill a whole suitcase with books to read. And thinking back to my last trip--a road trip to the Grand Canyon last May, I still do this whenever I go somewhere.  I had a bag of 15 books in the backseat of the car, and by the time we left Arizona, I'd worked my way through half of them.  I guess some habits just never die out.  This summer, I'll be going on a backpacking trip where you have to be aware of every pound you pack, so I will have to rethink this strategy....  Hauling 15 books up and over a mountain is not a good idea!

Anyway, whether you go on a trip or have a staycation, something to read is a necessary component that should be included on your list of "Things to Take."  Don't know what to read?  No worries!  I have compiled a handy-dandy booklist of perfect books with a vacation or a road-trip theme for you to check out for the optimum escape! 

Thursday, June 6

In the children’s book, Cecil the Pet Glacier, Ruby Small's embarrassingly eccentric parents take her on a vacation to Norway where she acquires an unwanted pet, a glacier named Cecil. Though Ruby's situation is far out, many children can relate to feeling embarrassed by their parents, and wishing they were nothing like them -- which makes this book not only relatable but hilarious. Recent novels for adults about eccentric parents are similar, perhaps a little darker, but still with some humor, and most of the children thrive in spite of their upbringing.  In Canada, two teens’ parents are arrested for armed robbery. The Elephant Keepers' Children is about how three precocious siblings deal with life alongside their eccentric parents. The children call their parents "elephant keepers", meaning that they have a huge unfulfilled desire - their yearning to know God. The parents in Family Fang are performance artists and they have no qualms about exploiting their children for their art.  And lastly, Little Caesar is a beautifully realized novel about a young man seeking to understand his difficult, eccentric parents. His father is a sensationalistic conceptual artist whose most recent project, the destruction of a mountain deep in the Amazon rain forest, has provoked worldwide protest.

Monday, June 3

When:
Tuesday, June 11
7-8  p.m.
Where:
North Village Branch Library
2505 Steck Ave.
974-9960
Who: Adults who love Young Adult Books.
Book: The Demon King by Cinda Williams Chima

This story is set in world where magic is a powerful presence. There is clan magic, tied to the earth and used for healing. There is wizard magic that must be controlled and channeled with talismans. There is also a complicated and dark history that binds these magics together. And, of course, a bunch of secret baddies that are working to break this whole peace agreement wide open. 

 

Enter our two heroes. We’ve got Han, a reformed thief trying to make an honest living to support his family. He’s street smart, tough, and has a way of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. We’ve also got Raisa, the princess heir who is trying to be more than just another empty headed princess. She’s tougher than her small stature would indicate, independent, and willing to do what it takes to make her kingdom a better place for all its citizens.

 

There are secret identities, court intrigue, and several exciting adventures. And this is just the first in the series! We really enjoyed this title and think you will too. We hope you can join us for an evening of discussion.

 

The Demon King is available in both our print and downloadable collections.

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APL Recommends

Cover of the book Dark places
By Gillian Flynn.
I have a meanness inside me, real as an organ. Libby Day was seven when her mother and two sisters were murdered in "the Satan sacrifice of Kinnakee, Kansas." As her family lay dying, little Libby fled their tiny farmhouse into the freezing January snow. She lost some fingers and toes, but she survived--and famously testified that her fifteen-year-old brother, Ben, was the killer.