APL Recommends

Books from our Booklists

Best Fiction 2009

Cover of the book The American painter Emma Dial : a novel
By Samantha Peale.
In this racy, muscular, enlightening beauty of a novel" (James McManus), Peale writes with astonishing insight about a young woman who risks everything to fulfill her ambitions as an artist.
Cover of the book American rust
By Philipp Meyer.
Set in a beautiful but economically devastated Pennsylvania steel town, a lush landscape as deceptively promising as the edifices of the abandoned steel mills, "American Rust" is a novel of the lost American dream and the desperation that arises in its absence.
Cover of the book American salvage : stories
By by Bonnie Jo Campbell.
These short stories approach their subjects from an array of perspectives, but what they share is freshness, surprise, and a compulsion to plumb some absolute extremes of American existence. National Book Award citation American Salvage is rich with local color and peopled with rural characters who love and hate extravagantly.
Cover of the book The anthologist
By Nicholson Baker.
"The Anthologist is narrated by Paul Chowder - a once-in-a-while-published kind of poet who is writing the introduction to a new anthology of poetry. He's having a hard time getting started because his career is floundering, his girlfriend Roz has recently left him, and he is thinking about the great poets throughout history who have suffered far worse and deserve to feel sorry for themselves. He has also promised to reveal many wonderful secrets and tips and tricks about poetry, and it looks like the introduction will be a little longer than he'd thought." "What unfolds is a wholly entertaining and beguiling love story about poetry: from Tennyson, Swinburne, and Yeats to the moderns (Roethke, Bogan, Merwin) to the staff of The New Yorker, what Paul reveals is astonishing and makes one realize how incredibly important poetry is to our lives. At the same time, Paul barely manages to realize all of this himself, and the result is a tenderly romantic, hilarious, and inspired novel."--BOOK JACKET.
Cover of the book Appassionata
By Eva Hoffman.
Isabel Merton is a renowned concert pianist, whose performances are marked by a rare responsiveness to the complexities of her art, and its intensities of feeling. She feels increasingly torn between the compelling musical realm she deeply inhabits, and her fragmented itinerant artist’s life, with its frequent flights, anonymous hotels, and brief, arbitrary encounters. Away from her New York home on a European tour, Isabel meets a political exile from a war-torn country, a man driven by a rankling sense of injustice and a powerful desire to vindicate his cause and avenge his people.
Cover of the book Apologize, apologize!
By Elizabeth Kelly.
Coming of age on Martha's Vineyard, Collie, struggles to find his place wihtin his wildly wealthy, hyperarticulate, resolutely crazy Irish-Catholic family: a philandering father, incorrigible brother, pigeon-racing unlce, radical activist mother, and domineering media mogul grandfather. It is a world where chaos is exhilaratingly constant, where money is of no object. Yet it is one where the tings Collie wants--understanding, stability, a sense of belonging--cannot be bought for any price.--From publisher's description.
Cover of the book Await your reply : a novel
By Dan Chaon.
While Miles pursues elusive letters and clues in a perpetual search for his missing twin, Ryan struggles with the discovery that he is adopted, and Lucy finds her daring escape from her hometown posing unexpectedly dangerous consequences.
Cover of the book The believers
By Zoë Heller.
This is a comic, tragic, supremely entertaining novel about one family's struggles with the consolations of faith and the trials of doubt. When Audrey makes a devastating discovery about her husband, New York radical lawyer Joel Litvinoff, she is forced to re-examine everything she thought she knew about their forty-year marriage. Joel's children will soon have to come to terms with this unsettling secret themselves, but for the meantime, they are trying to cope with their own dilemmas. Rosa, a disillusioned revolutionary, is grappling with a new-found attachment to Orthodox Judaism. Karla, an unhappily married social worker, is falling in love with an unlikely suitor at the hospital where she works. Adopted brother Lenny is back on drugs again. In the course of battling their own demons and each other, every member of the family is called upon to decide what - if anything - they still believe in.
Cover of the book Big machine : a novel
By Victor LaValle.
Scraping out an existence as a New York bus porter, recovering addict and suicide cult survivor Ricky Rice is inducted into a band of paranormal investigators who share his experience of having heard voices that may have a divine source.
Cover of the book Blonde roots
By Bernardine Evaristo.
In an alternate world in which Africans enslaved Europeans, Doris, an Englishwoman, is captured and taken to the New World, where the hardships she endures as a slave are offset by dreams of escape and home.
Cover of the book Border songs
By Jim Lynch.
An extremely tall dyslexic is pushed away from his family's Washington dairy farm to join the Border Patrol, where he indulges his obsessions with birds and art while occasionally catching smugglers and illegal immigrants on the British Columbian border.
Cover of the book Both ways is the only way I want it
By Maile Meloy.
Presents a volume of eleven short works that explores the complexity of life in austere landscapes of the American West, from the tale of a ranch hand who falls for a reluctant newcomer to the story of a young father who is shocked by the reappearance ofhis late grandmother.
Cover of the book Brothers
By Yu Hua ; translated from the Chinese by Eileen Cheng-yin Chow and Carlos Rojas.
Set against the backdrop of a modern-day China caught in the midst of a growing capitalism, Baldy Li, a teenage ne'er-do-well, and Song Gang, his bookish stepbrother, vow to preserve their close relationship despite their personal differences.
Cover of the book Chronic city : a novel
By Jonathan Lethem.
A searing portrayal of Manhattanites wrapped in their own delusions, desires and lies. Chase lives off residuals earned as a child star, living a life of cloistered ease, until a pop critic with a conspiratorial counter cultural savvy forces him to confront the answer to several mysteries tightly intertwined within the tragic fabric of the city itself.
Cover of the book The color of lightning : a novel
By Paulette Jiles.
The story of two different families, headed by a former slave and by a Quaker, who settle in Texas during the Civil War.
Cover of the book Cutting for stone : a novel
By Abraham Verghese.
Marion, fresh out of medical school, flees Ethiopia and makes his way to America, finding refuge in his work as an intern at an underfunded, overcrowded New York City hospital. When the past catches up to him--nearly destroying him--Marion must entrust his life to the two men he thought he trusted least in the world: the surgeon father who abandoned him and the brother who betrayed him.
Cover of the book Dark places
By Gillian Flynn.
For a price Libby Day will reconnect with the players that murdered her mother and two sisters in "The Satan Sacrifice of Kinnakee, Kansas." Having testified that her brother Ben was the murderer on that fateful night twenty-five years ago, now she is not so sure as, piece by piece, the unimaginable truth emerges, and Libby finds herself right back where she started--on the run from a killer.
Cover of the book Dream house : a novel
By Valerie Laken.
Hoping to rekindle their troubled marriage while renovating a historic house in Ann Arbor, Kate and Stuart Kinzler learn that the house had been the scene of a devastating crime thirty years earlier.
Cover of the book English
By Wang Gang ; translated from the Chinese by Martin Merz and Jane Weizhen Pan.
During the darkest days of the Cultural Revolution, a twelve-year-old boy named Love Liu wonders what life is like beyond the region of Xinjiang in China's remote northwest. Here, conformity is valued above all else, and suspicion governs every exchange among neighbors, classmates, and even friends. Into this stifling atmosphere comes a tall, clean-shaven teacher from Shanghai, with an elegant gray wool jacket and an English dictionary tucked under his arm. With the dictionary at his disposal, Love Liu throws himself into learning English, and a whole new world opens up for him. But in an atmosphere of accusation and recrimination, one in which the teacher is deemed morally suspect and mere innuendo can cost someone his life, Love Liu's ideals face a test more challenging than any he'll meet in the classroom. A major bestseller in China, with rights sold around the world, English is a transcendent novel about a boy's self-discovery, a country's shame, and the transporting power of language.
Cover of the book The family man
By Elinor Lipman.
A hysterical phone call from his ex-wife and a familiar face in a photograph upend gay lawyer Henry Archer's wellordered life and bring him back into contact with the child he adored, a short-term stepdaughter from a misbegotten marriage long ago in this humorous domestic tale from the Upper West Side.
Cover of the book Everything ravaged, everything burned
By Wells Tower.
A collection of darkly comic short works includes the stories of a man who is thrown out of his house when his wife discovers his infidelity in a bizarre way, teen cousins who share a woodland comeuppance, and a youth who flees to a carnival life after being bitten by his father.
Cover of the book The financial lives of the poets : a novel
By Jess Walter.
Matt Prior is losing his job, his wife, and his house, and he's about to lose his mind--until he discovers a way that he might possibly be able to save it all.
Cover of the book The forgotten garden : a novel
By Kate Morton.
From the author of "The House at Riverton" comes a story of outer and inner journeys as "Nell," abandoned as a child, leaves her adoptive parents in Australia and travels to England to trace her story, to find her real identity--a quest that ultimately leads her to Blackhurst Manor on the Cornish coast and the secrets of the doomed Mountrachet family.
Cover of the book A gate at the stairs : a novel
By Lorrie Moore.
"...As the United States begins gearing up for war in the Middle East, twenty-year-old Tassie Keltjin, the Midwestern daughter of a gentleman hill farmer--his 'Keltjin potatoes' are justifiably famous--has come to a university town as a college student, her brain on fire with Chaucer, Sylvia Plath, Simone de Beauvoir. Between semesters, she takes a job as a part-time nanny. The family she works for seems both mysterious and glamorous to her, and although Tassie had once found children boring, she comes to care for, and to protect, their newly adopted little girl as her own. As the year unfolds and she is drawn deeper into each of these lives, her own life back home becomes ever more alien to her: her parents are frailer; her brother, aimless and lost in high school, contemplates joining the military. Tassie finds herself becoming more and more the stranger she felt herself to be, and as life and love unravel dramatically, even shockingly, she is forever changed..."--dust cover flap.
Cover of the book Generosity : an enhancement
By Richard Powers.
When Chicagoan Russell Stone finds himself teaching a Creative Nonfiction class, he encounters a young Algerian woman with a disturbingly luminous presence. Thassadit Amzwar's blissful exuberance both entrances and puzzles the melancholic Russell. How can this refugee from perpetual terror be so happy? Won't someone so open and alive come to serious harm? Wondering how to protect her, Russell researches her war-torn country and skims through popular happiness manuals. Might her condition be hyperthymia? Hypomania? Russell's amateur inquiries lead him to college counselor Candace Weld, who also falls under Thassa's spell. Dubbed Miss Generosity by her classmates, Thassa's joyful personality comes to the attention of the notorious geneticist and advocate for genomic enhancement, Thomas Kurton, whose research leads him to announce the genotype for happiness.
Cover of the book Half broke horses : a true-life novel
By Jeannette Walls.
A true-life novel about Lily Casey Smith (the author's grandmother) who at age six helped her father break horses, at age fifteen left home to teach in a frontier town, and later as a wife and mother runs a vast ranch in Arizona where she survived tornadoes, droughts, floods, the Great Depression, and the most heartbreaking personal tragedy--but despite a life of hardscrabble drudgery still remains a woman of indomitable spirit.
Cover of the book The help
By Kathryn Stockett.
In Jackson, Mississippi, in 1962, there are lines that are not crossed. With the civil rights movement exploding all around them, three women start a movement of their own, forever changing a town and the way women--black and white, mothers and daughters--view one another.
Cover of the book In other rooms, other wonders
By Daniyal Mueenuddin.
A volume of linked stories describes the intertwined lives of landowners and their retainers on the Gurmani family farm in Pakistan, in a collection that explores such themes as culture, class power, and desire.
Cover of the book The increment : a novel
By David Ignatius.
When a hidden Tehran scientist sends encrypted messages to the CIA that reveal Iran's bomb-development program, agent Harry Pappas is directed to discern if the messages are true before enlisting the aid of a secret British spy team to safeguard the scientist.
Cover of the book It's beginning to hurt
By James Lasdun.
The stories in this remarkable collection--including "An Anxious Man," winner of the National Short Story Prize (UK)--are vibrant and gripping. James Lasdun's great gift is his unfailing psychological instinct for the vertiginous moments when the essence of a life discloses itself. With forensic skill he exposes his characters' hidden desires and fears, drawing back the folds of their familiar self-delusions, their images of themselves, their habits and routines, to reveal their interior lives with brilliant clarity.
Cover of the book Juliet, naked
By Nick Hornby.
Annie initiates an e-mail correspondence with Tucker Crowe, a reclusive Dylanish singer-songwriter, and a connection is forged between two lonely people who are looking for more out of what they've got. What happens when a washed-up musician looks for another chance? And a childless woman looks for a change?
Cover of the book Lark and Termite : a novel
By Jayne Anne Phillips.
Set during the 1950s in West Virginia and Korea, this is the story of two children--Lark, on the verge of adulthood, and her brother, Termite, a child unable to walk and talk but filled with radiance--who grow up with their mother and aunt while their soldier-father fights for his life during the chaotic early months of the Korean War.
Cover of the book Last night in Twisted River : a novel
By John Irving.
In 1954, in the cookhouse of a logging and sawmill settlement in northern New Hampshire, an anxious twelve-year-old boy mistakes the local constable's girlfriend for a bear. Both the twelve-year-old and his father become fugitives, forced to run from Coos County-to Boston, to southern Vermont, to Toronto-pursued by the implacable constable. Their lone protector is a fiercely libertarian logger, once a river driver, who befriends them. A tale that spans five decades.
Cover of the book Let the great world spin : a novel
By Colum McCann.
A rich vision of the pain, loveliness, mystery, and promise of New York City in the 1970s. A radical young Irish monk struggles with his own demons as he lives among the prostitutes in the middle of the burning Bronx. A group of mothers gather in a Park Avenue apartment to mourn their sons who died in Vietnam, only to discover just how much divides them even in grief. A young artist finds herself at the scene of a hit-and-run that sends her own life careening sideways. A 38-year-old grandmother, turns tricks alongside her teenage daughter, determined not only to take care of her family but to prove her own worth. Weaving together these and other seemingly disparate lives, McCann's allegory comes alive in the voices of the city's people, unexpectedly drawn together by hope, beauty, and the "artistic crime of the century"--A mysterious tightrope walker dancing between the Twin Towers.--From publisher description.
Cover of the book Little Bee
By Chris Cleave.
A haunting novel about the tenuous friendship that blooms between two disparate strangers--one an illegal Nigerian refugee, the other a recent widow from suburban London.
Cover of the book The little stranger
By Sarah Waters.
One dusty postwar summer in his home of rural Warwickshire, Dr. Faraday is called to a patient at lonely Hundreds Hall, the residence of the Ayres family for more than two centuries. Its owners, mother, son and daughter, are struggling to keep pace with a changing society, as well as conflicts of their own. But the Ayreses are haunted by something more sinister than a dying way of life.
Cover of the book Love and summer
By William Trevor.
Living an unfulfilling existence at the side of a tragic husband, shy orphan Ellie Dillahan begins an affair that forces her to choose between an uncertain future with the man she loves and the desolate life she has built for herself.
Cover of the book Lowboy
By John Wray.
Possessing paranoid schizophrenic beliefs that he can save the planet from climate change by cooling down his own overheated body, sixteen-year-old New York youth Will Heller pursues a terrifying and delusional odyssey through the city's tunnels and backalleys.
Cover of the book Major Pettigrew's last stand : a novel
By Helen Simonson.
Major Ernest Pettigrew (retired) leads a quiet life in the village of St. Mary, England, until his brother's death sparks an unexpected friendship with Mrs. Jasmina Ali, the Pakistani shopkeeper from the village. Drawn together by their shared love of literature and the loss of their respective spouses, the Major and Mrs. Ali soon find their friendship blossoming into something more. But will their relationship survive in a society that considers Ali a foreigner?
Cover of the book The marriage bureau for rich people
By Farahad Zama.
What does an Indian man with a wealth of common sense do when his retirement becomes too monotonous? Open a marriage bureau of course! With a steady stream of clients to keep him busy, Mr. Ali sees his new business flourish as Mrs. Ali and his careful assistant, Aruna, look on with vigilant eyes. "The Marriage Bureau for Rich People" has shades of Jane Austen and Alexander McCall Smith but with a resonance and originality entirely its own.
Cover of the book The museum of innocence
By Orhan Pamuk ; translated from the Turkish by Maureen Freely.
It is 1975, a perfect spring in Istanbul. Kemal, scion of one of the city's wealthiest families, is about to become engaged to Sibel, daughter of another prominent family, when he encounters Fusun, a beautiful shopgirl and a distant relation. Thus begins an obsessive but tragic love affair that will transform itself into a compulsive collection of objects--a museum of one man's broken heart--that chronicle Kemal's lovelorn progress and his afflicted heart's reactions.
Cover of the book New world monkeys : a novel
By Nancy Mauro.
Duncan and Lily, young and adrift in a prickly marriage and lackluster careers, flee Manhattan for the peaceful allure of a recently inherited crumbling Victorian home. But the two are left with little time to ponder the traditional "he said, she said" failings of a relationship: On an upstate road miles shy of their house, a wild boar leaps to his death in front of their Saab--an accident whose consequences will haunt them throughout the summer. That was no ordinary hog. Lily and Duncan arrive in the eccentric town of Osterhagen to discover the boar had a name: The Sovereign of the Deep Wood. That it was the town mascot. And, as the hapless urbanites are coerced into the vortex of tea socials, cannon fire, and communal history, they realize that the residents of the bizarre hamlet intend to seek justice for their fallen hero.
Cover of the book Major Pettigrew's last stand : a novel
By Helen Simonson.
Major Ernest Pettigrew (retired) leads a quiet life in the village of St. Mary, England, until his brother's death sparks an unexpected friendship with Mrs. Jasmina Ali, the Pakistani shopkeeper from the village. Drawn together by their shared love of literature and the loss of their respective spouses, the Major and Mrs. Ali soon find their friendship blossoming into something more. But will their relationship survive in a society that considers Ali a foreigner?
Cover of the book The marriage bureau for rich people
By Farahad Zama.
What does an Indian man with a wealth of common sense do when his retirement becomes too monotonous? Open a marriage bureau of course! With a steady stream of clients to keep him busy, Mr. Ali sees his new business flourish as Mrs. Ali and his careful assistant, Aruna, look on with vigilant eyes. "The Marriage Bureau for Rich People" has shades of Jane Austen and Alexander McCall Smith but with a resonance and originality entirely its own.
Cover of the book The museum of innocence
By Orhan Pamuk ; translated from the Turkish by Maureen Freely.
It is 1975, a perfect spring in Istanbul. Kemal, scion of one of the city's wealthiest families, is about to become engaged to Sibel, daughter of another prominent family, when he encounters Fusun, a beautiful shopgirl and a distant relation. Thus begins an obsessive but tragic love affair that will transform itself into a compulsive collection of objects--a museum of one man's broken heart--that chronicle Kemal's lovelorn progress and his afflicted heart's reactions.
Cover of the book New world monkeys : a novel
By Nancy Mauro.
Duncan and Lily, young and adrift in a prickly marriage and lackluster careers, flee Manhattan for the peaceful allure of a recently inherited crumbling Victorian home. But the two are left with little time to ponder the traditional "he said, she said" failings of a relationship: On an upstate road miles shy of their house, a wild boar leaps to his death in front of their Saab--an accident whose consequences will haunt them throughout the summer. That was no ordinary hog. Lily and Duncan arrive in the eccentric town of Osterhagen to discover the boar had a name: The Sovereign of the Deep Wood. That it was the town mascot. And, as the hapless urbanites are coerced into the vortex of tea socials, cannon fire, and communal history, they realize that the residents of the bizarre hamlet intend to seek justice for their fallen hero.
Cover of the book Nothing right : short stories
By Antonya Nelson.
A collection of short works by a noted New Yorker fiction writer includes the National Magazine Award-nominated tale "Or Else," and features characters who struggle to keep themselves intact when their personal lives unravel.
Cover of the book Pictures at an exhibition
By Sara Houghteling.
In the wake of World War II, Max Berenzon, the son of an art dealer and his pianist wife, wanders Paris in an effort to recover his family's lost masterpieces, looted by the Nazis during occupation, uncovering in the process an old family secret.
Cover of the book A reliable wife : a novel
By by Robert Goolrick.
Set in rural Wisconsin in 1909, Ralph Truitt stands alone on a train platform waiting for the woman who answered his newspaper advertisement for "a reliable wife." But when Catherine Land steps off the train from Chicago, she's not the "simple, honest woman" that Ralph is expecting.
Cover of the book Rhino ranch : a novel
By Larry McMurtry.
Returning home to recover from a near-fatal heart attack, Duane discovers that he has a new neighbor: the statuesque K. K. Slater, a quirky billionairess who's come to Thalia to open the Rhino Ranch, dedicated to the preservation of the endangered black rhinoceros. Despite their obvious differences, Duane can't help but find himself charmed by K.K.'s stubborn toughness and lively spirit, and the two embark on a flirtation that rapidly veers toward the sexual -- but the return of Honor Carmichael complicates Duane's romantic intentions considerably.
Cover of the book Roses
By Leila Meacham.
Spanning the 20th century, the story of Roses takes place in a small East Texas town against the backdrop of the powerful timber and cotton industries, industries controlled by the scions of the town's founding families. A deeply moving love story of struggle and sacrifice across generations. Roses is steeped with nostalgia for a time when honor and good manners were the rule.
Cover of the book Sag Harbor : a novel
By Colson Whitehead.
Benji, one of the only black kids at an elite prep school in Manhattan, tries desperately to fit in, but every summer, he and his brother, Reggie, escape to the East End of Sag Harbor, where a small community of African American professionals has built aworld of is own.
Cover of the book Shanghai girls : a novel
By Lisa See.
May and Pearl, two sisters living in Shanghai in the mid-1930s, are beautiful, sophisticated, and well-educated, but their family is on the verge of bankruptcy. Hoping to improve their social standing, May and Pearl's parents arrange for their daughters to marry Gold Mountain men who have come from Los Angeles to find brides. But when the sisters leave China and arrive at Angel's Island (the Ellis Island of the West) where they are detained, interrogated, and humiliated for months they feel the harsh reality of leaving home. And when May discovers she s pregnant the situation becomes even more desperate. The sisters make a pact that no one can ever know.
Cover of the book Shimmer
By Eric Barnes.
The story of a high stakes, hi-tech gamble that could have a devastating effect on Robbie Case's family and friends, as well as on the world economy.
Cover of the book Sing them home
By Stephanie Kallos.
This novel is a portrait of three siblings who have lived in the shadow of unresolved grief since their mother's disappearance when they were children. Everyone in Emlyn Springs knows the story of Hope Jones, the physician's wife whose big dreams for their tiny town were lost along with her in the tornado of 1978. For Hope's three young children, the stability of life with their preoccupied father, and with Viney, their mother's spitfire best friend, is no match for Hope's absence. Larken, the eldest, is now an art history professor who seeks in food an answer to a less tangible hunger; Gaelan, the son, is a telegenic weatherman who devotes his life to predicting the unpredictable; and the youngest, Bonnie, is a self-proclaimed archivist who combs roadsides for clues to her mother's legacy, and permission to move on. When they're summoned home after their father's death, each sibling is forced to revisit the childhood tragedy that has defined their lives.
Cover of the book The song is you : a novel
By Arthur Phillips.
"Until one snowy night in Brooklyn, when his life's soundtrack - and life itself - starts to play again. He stumbles into a bar and sees Cait O'Dwyer, a flame-haired Irish rock singer, performing with her band, and a strange and unlikely love affair is ignited. Over the next few months, Julian and Cait's passion For music and each other is played out, though they never meet. In cryptic emails, text messages, cell-phone videos, and lyrics posted on Cait's website, they find something in their bizarre friendship that they cannot find anywhere else. Cait's star is on the rise, and Julian gently guides her along her path to fame - but always from a distance - and she responds to the one voice who understands her, more than a fan but still less than a lover." "As their feelings grow more feverish, keeping a safe distance becomes impossible. What follows is a love story and a uniquely heartbreaking dark comedy about obsession and loss."--Jacket.
Cover of the book South of Broad : a novel
By Pat Conroy.
Leopold Bloom King, the narrator, is the son of an amiable, loving father who teaches science at the local high school. His mother, an ex-nun, is the high school principal and a well-known Joyce scholar. After Leo's older brother commits suicide at the age of thirteen, the family struggles with the shattering effects of his death. Eventually he becomes part of a tightly knit group of high school seniors that includes friends Sheba and Trevor Poe, glamorous twins with an alcoholic mother and a prison-escapee father; hardscrabble mountain runaways Niles and Starla Whitehead; socialite Molly Huger and her boyfriend, Chadworth Rutledge X; and an ever-widening circle whose liaisons will ripple across two decades-from 1960s counterculture through the dawn of the AIDS crisis in the 1980s.
Cover of the book The suicide collectors
By David Oppegaard.
In the wake of a mysterious plague that has caused ninety percent of the world's population to commit suicide, survivor Norman journeys across the remains of North America to counter a shadowy group and locate a scientist who is rumored to be working on a cure.
Cover of the book The sweetness at the bottom of the pie
By Alan Bradley.
Eleven-year-old Flavia de Luce, an aspiring chemist with a passion for poison, must exonerate her father of murder. Armed with more than enough knowledge to tie two distant deaths together and examine new suspects, she begins a search that will lead her all the way to the King of England himself.

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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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By Christopher Buehlman.
Failed academic Frank Nichols and his wife, Eudora, have arrived in the sleepy Georgia town of Whitbrow, where Frank hopes to write a history of his family's old estate-the Savoyard Plantation- and the horrors that occurred there. At first, the quaint, rural ways of their new neighbors seem to be everything they wanted. But there is an unspoken dread that the townsfolk have lived with for generations. A presence that demands sacrifice.