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BookPage July 2020

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BookPage

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DISCOVER YOUR NEXT GREAT BOOK

JULY 2020

F O S E G A P

L I R PE

d new thriller te is tw s r’ e g a S y e , Ril Home Before Dark in e m o h t a r fe No one’s sa

More thrills during Private Eye July

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BookPage

®

JULY 2020

features cover story | riley sager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8 Riley Sager crafts a literary hall of mirrors in his latest terrifying novel

feature | class of 2020. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 YA authors graduate to your bookshelf

feature | horror . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9 Disturbing tales to keep readers up late

feature | private eye july. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

q&a | deb caletti. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 The dark consequences of treating people like objects

meet | jessie sima. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Meet the author-illustrator of Jules vs. the Ocean

Our favorite thrillers for the season

feature | mystery genre studies. . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

columns

The deadliest summer school course you’ll ever take

behind the book | ivy pochoda. . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 The serial killer doesn’t get to tell the story this time

q&a | john fram. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Queering the small-town thriller

feature | criminal investigations . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 How modern forensic science was born

feature | true crime memoirs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Two piercing and personal true stories

feature | dog mysteries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 These books are tough on crime but sweet on dogs

feature | gothic thrillers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Carefully laid clues and truly sinister reveals

feature | summertime romps. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Books to lighten up your summer reading list

lifestyles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4 romance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4 book clubs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5 audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6 the hold list . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7 whodunit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 cozies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 well read. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

reviews fiction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 nonfiction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 children’s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Cover image from Home Before Dark, jacket design © Alex Merto.

PRESIDENT & FOUNDER Michael A. Zibart ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Elizabeth Grace Herbert CONTROLLER Sharon Kozy

PUBLISHER & EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Trisha Ping DEPUTY EDITOR Cat Acree

MARKETING MANAGER Mary Claire Zibart

ASSOCIATE EDITORS Stephanie Appell Christy Lynch Savanna Walker

SUBSCRIPTIONS Katherine Klockenkemper

PRODUCTION MANAGER Penny Childress

CHILDREN’S BOOKS Allison Hammond CONTRIBUTOR Roger Bishop

EDITORIAL POLICY

SUBSCRIPTIONS

BookPage is a selection guide for new books. Our editors evaluate and select for review the best books published in a variety of categories. BookPage is editorially independent; only books we highly recommend are featured.

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lifestyles by susannah felts

H Perfectly Golden Angela Garbacz makes her cookbook debut with Perfectly Golden (Countryman, $29.95, 9781682684764), a trove of treats from her popular bakery, Goldenrod Pastries in Lincoln, Nebraska. Garbacz became devoted to dietary-­inclusive baking after developing a dairy sensitivity, and her bakery uses nondairy milks exclusively (almond is her go-to). Here she reveals her top tricks for delicious sweets that are also gluten free and vegan, including decadent buns, cakes, cookies and more. (You can make any of the recipes in the traditional way, too, using cow’s milk and eggs.) While this bright and cheerful cookbook is decidedly contemporary in its methods, Garbacz bakes from a strong family tradition, and she includes tweaked versions of old favorites, such as her mom’s turtle cookies: cooked in a waffle iron and dolloped with peanut butter frosting. It’s truly a guide to sweets for all tastes and preferences.

An Almost Zero Waste Life You probably think that a zero-waste life sounds appealing. You may also think it sounds exhausting to achieve. I’m with you on both counts, but after exploring the solutions offered by Megean Weldon in An Almost Zero Waste Life (Rock Point, $19.99, 9781631066580), I’m newly enthusiastic about my family’s ability to slash our trash. Weldon is practical in her guidance, and she urges readers to use up their disposables before replacing them with sustainable alternatives. After that, small changes start to add up: Snip old T-shirts into rags, start composting and cook more homemade food. I especially like Weldon’s weekly menu examples, designed to cut vegetable waste, and her section on holidays, which includes a list of 101 zero-waste gift ideas.

See You at the Campground

romance by christie ridgway

H About a Rogue A marriage of convenience becomes more in About a Rogue (Avon, $7.99, 9780062913623), the latest historical romance by Caroline Linden. As one of three men in line for a dukedom, Maximilian St. James is exhorted to rehabilitate his reputation. Max, wallet empty and ever the pragmatist, offers marriage to the elder daughter of a successful ceramics maker. But after his intended elopes with someone else, he ends up “I do”-ing with her younger sister, Bianca. Watching them go from cool companions to passionate husband and wife is warmly satisfying. There is no hot flash of insta-lust or even the slow burn of banked longing. Instead, true regard grows naturally as Max and Bianca learn about each other through work, friends and shared interests.

Just a Heartbeat Away Cara Bastone delivers a cozy and charming Brooklyn-set romance in Just a Heartbeat Away (HQN, $7.99, 9781335045379). After his wife’s death, Sebastian Dorner shifted his life to focus on his young son. While serving as lunch monitor at his son’s elementary school, he’s surprised by the sparks that fly between him and school counselor Via DeRosa. But she’s got a boyfriend, and Seb’s convinced their 15-year age gap is a deal breaker. However, the pair bumps into each other so often at school and in their shared neighborhood that the attraction grows unstoppable. Bastone explores universal themes of grief, love and parenthood through Seb’s and Via’s relatable fears and hang-ups in this heartwarming story.

A Duke, the Lady, and a Baby

Though See You at the Campground (Sourcebooks, $18.99, 9781492694656) was published earlier this spring, I think it deserves a shout-out now as we enter prime camping season. Parents and podcasters Stephanie and Jeremy Puglisi lay out the pros and cons of vacationing via tent, RV or cabin and are forthcoming about their missteps as they learned to navigate the great outdoors with their three sons. Now seasoned experts, they share packing lists, choice campgrounds, campfire grub, campground etiquette and advice for exploring national parks. Armed with this book, even the most avid camper will be better prepared for the next adventure with children in tow.

A secret group dedicated to helping ill-­treated widows takes up the case of West Indian heiress Patience Jordan in A Duke, the Lady, and a Baby (Zebra, $15.95, 9781420152234) by Vanessa Riley. Patience is determined to reunite with her infant son and return to her island home. But the arrival of her son’s guardian, a heroic soldier and powerful duke named Busick Strathmore, means she must masquerade as the child’s nanny until she can secure their escape. Riley opens up the world of Regency romance by depicting a heroine whose society views her as the Other and pairing her with a powerful man whose war wounds now cause him to see himself differently. There’s wordplay and swordplay in this not-to-bemissed romance, plus subtle love scenes that prove Patience and Busick’s mettle as helpmeets and lovers.

Susannah Felts is a Nashville-based writer and co-founder of  The Porch, a literary arts organization. She enjoys anything paper- or plant-related.

Christie Ridgway is a lifelong romance reader and a published romance novelist of over 60 books.

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book clubs by julie hale

Four thoughtful takes on #MeToo Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey deliver a watershed work of investigative journalism with She Said: Breaking the Sexual Harassment Story That Helped Ignite a Movement (Penguin, $18, 9780525560364). The authors, who broke the Harvey Weinstein sexual assault story for the New York Times, have crafted an eye-opening look at how #MeToo took off, sharing details about how they located sources and perMore than two years after suaded them to talk about Weinstein. the #MeToo movement In Chandler Baker’s novel, took off, writers have shaped Whisper Network (Flatiron, $16.99, 9781250205360), Rothe resulting conversation salita, Ardie, Grace and Sloane work under Ames, who is set about sexual harassment to become CEO of Truviv, Inc. Ames has a reputation and abuse into meaningful for making advances toward fiction and nonfiction. women, and his latest in-­ office transgression leaves the four co-workers determined to take action. Writing with humor and poise about a sensitive subject, Baker introduces complicated topics that will spark plenty of conversation and spins a suspenseful plot full of surprises that book clubs will enjoy unraveling. Susan Choi’s novel Trust Exercise (Holt, $15.99, 9781250231260), which won the National Book Award in 2019, explores #MeToo concerns from the perspective of a group of students at a per for min g arts school who are manipulated by their elders, particularly their formidable drama teacher, Mr. Kingsley. The novel is at once a beautifully executed coming-of-age story and an unflinching account of lost innocence and idealism. It’s sure to prompt deep discussions of gender and age dynamics, especially the power plays that occur between teens and those whom they idolize. Catch and Kill: Lies, Spies, and a Conspiracy to Protect Predators (Back Bay, $18.99, 9780316486644) by Ronan Farrow is an electrifying account of the fall of convicted sex offender Harvey Weinstein and the difficulties Farrow faced in bringing the media mogul’s story to light. Farrow also looks at abuses of power by Donald Trump, Matt Lauer and other high-profile figures as he creates—and sustains—a mood of suspense throughout the narrative. From ethics questions related to journalism to issues of gender discrimination, the book offers numerous subjects for conversation.

A BookPage reviewer since 2003, Julie Hale recommends the best paperback books to spark discussion in your reading group.

BOOK CLUB READS FOR SUMMER SPRING FOR MRS. LINCOLN’S SISTERS by Jennifer Chiaverini The bestselling author of Mrs. Lincoln’s Dressmaker returns to her most famous heroine in this compelling story of love, loss, and sisterhood rich with history and suspense.

THE GOLDEN HOUR by Beatriz Williams “ The Golden Hour is pure golden delight. Beatriz Williams is at the top of her game.” —KATE QUINN,

New York Times bestselling author

THE OYSTERVILLE SEWING CIRCLE by Susan Wiggs “Stitched together with love, this is a story just waiting for your favorite reading chair.” —LISA WINGATE, New York Times bestselling author

THE JOYCE GIRL by Annabel Abbs “A gripping and little-known story at the heart of one of the 20 th century’s most astonishing creative moments.” —EMMA DARWIN, bestselling author

t @Morrow_PB

t @bookclubgirl

f William Morrow I BookClubGirl

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THESE NEW AUDIOBOOKS MAKE A Splash

READ BY THE AUTHOR READ BY ELIZABETH EYRE “A powerful, beautifully crafted story that ratchets up the tension...and packs a huge emotional punch.” —T.M. Logan, author of Lies

“I loved The Safe Place .... It was tense and atmospheric with the seemingly idyllic yet eerie setting.” —Karen Hamilton, author of The Perfect Girlfriend

READ BY KATHLEEN MCINERNEY

READ BY GROVER GARDNER

“Narrator Kathleen McInerney returns as compassionate and determined Chief of Police Kate Burkholder.... McInerney shifts seamlessly between the many secondary characters, drawing in listeners as the plot unfolds.” —AudioFile on A Gathering of Secrets

“Listening to Grover Gardner narrating a David Rosenfelt novel is like sliding into favorite slippers at the end of a long day.” —AudioFile on Bark of Night

READ BY THERESE PLUMMER “The story’s message, that people should choose joy even (and especially) in difficult and painful times, seems tailor-made for this moment.” —Kirkus (starred review)

AVAILABLE FROM MACMILLAN AUDIO 6

audio

by anna zeitlin

H Dirt Di r t : Ad ve n t u re s i n Lyon as a Chef in Training, Father, and Sleuth Looking for the Secret of French Cooking (Random House Audio, 17 hours), written and narrated by journalist Bill Buford, is a foodie’s fantasy. Wanting to immerse himself in French cooking, Buford moves his family from New York to France, where he finds a job at a boulangerie that makes the best bread he’s ever tasted (the secret is the fresh flour) before enrolling in a traditional cooking school, then working in a fine dining restaurant. All the while, his young sons are losing their taste for delivery pizza. Buford is the perfect narrator for his book, as he brings joy and curiosity to all he uncovers. He treats French cooking as a mystery to unravel, tracing its roots back hundreds of years and digging for clues in the margins of secondhand cookbooks. His true passion for food makes his descriptions a pleasure to hear, even when it’s a dish I wouldn’t touch with a 10-foot fork.

The Hilarious World of Depression John Moe brings hope, humanity and candor to the taboo topic of depression in The Hilarious World of Depression (Macmillan Audio, 10 hours). On his podcast of the same name, he has conducted hours of interviews with actors, comedians and writers with this mental illness, including John Green, Aimee Mann and Andy Richter, and he mines these conversations to share what he has learned about depression. Moe also relates deeply personal stories of how depression has touched his own life. Having honed his skills over years in public radio and podcasting, Moe is a great narrator, finding humor in the topic but never making light of it. Add this one to the list of audiobooks that are even better than the books.

The Happy Ever After Playlist As a new puppy parent, I was immediately hooked by the doggy meet-cute in Abby Jimenez’s The Happy Ever After Playlist (Hachette Audio, 9 hours). Sloan, a grieving artist and food blogger, and Jason, a rising rock star, are brought together when she finds his lost dog while he’s overseas. They bond over their love for the dog, and a flirty phone relationship blossoms into something more when he returns to Los Angeles. It takes Sloan a while to realize he’s the man behind the music, and the book has a lot of fun playing with the concept of celebrity. Their story is told from both perspectives, and narrators Erin Mallon and Zachary Webber do a good job capturing their voices. The interplay between the two narrators keeps things dynamic and brings readers closer to Sloan and Jason’s love story.

Anna Zeitlin is an art curator and hat maker who fills her hours with a steady stream of audiobooks.


the hold list

Crimes we can’t help but admire Generally we’re a law-abiding group, we promise. But something about Private Eye July makes us revel in bad behavior. These are some of our favorite crimes and criminals in literature.

Heresy An all-female gang of Robin Hood-style outlaws in the Old West, robbing stagecoaches and seeking revenge on horseback? I’m in my boots and already out the door. In Melissa Lenhardt’s novel, the first daylight bank robbery in Colorado was not by Butch Cassidy in 1889, by rather by Margaret Parker and her Parker Gang in 1873. The women on Margaret’s ranch just want to make a home and care for their horses. But men, furious at their success, destroy everything, so the women take up a life of crime. They capitalize on being underestimated and then take what they want, only to use the ill-­gotten gains to support their ranch and town. As far as reckless, unrepentant outlaws go, Margaret is one of my favorites, making the most of a lawless West and then distributing the wealth to those who need it most. If you loved Netflix’s “Godless,” then this feminist Western is for you. —Cat, Deputy Editor

From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler When it comes to trespassing, Claudia and Jamie Kincaid really know how to make a crime count. Twelve-year-old Claudia wants to run away from home, but she knows she doesn’t have what it takes to make it in the wide world, with all its bugs and sun and other trifles. So she devises a plan to disappear in style, by sneaking into the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and living there with her younger brother until further notice. When I read this renowned middle grade novel for the first time (at age 31), I immediately related to Claudia’s poised practicality and fussy tastes. Why even bother breaking the law unless you’ll get to bathe in a marble fountain and sleep in an elaborate canopy bed? No matter your age, this childhood classic is sure to break and enter into your heart. —Christy, Associate Editor

The Thief

The Feather Thief

An Unnatural Vice

I love a good con. Strictly speaking, the events that unfold in Megan Whalen Turner’s series opener, The Thief, are more of a conheist hybrid, as Gen steals the king’s signet ring, gets caught when he boasts of having done so, is thrown in prison and is freed only under the condition that he steal something even more valuable on behalf of the king. But Gen has as much in common with successful con artists as he does with successful thieves. He’s patient and highly skilled at playing a very long game. He understands the power of misdirection, turning the expectations of others to his advantage repeatedly. The Thief’s best con, however, is on the reader, as Turner gradually reveals that nothing and no one in her story are what they seem. The first time I read it, I was, as they say, a total mark. It was the most enjoyable deception I’d ever experienced. —Stephanie, Associate Editor

It’s easy to think of theft as a victimless crime: Items of financial value usually belong to people who can afford to part with them. But in The Feather Thief, Kirk Wallace Johnson writes about a real-life theft with an impact far beyond the financial. In 2009, Edwin Rist broke into a London museum to steal the skins of 299 rare birds. By the time Rist was arrested, more than half of the skins had been sold or stripped of their valuable feathers. Johnson’s quest to discover why leads him to a network of Victorian salmon fly-tying fanatics who’ll pay to pursue their esoteric hobby, as well as through the history of the birds, many of which were painstakingly preserved for 150 years before their ignominious end. A good crime story says something about the world: What do we value? What is worth protecting? Rist’s crime is a perfect, if heartbreaking, one, because of the answers Johnson finds. —Trisha, Publisher

In K.J. Charles’ atmospheric Victorian romance, Justin Lazarus swindles his trusting clients out of their money by pretending to be a spiritualist. And while, yes, that frequently means taking advantage of people’s grief, it’s hard not to root for him given the desperate poverty of his background and the relative prosperity of his targets, not to mention his habit of taking in stray orphans, whom he in no way cares for, by the way—why on earth would you suggest such a thing? Justin’s love interest, idealistic journalist Nathaniel Roy, admits, in spite of himself, that to actually make people believe you can talk to the dead takes nerves of steel and a keen insight into human psychology. Charles puts readers in the same thrilling, uncomfortable place as Nathaniel: You know that what Justin is doing is wrong, but you also want to keep watching him do it. —Savanna, Associate Editor

Each month, BookPage staff share special reading lists—our personal favorites, old and new.

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interview | riley sager

ALL THE

This turns out to be the least of protagonist Maggie Holt’s problems when she sets out to renovate Baneberry Hall. She inherited the home from her father, who wrote about the horrors that he and his family experienced there 25 years ago in a hugely successful memoir. After just 20 days in the gothic fixer-upper, they abandoned their attempts to downplay and then deal with increasingly terrifying ghostly goings-on. They fled in the middle of the night, leaving all their possessions behind. Her father’s book and the fame and notoriety it engendered have embarrassed Maggie her entire life; she was just 5 when the family made their escape, and she doesn’t remember the events her dad describes. In fact, she thinks her parents made the whole thing up, so it seems perfectly safe to stay in the house while she revamps and sells it, in service of releasing herself from it (and the hurt she feels at her parents’ lying to her). Maggie muses, “I believe science, which has concluded that when we die, we die. Our souls don’t stay behind, lingering like stray cats until someone notices us. . . . We don’t haunt.” So what if she’s long been bedeviled by nightmares about the threatening figures of Mr. Shadow and Miss Pennyface? Readers will be delighted to discover that they are not only able to immerse themselves in Maggie’s story (which ultimately transforms into something far more dramatic and frightening than she could’ve anticipated), but they also get to read what her father wrote in his book—a deliciously frightening story well told, even if it might not be true. After all, Sager notes, “I don’t believe in ghosts, yet the thought of them is very, very frightening to me. That’s what I was aiming for with this book: coming from a place of skepticism, yet also being scared at the same time.” For Sager, crafting the book-within-a-book was one of the most rewarding aspects of writing Home Before Dark. “It was really interesting to do the backand-forth,” he says. “Maggie and her father were sort of in a dialogue with each other, almost comparing and contrasting their recollections with each other, like a fun-house mirror. . . . It was fascinating to come up with ways to do that, and have her father’s book be the unreliable narrator, in a sense.” As Maggie’s days in the house tick by, readers will indeed begin to wonder which narrator is telling the truth—or if anyone is. To add to the mystery, the neighbors, many of whom were there 25 years ago, are by turns friendly and angry, inquisitive and brusque. Might they be hiding something, too? Soon Maggie begins to experience disorienting flashes of memory, but she’s unsure if they’re real or just imprinted on her consciousness after years of hearing about Baneberry Hall’s generations of pain and sorrow. Like her parents before her, Maggie finds that her stress is amplified by her reluctance to leave the house, because of both her skepticism and her desire to sell the place. That’s in keeping with a theme that’s been woven through Sager’s work thus far: the ways in which dire financial straits can constrain people’s choices and well-being. His characters often

ry hall of mirrors ra te li a s ft a cr r e g Riley Sa ing novel. in his latest terrify

Riley Sager’s childhood home was not an architectural delight. Rather, he says in a call from his current New Jersey home, “I grew up in Pennsylvania in a boring ranch house. I longed to live in a house that was exciting in some way. I would’ve settled for a second floor! That’s probably why I think haunted houses and buildings with history are cool: childhood boredom.” The bestselling author of three previous thrillers (he is perhaps best known for 2017’s Final Girls) says the classic horror story The Amityville Horror served as inspiration for his new book, Home Before Dark—but he didn’t think the suburban Long Island setting of that iconic tale would provide the right “aura of creepiness” for his haunted Victorian manor. So he set his supernatural story in a remote area of Vermont, in a small town with beautiful woodlands that become decidedly more threatening under the dark of night.

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feature | horror make decisions they hope will give them a monetary boost with, shall we say, mixed results. “It does make plotting things easier when there’s desperation involved,” he says. “For example, Maggie’s family felt they couldn’t leave Baneberry Hall because they didn’t have money to buy a new house,” thus making them less likely to immediately run screaming into the night like people with more money could and would have. “That’s one thing I think genre books are able to do very well: address important issues while still entertaining,” Sager says, adding that the financial insecurities of his characters come from his own experience. “Five years ago, I was laid off from my job [at a newspaper] and had a year of unemployment. During that year, I wrote Final Girls. So something great came out of it, but it was just this year of constant worry. I knew that if I put on the page how I felt at that time, a lot of people would be like, I hear you, I’ve been there.” Sager explains that it’s important for him “to put my concerns and thoughts into these books, a bit of myself. A lot of times in genre fiction, the characters are just wealthy. It doesn’t say how, they’re all just wealthy. . . . I like to put a little bit of realism in.” Another element that’s become a Sager sigHome Before Dark nature is his female protagonists. He says that Dutton, $27 writing women characters “started by happy ac9781524745172 cident through my first book, Final Girls, because the trope in horror movies is final girls. If it had Thriller been final boys, it would’ve been a very different book, and probably a very different career.” It’s crucial that, in Sager’s books, there isn’t much talk of female characters’ clothing, makeup, physicality, etc. Instead, the focus is on what they’re thinking and experiencing—which is by design. “I think about what makes this person tick, not what makes this woman tick,” he says. Thus, having half of Home Before Dark “be from a man’s point of view was kind of worrisome to me. In my other three books, there’s a firstperson female present-tense narrative,” he says. “To throw this male pasttense narrative in the mix . . . how much should be Maggie’s, and how much should be her father’s? It was definitely a challenge.” What hasn’t been so difficult, he says, is diving into a whole new set of characters and storylines with each new book. “It’s not easier than writing a series,” he says, which he did under his real name, Todd Ritter, before he adopted the Riley Sager nom de plume, “but it’s better for what I’m trying to do: create a little world in each book. It’s fun to not be tied down to one set of characters, or one style.” Ultimately, Sager says, “I’m fully cognizant how darn lucky I am [that] this is my full-time job. I don’t work in a coal mine; my job is to sit here and try and scare people.” Fortunately for Sager fans, there’s no rest for the spooky. Once readers have recovered from the goings-on at Baneberry Hall, they can keep an eye out for his next book, a story that goes in a “completely different direction from Home Before Dark.” —Linda M. Castellitto

Tomes of terror These disturbing tales will keep readers up late—with the lights on. Horror fans are in for a satisfyingly spooky July with two new novels guaranteed to get under the skin. In Zoje Stage’s sublimely suspenseful Wonderland (Mulholland, $28, 9780316458498), ominous forces are at work in the Adirondack woods. After years of hectic urban life, former ballet dancer Orla and her husband, Shaw, give up their cramped New York City co-op and relocate upstate. With their 9-year-old daughter, Eleanor Queen, and 4-year-old son, Tycho, they move into a spacious old farmhouse set on six acres of wilderness. From the start, Orla senses that something is off about their new home. Instances of weird, oppressive weather, including a surprise blizzard and strange movements in the trees, keep her on edge. When an invisible presence seems to be reaching out to Eleanor Queen, it becomes clear that the surrounding forest harbors a world of supernatural terror. After a tragic accident occurs, Orla alone must face up to the strange powers she senses all around them. Stage, whose 2018 debut novel, Baby Teeth, garnered widespread praise, is a literary horror writer on the rise. Her refined prose and knack for emphasizing small but disquieting details make Wonderland a standout summer suspense selection. Reader be warned: The woods will never look the same once you read Stage’s latest. Paul Tremblay pushes a pan-

demic plotline to horrifying new heights in Survivor Song (William Morrow, $27.99, 9780062679161). Set in Massachusetts, this spookily prescient thriller features a new strain of rabies that’s infecting the human population. Those who catch the highly contagious disease go mad, attack others and die. In Boston, pediatrician Ramola Sherman is contacted by her pregnant friend Natalie, whose husband was killed by a virus-­ infected neighbor. That neighbor also attacked Natalie, and if she doesn’t get a rabies shot soon, she will succumb to the malady. Together, Ramola and Natalie set out in search of help. But hospitals are overrun by infected patients, and curfew measures have been put in place across the state. As the two women press on, they encounter armed mobs and demented victims of the disease. This propulsive tale of contagion finds Tremblay, bestselling author of The Cabin at the End of the World, in top form. He offers a poignant central character in Natalie, who, as she fights to survive, records voice messages for her unborn child. Survivor Song is a horror narrative of the highest order, and much of it feels eerily real in light of the COVID-19 crisis. “We’ve been quarantined. Nice knowing everybody,” writes a Facebook user in the novel. Can Paul Tremblay predict the future? Let’s hope not. —Julie Hale

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feature | private eye july

The phrase “summer thriller” tends to conjure up a specific sort of book, but our favorites

H The Girl From Widow Hills Killer line: “My head swam in a sudden rush of understanding. I moved the branches of the bushes aside to be sure: the shape of a torso; arms; the back of a head.” Arden Maynor was sleepwalking when a flash flood swept her away. The country breathed a sigh of relief when the 6-year-old was found— and on every anniversary of that day, the media’s spotlight has returned to Arden and her mother. In Megan Miranda’s The Girl From Widow Hills (Simon & Schuster, $26.99, 9781501165429), we get to know the Arden of two decades later. Now 26, she goes by Olivia Wells and lives in North Carolina. She’s beginning to feel secure in her life’s rhythms, but one horrible night, she sleepwalks and awakens with a bloodied body at her feet. Is the looming 20th anniversary stirring up tamped-down trauma? Or is someone from the past trying to torment her anew? Step by suspenseful step, Miranda lays a path for readers to follow as Olivia tries to separate dreams and reality, fear and fact, with a tenacious local detective not far behind. The Girl From Widow Hills is a creepy, compelling portrait of a life forever warped by unwanted fame—a timely theme in this era of internet celebrity and the fall from grace that often follows. —Linda M. Castellitto

The Mountains Wild Killer line: “When I turned around, I could no longer see the road. We were all alone in the woods.” Sarah Stewart Taylor’s simmering The Moun-

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tains Wild (Minotaur, $27.99, 9781250256430) is the first entry in a new series featuring homicide detective Maggie D’arcy. A divorced mother living on Long Island, New York, Maggie felt called to become a detective after her cousin, Erin, vanished in the woods of Wicklow, Ireland, in the 1990s. At the age of 23, Maggie traveled there to look for Erin, but neither she nor the Irish Guards, the national police, could locate her. After Erin’s scarf is found by investigators searching for a different woman, Maggie returns to Ireland to do some sleuthing, reentering a maze of painful memories. Taylor moves nimbly through the decades, flashing back to Maggie’s earlier trip to Ireland and providing glimpses of her friendship with Erin. Featuring a memorable cast that includes cheeky Irish Guards, sinister suspects and a not-to-be-messed-with female lead, The Mountains Wild makes for perfect summer reading. Maggie is a first-class protagonist—an ace investigator and appealing everywoman with smarts and heart. Suspense fans are sure to welcome her to the crime scene. —Julie Hale

Out of Time For fans of: Thrillers by David Baldacci or James Patterson and ripping through the pages of a good FBI search. Author and screenwriter David Klass turns the serial killer mythos on its head in his new novel, Out of Time (Dutton, $27, 9781524746162), in which the killer is intent on saving humankind through his inconceivable deeds. The Green Man, so dubbed by the

media and the FBI pursuing him, doesn’t kill for the sake of some insatiable, perverse sexual desire but out of an acute calling to save the environment. His terrorist acts are meant to call attention to climate change and heighten awareness of its adverse effects. But FBI data analyst Tom Smith—not exactly a memorable name, he admits, adding, “I didn’t choose it”— and a task force of 300 FBI agents only see a killer who must be stopped. So begins a fastpaced game of cat and mouse as Smith zeros in on the Green Man’s identity and tries to stop him before more lives are lost. Klass writes with terse, straightforward prose, alternating between Smith’s and the Green Man’s points of view to allow readers a close-up perspective of each character’s motivations and desires. The fun is in the thrill of the chase, and in that respect Klass delivers. —G. Robert Frazier

H The Mist Killer line: “ ‘Oh, the nights here are something else,’ Erla said quietly. . . . ‘I hope you’re not afraid of the dark.’ ” The Mist (Minotaur, $27.99, 9781250768117) is the third and final book in Ragnar Jónasson’s electrifying Hidden Iceland series. These labyrinthine murder mysteries, set against the bleak backdrop of Iceland, feature Hulda Hermannsdóttir, detective inspector with the Reykjavík Police Department. It’s Christmas in 1987, and Erla and Einar Einarsson are preparing for the holiday. In their region of Iceland, winter days don’t begin to bright-


feature | private eye july

for the season run the gamut from meditative mysteries to relentless page turners. en until 11 a.m., brutal blizzards are a regular occurrence, and skiing is easier than walking or driving. In the midst of a pummeling snowstorm, a stranger named Leó shows up at the farm looking for shelter. Leó claims to have gotten lost during a hunting trip with friends, but Erla doesn’t believe his story. She’s frightened of him from the start, and her fears worsen after the electricity goes out, leaving the farmhouse in darkness. Two months later, Hulda is asked to look into a pair of murders that occurred at the farm. Jónasson turns up the tension to a nearly unendurable degree as the novel unfolds. His complete design isn’t revealed until late in the book, when the story’s multiple threads coalesce in a surprising conclusion. Masterfully plotted and paced, The Mist is atmospheric, haunting and not for the faint of heart. —Julie Hale

works for the queen. Discretion is required as Gwen and Iris search for a cache of letters that could derail Princess Elizabeth’s engagement, and they quickly realize this is information that people will kill for. The balance Montclair strikes between humor and hard truths is arresting. Postwar England has raucous parties and a lot of can-do spirit, but the entire nation is still reeling—and rationing, for that matter. (Can a birthday party be any fun if the cake has “tooth powder frosting”?) Have faith, though: There’s not much that can stop this pair, and the climactic scene laying out the whodunit (and why) is like a maraschino cherry in a complex cocktail. Here’s to the return of these formidable women, and to many more chances to enjoy their company. —Heather Seggel

A Royal Affair

Killer line: “It takes longer than you might think, for a man to burn.”

For fans of: Keeping calm and carrying on, drinking tea with a bit of fortification and maintaining a stiff upper lip until such time as a therapist can be seen. In their second adventure, Iris Sparks and Gwendolyn Bainbridge would like nothing more than to get back to running their business, The Right Sort Marriage Bureau. But in Allison Montclair’s A Royal Affair (Minotaur, $26.99, 9781250178398), their reputation as crime fighters precedes them, so in addition to pairing off various lonely hearts, they’re also working for Lady Matheson, who herself

H The Distant Dead The small town of Lovelock, Nevada, is nestled in brush-dotted hills that crouch under unending blue sky—an eerie desert landscape that sets a tone of creeping dread in Heather Young’s The Distant Dead (William Morrow, $27.99, 9780062690814). Sixth grader Sal Prentiss goes to the fire station to report that he’s found a burned body while, in another part of town, social studies teacher Nora Wheaton is wondering why her colleague Adam Merkel hasn’t shown up to work. He’s a math teacher, and it’s Pi Day; surely he wouldn’t miss the opportunity to have math-­c entric fun with

his class? No one else seems very concerned, as the enigmatic Adam has always kept to himself and doesn’t engage in gossip, but Nora can’t shake the feeling that something’s wrong. Alas, her instincts are validated when she learns that Adam is the victim Sal found. Young takes the reader back and forth in time as she unfurls the characters’ relationships and life paths, with all their secrets and hopes and disappointments. The suspense is slow and steady in this meditative, artistic take on the murder mystery. Young’s language is poetic, and her contemplation of the corrosiveness of suppressed emotion is both sympathetic and impatient in this unusual, compelling portrait of a people and a place. —Linda M. Castellitto

Blacktop Wasteland For fans of: Bullitt, The Fast and the Furious and gritty Elmore Leonard-style noir. Beauregard “Bug” Montage thought he was out—out of the rackets and the crimes that dominated his early life. He opened his own garage, settled down with a loving wife and had several children. But the past and the demands of the present have a way of catching up with people. In Bug’s case, mounting expenses leave him with nowhere else to turn. So, when an old associate, Ronnie, approaches him about a job that could set everything right, Bug reluctantly agrees. Author S.A. Cosby quickly establishes Bug’s financial burdens and emotional dilemma in his new novel, Blacktop Wasteland (Flatiron, $26.99, 9781250252685), and never lets up on the gas. The result is a high-­octane, white-­k nuckle thriller that will have readers whipping through the pages at breakneck speed. Needless to say, not everything goes to plan. Bug and Ronnie’s “simple” heist of a jewelry store goes horribly awry in more ways than one. Bug’s skills as a wheelman—and the Plymouth Duster he inherited from his father—enable him and his crew to get away with their lives, but it’s not enough to keep greed, betrayal and vengeance from closing in at every turn. Cosby’s tightfisted prose fuels this story with heart-pumping (and often brutal) action that begs to be adapted for the big screen but never loses its compassionate edge. —G. Robert Frazier

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whodunit by bruce tierney Once You Go This Far At first glance, Columbus, Ohio, doesn’t seem a likely candidate for the epicenter of private investigations, but there are certainly enough cases to keep PI Roxane Weary busy, as evidenced by Kristen Lepionka’s fourth novel about her, Once You Go This Far (Minotaur, $26.99, 9781250309372). The book starts with what appears to be an accident: A woman suffers an unfortunate, fatal fall from a park trail, and Roxane discovers the body during a morning hike. The daughter of the deceased woman thinks it was no accident and strongly suspects the victim’s ex-husband of having given his ex-wife the heave-ho in more ways than one. And who better to investigate than Roxane Weary, PI? It doesn’t take her long to find out that the ex is a real piece of work (not my first choice of descriptors, but hey, this is a family publication). That doesn’t necessarily make him a killer, however. Further muddying the waters is the victim’s connection to a cultish church, or perhaps a churchish cult, which in either case is a clear and present danger to both the resolution of the case and perhaps the safety of anyone who gets a bit too close to the group’s secrets. Read this one and see if it doesn’t send you scurrying in search of the previous three books in Lepionka’s series.

The Shadows The Shadows (Celadon, $26.99, 9781250318039) is the second in a series by British author Alex North, set in the small (and fictional) English town of Featherbank, which was rocked by a bloody murder 25 years back and is now the scene of what may well be a copycat killing. Or worse, perhaps the new homicide marks the return of the original killer, who was never apprehended nor, for that matter, conclusively identified (although there was little doubt in anyone’s mind as to who the responsible party was). Paul Adams was friends with both the key suspect, Charlie Crabtree, and the killer’s victim. He has just made his way back to Featherbank to take care of his ailing mother, whom he has not seen in the intervening years. Although she is suffering from dementia, Paul’s mother is clearly frightened out of her wits about something, and her fear quickly becomes contagious. There are elements of the supernatural, or at least the not conventionally explainable, in the book, but more in the manner of John Connolly or T. Jefferson Parker than of, say, Stephen King. But it’s still probably not a good idea for late-night reading in a house with creaky doors. . . .

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A Dangerous Breed When Van Shaw receives a reunion invitation addressed to his dead mother, he hardly realizes it will be his stepping-off point to a whole new existence. Glen Erik Hamilton’s critically acclaimed suspense series returns with A Dangerous Breed (William Morrow, $27.99, 9780062978516). Van’s mother, Moira, lived a short but troubled life, leaving her young son to be raised by his stern yet criminally inclined grandfather. This upbringing put young Van in touch with some decidedly unsavory characters, a number of whom he nowadays counts as his closest friends. While doing a bit of sleuthing into his mom’s past, he stumbles onto information that hints at his father’s identity; it seems he could be a man well known in crime circles as someone not to be trifled with. Meanwhile, courtesy of one of his ne’er-do-well friends, Van is drawn into an extortion scheme that leaves him forced to choose between committing an act of domestic terrorism or watching several of his closest friends die slow and agonizing deaths. In best mystery fashion, nothing is quite what it seems, and as our hero begins to make some connections, he gets closer to an understanding that will place him directly in the crosshairs. If you’re a Jack Reacher fan, you’ll love Van Shaw.

H The Delightful Life of a Suicide Pilot The latest Dr. Siri book by Colin Cotterill, The Delightful Life of a Suicide Pilot (Soho Crime, $27.95, 9781641291774), is the last in a quirky, fiendishly clever series that has long been one of my absolute favorites. It’s 1981, and Siri Paiboun, the former national coroner of Laos, has received a mysterious gift: the diary of a Japanese kamikaze pilot who was stationed with occupation forces in Laos during World War II. The diary is fascinating for many reasons, not least of which is the officer’s evident descent into madness as the journal unfolds. Written half in Lao and half in Japanese, the diary ends abruptly and is missing a half-­dozen pages—pages that may hold the key to the location of a gold fortune that mysteriously went AWOL as the Japanese beat their retreat from Southeast Asia. Furthering the intrigue, the notebook’s anonymous donor attached a note: “Dr. Siri, we need your help most urgently.” Although Siri, at his advanced age, is relatively unmotivated by hidden treasure, he and his wife, Madame Daeng, cannot resist a good mystery. And folks, neither can I. If this is indeed the final volume of the Siri series, he and Cotterill leave it on a high note. You cannot ask for more out of life than that.

Bruce Tierney lives outside Chiang Mai, Thailand, where he bicycles through the rice paddies daily and reviews the best in mystery and suspense every month.

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cozies

by heather seggel

H The Last Curtain Call Juliet Blackwell’s refreshing The Last Curtain Call (Berkley, $7.99, 9780593097939) continues her Haunted Home Renovation series with a twist: Mel Turner is dealing with a ghost in the attic of the house she’s remodeling, and the spirit may be connected to her current work project, a remodel of the beautiful Crockett Theatre. On top of that, Mel must negotiate with a group of squatters occupying the theater, some eccentric historical preservationists and a faceless consortium steering the project, rich folk who smack of gentrification. Details of the San Francisco Bay Area make for a series of sensory delights, and a trip to a Fremont museum illuminates Northern California’s connection to Hollywood in the silent movie era.

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Booked for Death Charlotte Reed is starting life over. The young widow left her teaching career to take over her great-aunt’s North Carolina bed-and-­ breakfast, and she’s keeping its literary theme and events afloat, complete with menus drawn from classic novels. A rare book dealer who’s staying at the B&B manages to rub everyone the wrong way and is soon found dead. Booked for Death (Crooked Lane, $26.99, 9781643853079) has local color and a sizable suspect list but still makes time to talk about grief, family secrets and the limits of an intuitive hunch versus actual detective work. Author Victoria Gilbert combines a whodunit setup with Southern hospitality, which makes for smiles full of very sharp teeth and characters we’re glad to meet—but can’t turn our backs on.

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A Deadly Inside Scoop A freak storm hits Chagrin Falls, Ohio, but Bronwyn “Win” Crewse is committed to making handmade scoops of her grandmother’s finest recipes for her family’s ice cream shop. Then she discovers a body in the snow. Author Abby Collette fills series starter A Deadly Inside Scoop (Berkley, $16, 9780593099667) with details about Chagrin Falls, Crewse Creamery and Win’s family and friends. Were this not a story about murder, it could almost be a “Gilmore Girls” reboot. Police may be inclined to suspect Win’s dad because he’s African American. She must clear his name without drawing further attention to the family, all while keeping her fledgling business afloat. This balancing act keeps suspense high throughout, so readers will appreciate the sprinkles of silliness all the more.

Heather Seggel is a longtime bookseller, reviewer and occasional library technician in Ukiah, California.

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well read by robert weibezahl

Private Investigations When we talk about mystery in the book world, we generally mean a crime novel wherein a murder is committed and a sleuth, professional or amateur, figures out who done it. There are subgenres, of course—thrillers, cozies, police procedurals, even the occasional caper where no murder occurs. Yet the word mystery has much broader meaning outside publishing: a puzzle, a secret, an enigma or something unexplainable. These latter definitions spur the 20 essays by contemporary crime fiction writers in Private Investigations (Seal, $28, 9781580059213), edited by Victoria Zackheim. The contributors’ assignment was to contemplate mysteries from their own lives. Some rise to the challenge with startling revelations; others take a safer route and explore why they write what they write. All engage and entertain as they share personal aspects of their lives. The most compelling essays are those in which writers come clean about some very dark moments in their pasts. Steph Cha recalls a man who lurked in an alley and made lewd suggestions outside her Twenty contemporary apartment window, an incident that underscores the dangers crime writers leave women face every day. Sulari fiction behind with Gentill recounts discovering an uncle she never knew, locked essays revealing away in an institution in Sri Lanka. Domestic disturbances unsolvable riddles also play out in William Kent from their own lives. Krueger’s poignant account of his mother’s experience with mental illness and Lynn Cahoon’s true tale of deception by a man who was nothing he claimed to be. The supernatural is met with some skepticism (and also some grudging acceptance) as Kristen Lepionka is haunted by a ghost and Hallie Ephron reluctantly attends a seance. The human body is a great mystery, of course, and illness is at the center of essays by Connie May Fowler and Caroline Leavitt. What Rhys Bowen calls “The Long Shadow of War” also hangs over essays by Jacqueline Winspear and Charles Todd, who often use the backdrop of the world wars in their work. Of the essays that trace the impetus of their authors’ work, one of the most interesting is Martin Limón’s “The Land of the Morning Calm” about his love affair with Korea and its culture, which began when he was a U.S. soldier stationed there. Cara Black’s equally encompassing passion for Paris began, she tells us, by reading the Maigret novels of Georges Simenon. Like Robert Dugoni, Anne Perry writes about the “magic” of the writing process—although I, for one, not-too-secretly hoped for an account of her own murder conviction when she was a teenager, a shadowy incident she has never fully addressed. At turns inspiring, informative and unsettling, Private Investigations will be savored by these writers’ many fans.

Robert Weibezahl is a publishing industry veteran, playwright and novelist. Each month, he takes an in-depth look at a recent book of literary significance.

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feature | mystery genre studies

Case notes New books explore the traditions and tropes of the mystery genre. With its numerous subclassifications—police procedural, whodunit, historical thriller—the mystery genre is an exceptionally addictive field of fiction. Two new titles investigate the category’s long-lasting allure. At the heart of many an American whodunit stands the brooding, solitary private eye. You know the type: wears a trenchcoat and a hat, handy with a gun and quick with a quip, has nerves of steel and a heart of gold. How did this nowclassic character come to rule the crime scene? Susanna Lee sheds light on the mystery with Detectives in the Shadows: A Hard-Boiled History ( Johns Hopkins University, $27, 9781421437095). Lee, an author and scholar, traces the character’s origins back to the 1920s, when crime was escalating in the United States thanks to Prohibition and the country needed a champion. The first iteration of the figure—an action hero-cum-­ gumshoe named Terry Mack—appeared in Black Mask magazine in 1923, in a story by Carroll John Daly. Over the course of the book, Lee shows how current events and political forces shaped portrayals of the PI on page and screen, from Dashiell Hammett’s Sam Spade, a street-smart sophisticate, to Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer, a trigger-happy veteran of World War II. Lee’s lively, perceptive analysis spans nearly a century. It’s a

revealing critique of a pop culture icon and required reading for mystery buffs. Compared to America’s gritty cities, the well-ordered nations of northern Europe hardly seem like fertile ground for crime fiction. Yet manifold mystery series have issued from the area, and fans can’t seem to get enough. Critic We n d y Lesser parses the appeal of the region’s thrillers in Scandinavian Noir: In Pursuit of a Mystery (FSG, $27, 9780374216979). A longtime enthusiast of the genre and a stylish writer in her own right, Lesser delivers a detailed overview of notable authors, past and present, from Sweden, Norway and Denmark ( Jo Nesbø, Henning Mankell, Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö—the list goes on). She also looks at local cultural factors like art, bureaucracy and religion that figure in the work of many suspense authors and instill the genre with a singular sense of place. In the book’s second half, Lesser travels to Scandinavia for the first time. Her knowledge and love of the crime fiction tradition shine through as she scopes out landmarks from well-known novels and talks with real-life detectives in Copenhagen, Stockholm and other cities. The end result is a fascinating tribute to a unique breed of mystery. Fans of Nordic noir, take note. —Julie Hale


behind the book | ivy pochoda

Let the women do the talking I wanted to write about the women who Five years ago, I was convinced during after-­ cared about it and who were rooted in it. dinner drinks (always the best time to get me to One of the issues that commonly do anything) to run for a seat on my local neighcropped up in front of the council was borhood council. Grassroots politics and comprostitution. It was a subject that united munity organizing had never been on my radar. everyone: Get rid of the “hookers,” shame But I live in a neighborhood called Harvard them, blame them. Western Avenue, the Heights, a small subsection of a much larger major thoroughfare that runs northneighborhood called West Adams that sweeps south through our section of West across South Los Angeles for many miles, and Adams, is a hotbed for prostitution. This I care deeply about my community. It’s a conhas never bothered me. I lived in Amflicted place of pride and neglect, home to famisterdam for many years and have what lies who have generational roots as well as newI hope is a liberal or humanizing take on comers. West Adams, which is filled with grand the industry. I was horrified that a group Craftsman homes and Victorian mansions, was of civic-­minded women could be so inone of the first places in Los Angeles to permit tolerant of the sex workers in their midst. nonwhite homeownership, and for that reason, I was baffled by their inability to see them when the city decided to build the 10 Freeway, as not just people, but people most likely they placed it smack-dab in the neighborhood’s conscripted into their line of work. And middle, creating a roaring gully and ghettoizing then I knew I had my story. the area south of the 10. I always think that the best way to I have to admit, I didn’t last on the council write about a community—to examine one— very long, only half of my four-year term. (I is to make a crime occur in its midst. A crime travel too much.) But what I saw and absorbed gives everyone something to react to. It teases there became the basis for These Women. My out deep cultural fissures and challenges loycouncil was called the United Neighborhoods alties. With the premise of someone killing sex Neighborhood Council (yeah, I know), and it workers, I knew I had a way to explore my secwas comprised of a handful of underserved tion of West Adams. And I knew I had something communities at the eastern and northern edges people wanted to read—a serial killer story. But of West Adams. The council members fell into therein lay a problem. two categories: long-term African American We already have many books about serial residents who wanted to see the neighborhood killers. And I didn’t dare add my name to that thrive economically without falling prey to the list. There are many great perils of gentrification and ones that influenced me: middle-aged white people Michael Connelly’s The Poet devoted to the historic and Jess Walter’s incredible preservation of the state Over Tumbled Graves, as well homes in the community. as Dan Chaon’s remarkable Many issues brought before Ill Will, to name a few. These the council broke along books are paragons of the these lines: make things genre. Connelly’s is more better for the residents or conventional but nonethepreserve the important hisless brilliant and accomtoric charm of the United plished. Walter takes a larger Neighborhoods. swing, peppering his story The board was predomiwith a critique of our fascinantly female—outspoken nation with serial killers and and articulate women from the cottage industry they different races and cultures inspire. And Chaon, well, he who brought a wide range hits it out of the park with his of views, perspectives and beyond-category psychologintolerances to the table. ical thriller that plunges the Everyone saw the comserial killer mythos and our munity, its potentials and perception of it into incredits problems differently. I These Women ibly dark waters. knew that I wanted to write Ecco, $27.99, 9780062656384 We’ve also had too many about this cultural divide in Thriller books (and TV shows) that femy section of West Adams.

© MARIA KANEVSKAYA

In Ivy Pochoda’s new thriller, five women are connected by a serial killer—but he doesn’t get to tell the story.

tishize such murderers, almost glorifying them, granting them genius status simply because of the number of killings they got away with. And I certainly didn’t want to enter that fray. What interested me was not the killer but the women touched by his crimes—the women like those on my neighborhood council. I was interested in the obvious victims, sure, those he killed and those related to the women he killed. But I was also compelled by the victims usually overlooked in crime fiction, those close to the murderer who have lived in the shadow of unspeakable violence. As I began to write, I realized the serial killer in my book had little to do with my story. So instead of fetishizing him, as other books might, I punched a serial killer-size hole in my narrative, shifting the focus to the women at the nexus of his crimes. Never before has it been so important to listen to women, to hear our stories, to put our perspectives first. Never before has it been so important to understand the amount of disregard that has been dumped upon us, to consider how often we are written off as victims, sluts, hysterics, embittered and emotional wrecks. Never before has it been so important to see a crime from the female perspective and for once to put the criminal where he belongs: in the background. Which is why I wrote These Women—to celebrate my neighborhood and the women who live there who are overlooked but shouldn’t be. —Ivy Pochoda Visit BookPage.com to read our starred review of These Women.

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q&a | john fram

Friday night frights Something terrible lurks behind the facade of a small Texas town in John Fram’s thrilling debut.

What was your initial inspiration for this story? All my life, I’ve wanted to read a suspense novel that featured a queer hero and dealt frankly with all the pressures and pleasures of the queer experience. I realized that after spending years away from Texas, I would still be terrified to return to my hometown, even if something desperate were to arise and my family needed my help. I began to wonder what sort of chaos my queer hero could cause in just such a situation, especially if he came to suspect that his hometown was hiding something from him. What is it about small-town America and football that is so appealing to readers? One of the greatest pleasures I take from a novel is the feeling of losing myself in a world where everyone is getting into each other’s secrets, making each other breakfast, robbing each other blind. As for football, there’s something nice about a conflict in which we know exactly who to root for. Beyond that, I think we’re all suckers for nostalgia. Who doesn’t have some latent scent memory of bleacher steel, thunder, dry grass? Early critics have likened The Bright Lands to the work of Stephen King. Who are your influences? If you had to compare your writing to someone else’s, who would it be? The comparisons to Mr. King are more than mildly daunting. I think he casts a long shadow over all of us, though I didn’t actually have the courage to read him until I was in my late teens (when he, of course, rocked my world). When I was younger, my two idols were the British crime fiction wizard Ruth Rendell and the almighty Alice Munro, who can teach us more about time and irony than anyone writing in English. Also, what little gay boy in the sticks doesn’t identify with Munro’s moody country girls, all eager to discard their childhoods?

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A few years ago, I discovered Kate Atkinson and found, in her wry English observations, the courage to write in the voice my family used to tell stories at the table. Atkinson treats her characters in a way that’s imminently Texan. She regards them with compassion, brutal honesty and a bleak, gut-busting humor. So these days, if I had to be anybody, I’d like to be the gay son that she and Stephen King never had. Your novel touches on the pressures and expectations that people put on each other, especially on a star athlete like Dylan. His brother, Joel, who is gay, faces his own set of prejudices from others. What compelled you to write about these pressures, and what do you hope readers might take away? I think subconsciously I understood that these two pressures aren’t all that different, though it took me until well into the writing process to articulate it. I’m not saying that the star athlete suffers as badly as the closeted kid next door, but both can suffer incredible pain if they fail to fulfill the need their hometown has for them. I wanted to make the reader feel, if only for a few pages, how terrifying it is to be different in a place that doesn’t accept you. Ideally, that reader would feel empowered to kick down a few walls wherever they live. Otherwise, they’ll at least know why the weirdos like us won’t go away without a fight. © LUKE FONTANA

John Fram, author of The Bright Lands, shares his fresh and frightening take on the small-town thriller and describes what it feels like to be compared to Stephen King.

The book reads like a crime novel at first, but as readers turn the pages, the supernatural aspects become more prevalent. How difficult was it to balance those genres? In its original form, this book was . . . I guess you’d say secular: no ghosts, no whispering voices, no shared nightmares. But I saw, in looking over that draft, that the text was so filled with strange, occult imagery—a deep hole, impossibly dark, kept creeping into all my metaphors—that I just

sort of gave myself The Bright Lands over to it during the Hanover Square, $27.99 9781335836625 rewrites. Introducing elements of the suThriller pernatural into a book with a carefully constructed mystery at its heart posed some incredibly satisfying technical challenges to make sure the reader never felt cheated or done over, while also allowing me to heighten the drama for all of my characters. Yes, there are some strange powers at work in [the town of] Bentley, but they’re simply enabling our culprits’ bad behavior. The darkness, in short, is already there inside them. What do you hope a novel like The Bright Lands can do for readers in a time when a real-life crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic is gripping the world? This might sound ridiculous, but I’ve found horror novels and thrillers to be weirdly homeopathic during this massive existential threat. I think this panic is driving home to the entire population something that queers and people of color and women have been saying for years: The world isn’t safe, and the people in charge are not looking out for you. What better mirror can we find to that reality than in a brutal piece of suspense? —G. Robert Frazier Visit BookPage.com to read our starred review of The Bright Lands.


feature | criminal investigations

feature | true crime memoirs

Scientific sleuthing

Foreboding in the first person

Two works of nonfiction provide gripping glimpses of the dawn of modern forensic investigation.

These true crime memoirs are as piercing as they are personal.

In the age of “CSI,” it’s hard to imagine the world of crime solving before the introduction of forensic science. These books transport readers to the birth of the innovative police work that’s still cracking cases today. In 1932, America was gripped by the headlines coming out of rural New Jersey: 20-month-old Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr., the son of celebrity aviator Charles Lindbergh and his wife, Anne, was stolen from his crib as his parents sat downstairs. His tiny skeleton would later be found on the side of the road, breaking hearts and inciting outrage around the world. The crime shocked the nation and created a ripple effect that echoed through history. Though certainly the most famous kidnapping of the era, the Lindbergh case was by no means a singular event. In The Kidnap Years: The Astonishing True History of the Forgotten Kidnapping Epidemic That Shook Depression-Era America (Sourcebooks, $26.99, 9781492694793), journalist and author David Stout recounts the bewildering rash of kidnappings that swept the United States as gangland rose to prominence and much of the country was swallowed by desperate poverty. Interweaving the Lindbergh kidnapping through narratives of lesser-known abductions from coast to coast, Stout examines this wave of crime from many angles: the lives of the abducted, the circumstances of the abductors and the state of a nation in which organized crime flourished because of people’s dire financial circumstances. This movement coincided with the rise of J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI, and the Lindbergh case itself saw the first flickerings of psychology and forensic analysis, including fingerprinting, being used in criminal cases. It is surprising, then, that in 1951, Hoover would turn down a visit from a grandmotherly figure who seemed particularly insistent upon gaining an audience with him. An unlikely presence in the world of criminal investigation, Frances Glessner Lee was a leader in the emerging forensic sciences and a staunch advocate for the adoption of the medical examiner system. Best known today as the creator of the Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Death, a series of dioramas depicting homicides in miniature for officers to practice their observational skills upon, Lee is the subject of Bruce Goldfarb’s 18 Tiny Deaths: The Untold Story of Frances Glessner Lee and the Invention of Modern Forensics (Sourcebooks, $25.99, 9781492680475). Born to wealth but denied a career because of her gender, Lee employed her considerable curiosity, intellect, willpower and fortune toward the burgeoning field of “legal medicine,” the application of medical sciences toward criminal investigation. The scope of what Lee accomplished in her lifetime is breathtaking, and Goldfarb has written a worthy tribute to the passionate life’s work of a deeply singular woman. —Anna Spydell

Some ghosts from the past never stop haunting us, as shown by these two sharply crafted memoirs in which true crime meets family trauma. Betsy Bonner explores her sister’s unsettling life and death with laser-sharp prose in The Book of Atlantis Black: The Search for a Sister Gone Missing (Tin House, $26.95, 9781947793774). Because their mother had bipolar disorder and was suicidal, Bonner and her sister, Nancy, were raised mostly by their physically abusive father. Eventually Nancy changed her name to Atlantis Black, which Bonner felt suited her sister perfectly, as “the Atlantis of legend is mystical, self-­ destroying, and forever lost.” Likewise, Atlantis nicknamed Bonner “Lucky Betsy” because she hadn’t inherited the depression and mental illness that ran through their family tree like a venomous snake. In 2008, when Atlantis was 31, her body was found on the floor of a Mexican hotel room, her death most likely the result of a heroin overdose. However, mysterious circumstances caused Bonner to wonder if the body they found wasn’t actually her sister’s. Fingerprints and dental records weren’t checked. Could her sister be alive, hiding somewhere? This notion could simply be magical thinking, Bonner admits, but the messy last few months of her sister’s life were filled with a host of suspicious, shadowy characters, whom Bonner duly investigates. Part exorcism and part adoring tribute, The Book of Atlantis Black is

deeply haunting and darkly fascinating. With two stumbling-drunk parents, including a mother who faced a variety of health issues and spent hours reading and watching true crime dramas, Marcia Trahan’s childhood had hardly bolstered her self-­confidence. “I was not simply shy; I was frightened by almost anything that was unfamiliar, any uncertainty,” she writes in Mercy: A Memoir of Medical Trauma and True Crime Obsession (Barrelhouse, $18, 9780988994577), her adroit exploration of how inherited fears and traumas overtook her life. A l re a d y p ro n e to depression and having attempted suicide at age 27, Trahan was then diagnosed with thyroid cancer in her 30s, and a string of complications ensued. Three years later, she found herself glued to true crime TV in an obsessive way. “Only violent death captured my attention, as it had captured my mother’s,” she writes. Eventually she connects this obsession with the deep-seated medical fears instilled in her by her mother and realizes, “I sought out true crime programs because my body had experienced surgery as violence.” This is a wildly freeing revelation for Trahan, after years of being so fearful of medical procedures that she couldn’t even stand to have her teeth cleaned. Searingly honest and deftly written, Mercy is the story of a unique psychological journey that ends in satisfying self-revelation. —Alice Cary

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feature | dog mysteries

Sit. Stay. Solve crimes.

Shadows abound

These two mysteries are tough on crime but sweet on dogs.

Carefully laid clues and truly sinister reveals make these modern gothics utterly satisfying.

Good dogs never bite—but these two mysteries have plenty of snap. All Andy Carpenter wants is to put his law practice in his rearview mirror and enjoy retirement; his dog rescue foundation deserves all the love and time he can throw at it and then some. When a friend reaches out for a favor involving a stray dog, things quickly get complicated. Muzzled (Minotaur, $27.99, 9781250257116) combines the worlds of tech startups, medicine and the mafia in an off-leash thriller. This is Andy’s 21st outing, and author David Rosenfelt has a firm handle on the character. He imbues Andy’s home life with warmth and humor, but quickly shifts the tone as the search for the killers heats up. Once more bodies appear, his team of associates jumps in to help. The balance of action and levity is just right—Andy’s crew is hilarious, but some of the bad guys they take on are the stuff of nightmares. The Tara Foundation and Andy’s dogs, Tara and Sebastian, appear periodically, but they don’t upstage the main story. Not even a cameo by a dog named Simon Garfunkel (!) can derail the pursuit of justice. But dog people and their essential goodness stay at the heart of this tale. Spencer Quinn’s Of Mutts

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feature | gothic thrillers

and Men (Forge, $26.99, 9781250297693) takes quite a different approach. Washed-up PI Bernie Little is unlucky in love and money, but he hit the jackpot when he teamed up with Chet, his canine sidekick and the narrator of this wild ride. In their 10th adventure, the pair shows up to meet with a scientist with a secret, and are shocked to find that the man has been murdered. Quinn gets inside the mind of a dog, making Chet a terrific tour guide through this absolute riot of a mystery. The tension ratchets up as Chet sniffs out details his human partner is oblivious to, but then he’s unable to communicate his findings. The plot involves water rights and wine grapes, and includes a femme fatale whose overtures toward Bernie overload Chet’s ability to sift through all the flying pheromones. Amid frequent laughs and a crime story reminiscent of Chinatown, there’s also Bernie’s inability to get things right with the women in his life, and Chet’s quiet care for a hospice patient who he can sense is near the end. It would be easy to get mired in sadness, but all it takes is a glance at Bernie for Chet (and us) to fall in love all over again. —Heather Seggel

A good gothic novel leaves the reader unable to trust anything—certainly not the narrator and often not even the conclusion. It’s this uncertainty that makes for two thoroughly electric reads. Set on a bleak stretch of Cornish coastline, Laura Purcell’s The House of Whispers (Penguin, $17, 9780143135531) blends madness, disease and violent folklore together with truly terrifying results. Hester Why arrives at Morvoren House, the remote home of Louise Pinecroft, to serve as nurse and maid. In the aftermath of a stroke, Louise is a silent and eerie patient. She sits in a frigid room, watching her collection of bone china as if she expects it to run off. Adding to Hester’s unease is Creeda, a member of the staff whose obsession with folk tales of cruel, vengeful faeries is as bizarre as it is chilling. Hester is not the naive, virginal heroine that gothics of the 1970s and ’80s relied on; she is often selfish, dependent on the praise and attention of her employers in a way that feels alarmingly co-dependent, and increasingly reliant on gin and laudanum to numb herself. Hester fled London after her rash behavior led to a tragedy, and as events at Morvoren House become more frightening, she has nowhere else to go. Through Hester, the reader experiences an atmosphere of increasing claustrophobia and desperation that makes this novel both terrifying and impossible to put down. Mexican Gothic (Del Rey, $27, 9780525620785) by Silvia Moreno-Garcia begins as a dreamy gothic mystery but quickly unfolds into a visceral, almost hallucinogenic nightmare. Noemí Taboada is enjoying life as a young socialite in 1950s Mexico City when she receives a bizarre letter from her newlywed cousin, Catalina Doyle. Catalina insists that her husband, Virgil, is poisoning her, and Noemí travels to their estate of High Place to investigate. Symbols of rot are everywhere in Moreno-Garcia’s writing; mold and mushrooms seem to grow on every surface, and Noemí feels like the estate is decaying under her feet. Worse yet, Catalina’s madness seems to be contagious, and even as Noemí tries to convince herself that her cousin is merely ill, she begins to experience vivid nightmares. The Doyle family’s strange rituals and total isolation from their community similarly unnerve Noemí, preventing her from ever feeling safe. Like characters in The House of Whispers, the family featured in Mexican Gothic is hiding some truly vile secrets. But while much of the violence in The House of Whispers takes place off-screen, Moreno-Garcia puts it front and center, delivering a distinctive and cinematic horror novel that is not for the faint of heart. —Elyse Discher


reviews | fiction

H The Party Upstairs By Lee Conell

Family Drama There’s nothing like a great New York City novel, and praise be to the novelists who take us there: Think Cathleen Schine, Elinor Lipman, Emma Straub, Jennifer Egan and now Lee Conell, whose exquisite debut gets to the heart of the city via the super of an Upper West Side co-op and his frustratingly underemployed daughter. Martin lives in the building’s basement apartment with his wife, Debra, and 24-yearold daughter, Ruby, who has just moved home with an art history degree but no way to pay her student loans. Ruby’s friend Caroline, whose affluent family lives in the co-op penthouse, is also back home, but her wealth has cushioned the transition from college to what-comes-next. Though the girls have been friends since childhood, Ruby has grown increasingly discomfited by Caroline’s obliviousness to how her wealth brings her certain advantages. The Party Upstairs (Penguin Press, $26,

The Lightness By Emily Temple

Coming of Age Emily Temple’s moody debut novel, The Lightness (William Morrow, $26.99, 9780062905321), follows the lives of four bright but troubled teenage girls through a strange summer as they explore some of the dangerous outer reaches of young life and love. The “panspiritual contemplation community” known as the Levitation Center is no ordinary overnight camp. Located high in the mountains, this “Buddhist Boot Camp for Bad Girls” is home to some 60 girls: “shoplifters and potheads, arsonists and bullies, boy crazy and girl crazy, split and scarred.” Eager to escape her needy, abusive mother and haunted by the disappearance of her estranged father— last seen at a retreat at the same center the previous year—Olivia Ellis, the novel’s narrator, soon finds herself in an uneasy alliance with three bunkmates: Laurel, Janet and their

9781984880277) is told over the course of a single day, beginning with an argument between father and daughter when Martin tries to get Ruby to meditate with him before work. Ruby readies herself for a job interview at the Museum of Natural History and plans to attend Caroline’s fancy penthouse party that night. Meanwhile, Martin’s anxiety is through the roof after dealing with needy tenants and his grumpy daughter, and now vivid memories of a recently deceased tenant are starting to trouble him.

putative leader, the enigmatic Serena, who has her own painful associations with the center. Over the course of the summer, the foursome engages in a series of increasingly dangerous experiments designed to allow them to both realize the fantasy of flight and transform themselves into what Serena calls “beautiful, wrathful, whole new creatures.” Their nightly explorations are complicated by the involvement of the camp’s young gardener, Luke, a would-be mentor whose interactions with the girls, both sexual and otherwise, heighten the tension that skillfully builds over the course of the story. As Olivia reflects on these events from the perspective of early adulthood, her tone is one of mingled fascination and regret, seemingly aware that she has yet to fully comprehend all that happened to her and her friends during those fateful few weeks. Temple liberally seasons her story with informative bits of Buddhist philosophy, Greek mythology and descriptions of how, throughout history, humans have attempted to satisfy the yearning to defy gravity. For both its mystery and its psychological insight, The Lightness will appeal to readers who enjoyed works like Donna Tartt’s The Secret History or Claire Messud’s The Burning Girl. It’s an admirable addition to the body of fiction that helps illuminate why adolescence, for all its thrills of discovery, can be one of life’s most challenging stages. —Harvey Freedenberg

After a disheartening job interview, Ruby is further provoked by flashbacks of the decades of inequities between herself and Caroline and by an unfortunate run-in with a neighborhood photographer. By the time of the party, Ruby is moved to act out in a way that dramatically disrupts the course of her life and the lives of her parents. Like Kiley Reid’s Such a Fun Age, The Party Upstairs will make you laugh even as you grapple with how money defines many of its characters’ most significant choices. As chapters alternate between Ruby’s and Martin’s perspectives, Conell’s realistic dialogue and thoughtful plotting take us deep into the often unexpressed shame linked to financial uncertainty. The Party Upstairs is an on-the-nose, of-the-moment dark comedy that delves deep into issues of wealth, gender and privilege in the most iconic of American cities. —Lauren Bufferd

Florence Adler Swims Forever By Rachel Beanland

Family Drama Rachel Beanland’s debut novel opens in 1934 Atlantic City. It’s a bluesky June day, and most of the Adler family is enjoying the beach: 7-year-old Gussie; Gussie’s grandparents Esther and Joseph; Anna, the young German Jewish woman the family has taken in; and Florence, Esther and Joseph’s younger daughter, a Wellesley College student and star swimmer. Florence is such a competitive swimmer that she’s training to swim the English Channel later that summer. One family member who is not on the beach is Fannie, Florence’s older sister and Gussie’s mom, who is pregnant and in the hospital on bed rest, determined not to lose this baby as she lost the last one. By the end of the day, the Adler family’s world has changed forever. Florence inexplicably drowns, and Esther decides that the family must keep this secret from Fannie, for fear that

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reviews | fiction Fannie will go into early labor. There will be no funeral, no sitting shiva, no outer mourning for Florence. But that’s not the only secret in this family novel. Each character has reasons to hide something important, which in turn affects their own happiness and relationships. The novel rotates through the perspectives of Gussie, Esther, Joseph, Anna, Fannie, Fannie’s husband and Florence’s devoted young swim coach, Stuart. It’s an ambitious balancing act that occasionally requires a little double-­ checking as to whose point of view we’re following. As the novel moves forward through the summer, the stress of secrets increases the pressure on each of the characters. Florence Adler Swims Forever (Simon & Schuster, $25.99, 9781982132460) beautifully brings to life Atlantic City in the 1930s, offering the sights, sounds and smells of the beach and the boardwalk, as well as the daily life of Atlantic City’s Jewish community. It also foreshadows, through refugee Anna’s plight, the coming catastrophe of the Holocaust. Beanland loosely based the novel on the story of her great-great-aunt Florence, who, like Florence Adler, was a competitive swimmer who drowned off the coast of Atlantic City. It’s a worthy tribute and a satisfying historical family drama. —Sarah McCraw Crow

Utopia Avenue By David Mitchell

Historical Fiction David Mitchell has written some of the most innovative novels of the past 20 years, from the post-apocalyptic Cloud Atlas to Slade House, a ghost tale about a mysterious residence “that only blinks into existence one night every nine years.” His latest, Utopia Avenue (Random House, $30, 9780812997439), is a journey into new territory and a return to earlier themes. One of the biggest surprises here is that an author who has built a reputation for creating original worlds now seeks originality in a seemingly familiar milieu: a British rock band’s brief moment of fame in the psychedelic heyday of the late 1960s. It’s 1967, and impresario Levon Frankland, on the lookout for fresh talent, spots bass gui-

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tarist Dean Moss, a 23-year-old “long-haired lout” who’s desperate for a gig and a place to live. Soon, Dean joins a band that includes drummer Peter “Griff” Griffin, no stranger to having bottles thrown at him during a set, and lead singer Elf Holloway, formerly half of a folk duo with her Australian ex-boyfriend, a man who isn’t above using thievery and unfaithfulness to achieve his goals. So far, so familiar, but this being a Mitchell novel, a wrinkle is not too far off. This novel’s wrinkle involves lead guitarist Jasper de Zoet, a man who, ever since an afternoon on the cricket pitch during his youth in the Netherlands, has heard a persistent knocking in his head. The knocking has now returned, as has the message tapped out by this foreign entity inside his brain: “Life and liberty . . . De Zoet must die.” Utopia Avenue is more ramshackle than Mitchell’s earlier works. Some plot elements, including episodes of revenge, jealousy and blackmail, are exactly what one might expect to find in a story of newly celebrated musicians. Mitchell fans, however, will welcome the continuation of flourishes from such earlier works as The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet and The Bone Clocks, including the reemergence of characters from those novels and the neologisms that made Mitchell’s previous works such mind-bending experiences. Mitchell’s song may be different, but readers will recognize the tune. —Michael Magras

H Sex and Vanity By Kevin Kwan

Comic Fiction The title of bestselling author Kevin Kwan’s blazingly fun new novel is a bit of a misnomer: There’s very little sex. But that’s not what we go to the author of Crazy Rich Asians for, is it? What Kwan consistently delivers—and does so again in Sex and Vanity (Doubleday, $26.95, 9780385546270)—are fantastic tales of the over-the-top wealthy, written with just enough empathy to make us care about young, beautiful trust-fund billionaires. Meet Lucie Tang Churchill. She’s the beautiful daughter of a Mayflower descendant and a Chinese American from Seattle. On her lily-

white paternal side, Lucie has always been the outcast. Although she’s a born-and-bred New Yorker, her patrician grandmother still calls her an offensive slang term for a subservient Chinese woman. When Lucie travels to Italy for the extravagant wedding of a childhood friend, she meets George Zao, a handsome surfer from Hong Kong. Lucie and George get caught in a compromising position at the wedding, and they sheepishly go their separate ways. Fast-forward five years, and Lucie is a successful art consultant engaged to Cecil Pike, a Texas oil heir and a “GQ-handsome bon vivant.” But Lucie’s family looks down their noses at Cecil’s new money, and Cecil’s family looks right back at Lucie the same way. It’s clear Lucie and Cecil are an odd match—to everyone except Lucie and Cecil. And when George reemerges, Lucie begins to question everything she thought she wanted. Sex and Vanity is a deliciously fun romp from Capri to Manhattan and East Hampton. Kwan is in fine form, gleefully name-dropping luxury brands and socialites as he spins a heartfelt, satirical tale that observes the price of fame, fortune and following your heart. —Amy Scribner

The Only Good Indians By Stephen Graham Jones

Horror Stephen Graham Jones pulls off an interesting feat in his new novel, The Only Good Indians (Saga, $26.99, 9781982136451). He makes you question whether you should root for the four Native American friends who shot and killed a family of elk on a hunting trip or for the spirit of the elk as it seeks revenge against them. Ten years ago, while hunting on land designated for use by their tribal elders, Ricky, Lewis, Gabe and Cass opened fire on a small elk herd with reckless abandon, killing far more than they should have, including one that was pregnant. The now 30-something men have moved off of the Blackfeet reservation, but the incident still haunts Lewis, who has always felt guilty about the deed as well as about having turned his back on his culture. When Lewis sees a vision of the elk’s calf in his living room, his guilt begins to consume


reviews | fiction him. He suspects the elk’s spirit has taken the form of a friend, Shaney, and he sets a grisly trap for her. But Lewis’ irrational fears continue, and before long, he suspects the entity has switched forms again, this time taking on that of his wife, Peta. Confused by Lewis’ actions at first, Gabe and Cass soon begin to experience the wrath of the elk’s spirit as well, leading up to a frantic finale. Borrowing a bit from his previous novel, Mongrels, which explored the mindset of a family of werewolves, Jones’ latest novel dips into the elk’s perspective in several chapters. As a result, the reader is torn as to which faction—men or beast—is more deserving of empathy. The Only Good Indians unfolds at a slow and steady pace that offers ample opportunities for sharp commentary on history, past choices and the identity crises of a group of Native American men. It toys with impending doom, then slaps you in the face with violence. —G. Robert Frazier

H Scorpionfish

By Natalie Bakopoulos

Literary Fiction In Natalie Bakopoulos’ richly told Scorpionfish (Tin House, $16.95, 9781947793750), readers step into contemporary Athens with Mira, a Greek American woman who has returned to the city while she grieves her parents’ deaths as well as a dissolving relationship. As we enter the mess of her universe, counterpoints appear from her neighbor, the Captain. The alternating voices of these broken, fragmented people explore how each tries to repair and save the self, and how their personal connections become integral to that process. As Mira and the Captain get to know each other—sitting together and apart, talking across their balcony walls—the conversation reveals their layers and the ways that each sees the other. The newness of their connection allows them to puzzle through the complexities of their past loves, friendships and familial bonds. Each is navigating the ending of a relationship; each is reevaluating priorities. As we witness this growing friendship, the specificity of place—of the sea, the city and the interior emotional realm—cradles the characters’ attempts

to understand what it means to be human and to love. Bakopoulos’ prose is descriptive, full of images and details, and yet some sentences are so clear and axiomatic that the reader may need to pause and think, recognizing truths they’ve always known. In a certain way, reading Scorpionfish is a rereading, a remarkable recognition of how language can work, how grief and love and loss can be so particular, so meaningful, so universal—and how words can make those resonances propulsive and haunting. —Freya Sachs

Friends and Strangers By J. Courtney Sullivan

Family Drama As problems go, a surfeit of money is a nice one to have. Some might argue, however, that wealth is like a set of weights: Those who have it will likely be stronger than those who don’t. But mishandle it, and the self-imposed strains can be painful. The clash between rich and poor animates Friends and Strangers (Knopf, $27.95, 9780525520597), J. Courtney Sullivan’s quietly perceptive new novel about two women on different sides of America’s economic divide: a new mother and the college-age nanny she hires for her son. Elisabeth Ronson, a former New York Times journalist and author of two bestselling books, has moved from Brooklyn to upstate New York with her husband, Andrew, and Gil, their baby conceived through in vitro fertilization. The move was precipitated by the fellowship Andrew received from a nearby college to develop a solar-powered grill. Elisabeth won’t accept money from her rich, philandering father and insists that her needy sister, Charlotte, eager to build a lifestyle brand on Instagram, do the same. As Sullivan skillfully shows, family is not Elisabeth’s only problem. Another is loneliness in her suburban neighborhood of stay-at-home mothers. Elisabeth also needs help caring for Gil as she struggles to write a third book, so she hires Sam, a senior at the town’s women’s college, to watch him. Sullivan does a fine job depicting Elisabeth’s and Sam’s respective dilemmas, as Elisabeth

learns to live on less money and Sam deals with her family’s meager finances. Among the well-drawn supporting characters are Clive, Sam’s English boyfriend who’s a decade her senior, and whom Elisabeth suspects may be taking advantage of her; George, Elisabeth’s father-­in-law, who rails against the inequities of society; and the poorly paid staff at the college kitchen where Sam also works. The tension sometimes wanes, but Friends and Strangers is at its best when Sullivan emphasizes the widening class difference in America between people who can afford $46 peony-scented hand soaps and those worried about meeting basic needs. Sullivan dares to further complicate her narrative by showing that financial security doesn’t guarantee happiness. The result is a poignant look at the biases of modern society. —Michael Magras

Dear Emmie Blue By Lia Louis

Popular Fiction What happens when the person who finds your balloon bursts your bubble? Dear Emmie Blue (Emily Bestler, $26, 9781982135911) is a delightful story about a sweet, downtrodden woman’s journey to self-discovery after she believes she has lost everything. Fourteen years ago, when Emmie Blue was 16, she released a balloon into the sky over Kent, England, with her email address and a message attached to it—a dark secret she could no longer keep. The balloon was discovered in France by Lucas Moreau, a boy originally from London who has the same birthday as Emmie, who quickly became her best friend and with whom she has been in love for the last six years. Lucas has told Emmie that he plans to ask her a question on the eve of their 30th birthdays. Emmie has rehearsed her answer to what she assumes will be a romantic invitation—but what he asks her makes her question everything about her life. Emmie is a tremendously flawed character who might be self-pitying if she weren’t so darn self-effacing and nice. It’s hard not to sympathize with her, cheering her along as she muddles her way—repeatedly—through

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reviews | fiction one disappointment after another. Her back­ story is woven into her dynamic stream-of-­ consciousness narration, which causes some confusing moments but also sets a pace that reflects her psychological and emotional state. She’s dealing with a lot—the truth of Lucas and his brother, Elliot; her neglectful mother; the search for her father—while struggling to make peace with her dreadful secret. The comedic value of secondary characters, such as Emmie’s friends Rose and Fox, balances the weight of heavier themes to keep the story from getting too bogged down in drama. The dialogue, which is amply seasoned with profanity, effectively captures Emmie’s close relationships with other characters, especially with her quiet and wise landlady. Ebbing and flowing with the ups and downs of life, Dear Emmie Blue is a delightful read that fans of Bridget Jones’s Diary and Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine will enjoy. —Maya Fleischmann

the sugar plantations that were once Hawaii’s lifeblood. As always, Tsukiyama’s storytelling is deeply compassionate, undoubtedly buoyed by her personal ties to the material (her father was Japanese American by way of Hawaii), which lends a quiet and sincere intimacy to the proceedings. There is plenty of interpersonal drama in this twisting tale of love and loss, but the novel’s true joy and beauty come from the intensely atmospheric writing. Tsukiyama’s prose is lush and sensual, fully immersing the reader in this pocket of paradise and bringing the island’s spirits to life. She elevates Hawaii from a simple setting to a character as dynamic and vital as its human inhabitants. An intoxicating blend of historical events and fiction, The Color of Air is a richly rewarding reading experience perfect for fans of Lisa See or Isabel Allende, or anyone looking for a magical love story that transcends time. —Stephenie Harrison

The Color of Air

H The All-Night Sun

By Gail Tsukiyama

By Diane Zinna

Family Saga In Gail Tsukiyama’s eighth novel, a small Japanese community on Hawaii’s Big Island is thrown into chaos in 1935 when the town’s golden boy, Daniel Abe, returns home after several years away on the mainland. His homecoming coincides with the eruption of Mauna Loa, a portentous omen, as the locals have long viewed its seismic activity as the manifestation of the mercurial moods of Pele, the goddess of volcanoes and fire and the creator of the Hawaiian Islands. As Daniel works to resettle into his former home and make peace with a tragedy that occurred while working as a doctor in Chicago, dormant secrets and sins of the past come bubbling up. Tensions rise further when he and the villagers learn that the lava flow from Mauna Loa is headed directly for them. With The Color of Air (HarperVia, $26.99, 9780062976192), Tsukiyama revisits themes that have been constant over the course of her 20-year career, tenderly exploring the complicated web of family and the resilient nature of the human spirit, while also shedding light on an important period of Asian history, this time the indentured servitude of Asian people on

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Literary Fiction Lauren Cress has been drifting through life for the 10 years since she became an orphan. Her relationships with men are often perfunctory. She’s slow to open up to her colleagues at the college where she works as an adjunct instructor, teaching writing to international students. But in the classroom, Lauren comes to life. She’s a dazzling teacher who connects with her students, even when they don’t understand why they’re required to write personal essays. “Knowing how to express yourself to one another in real ways . . . it can help with loneliness and distance,” Lauren explains. Lauren’s insatiable but hidden desire to be known and understood thrusts her into an all-consuming friendship with Siri Bergström, a student from Sweden. Siri also knows the pain of losing a parent; her mother died when Siri was 5, though no one knows exactly how. When Siri invites Lauren to come home to Sweden with her, Lauren dives headfirst into the friendship, though she knows it’s unwise. As the Swedish summer celebration of Midsommar draws near, Lauren finds herself

swimming in the complexities of her relationships with Siri and the friends and siblings who welcome her. But when her friendship with Siri threatens to unravel, Lauren withdraws into herself, blocking out all signs of life around her. In The All-Night Sun (Random House, $27, 9781984854162), author Diane Zinna displays her deep understanding of the writing craft, born in part of her experience as a creative writing teacher and former executive co-­director at AWP, the Association of Writers & Writing Programs. Her stunning debut novel is a twisting tale of grief, hope and self-deceit, a story as mesmerizing as the young women at its heart. —Carla Jean Whitley

Crooked Hallelujah By Kelli Jo Ford

Short Stories Kelli Jo Ford’s first book, composed of interlocking stories set in Oklahoma and North Texas, is like a wildfire that slowly approaches a home and then whips through an entire region. Crooked Hallelujah (Grove, $26, 9780802149121) opens in 1974 and introduces four generations of Cherokee women: Granny, Lula, Justine and Reney. The women are as intertwined as they are distinct, adhering to their own codes and overshadowing the men in their lives. Granny, the matriarch of the clan, shares a bedroom with her daughter, Lula, a devoted follower of a Holy Roller-like church. Lula’s rebellious 15-year-old daughter, Justine, resists her mother’s religious affiliation. After Justine is raped, she gives birth to blue-eyed Reney. Gradually, Granny cedes center stage to Lula and Justine, who try to make a life amid the poverty of their town. Several powerful pieces stand out in this novel-in-stories. In one, grown-up Reney, now married, works at a Dairy Queen while trying to attend school. She also manages the small cattle ranch on which she and her husband live. One day, Reney’s beloved mule goes missing, and her search leads to a devastating act of violence. In another chaotic piece, Justine is packing up to leave Texas and return to Oklahoma, but a wildfire lights the horizon, forcing a change in her plans. In a stirring, believable hospital scene, in which Lula has suffered a


reviews | fiction massive stroke, relatives sing their church songs while Justine tries to comfort and come to terms with her mother. Crooked Hallelujah is an imperfect work. Some tales, such as that of a lesbian couple menaced in their trailer home, seem out of place, and readers may find the timeline difficult to follow. But Ford’s voice rises above the tumult, sharing the stories of women whose lives have been injured and upended but who will never be silent. —Grace Lichtenstein

Miss Iceland

By Auður Ava Ólafsdóttir

Coming of Age To say that Icelanders love literature may be an understatement. Per capita, Iceland has more books published and more books read than anywhere else in the world, and Reykjavík is well known for its authors and independent bookstores. But in the early 1960s, it was hard for a woman to penetrate Reykjavík’s artistic community. In her new novel, Miss Iceland (Black Cat, $16, 9780802149237), Icelandic writer Auður Ava Ólafsdóttir explores this conflict. Named after a dormant volcano by her weather-obsessed father, Hekla leaves her rural home in Dalir for Reykjavík with a copy of James Joyce’s Ulysses and an English-­Icelandic dictionary. She moves in with her former classmate Jon, a gay man who has moved to the capital with his sewing machine in hopes of getting a job designing costumes for the theater. But when Jon and Hekla find themselves firmly on the outside of their dreams, Jon accepts arduous work on local fishing trawlers, hoping to travel to a place where he is free to love whomever he chooses. At night after waitressing at the Hotel Berg, where avoiding the wandering hands of male patrons is as much a part of her day as serving coffee, Hekla stays up late to write. Even after Hekla begins dating a poet, she is unable to break into the male-dominated literary cafe crowd. When she reveals her true vocation (and prolific output) to her boyfriend, the relationship falls apart, leaving her to wonder if she can pursue her dreams in Iceland at all. Ólafsdóttir is an art historian and writer whose work is just beginning to receive the

attention it deserves in the United States. This quietly moving tale of friendship and artistic fulfillment will appeal to readers of Elena Ferrante and Margaret Atwood, and the unusual setting offers an interesting twist on the portrait of an artist as a young woman. —Lauren Bufferd

Nine Shiny Objects

decades­long timeline—is at times impressive to behold. Castleberry’s intricate narration (some sentences seem to run on for pages at a time) may even compel you to read some passages over again just to make sure you didn’t miss something. But it’s worth it to take your time and savor this one. —G. Robert Frazier

H Mother Land

By Brian Castleberry

Literary Fiction Yearning to find a better life and, more specifically, a purpose in life, is universal and natural. So it’s easy to see how the characters in Brian Castleberry’s debut novel, Nine Shiny Objects (Custom House, $27.99, 9780062984395), each disillusioned and frustrated by their dead-end lives, would embrace a cultish quest toward utopia on earth. Things start innocently enough as Oliver Danville, a failed-actor-turned-hustler in 1947 Chicago, reads of an aviator who sees nine bright objects in the sky. Convinced that there’s nothing for him where he is, Oliver hitchhikes west, looking for “a sign that might lead to his true calling.” Before long he dubs himself the Tzadi Sophit, leader of the Seekers, a community of outcasts and idealists with dreams of a society free of racial, ethnic, sexual and social bigotry. Castleberry could easily have followed Oliver’s exploits from there, but instead he switches gears. Each subsequent chapter jumps ahead in the narrative by five years, introducing another character—a down-on-herluck waitress, a traveling book salesperson/ aspiring songwriter, a painter, a radio host, a poet, a teenager and others—and chronicling how their lives intersect with the Seekers. If that sounds busy and even confusing, it is; you may need a set of cue cards to help keep track of who’s who. Much of the story revolves around a pivotal event in the establishment of Oliver’s community, in which an outsider attacks one of its members, leading the Seekers to resettle in a Long Island subdivision. But if the Seekers think things will get easier for them, any New Yorker could tell them otherwise. The scope of the novel—from its vast conspiracies and social commentary to its

By Leah Franqui

Family Drama Leah Franqui knows a thing or two about straddling different cultures and identities. She is a Puerto Rican Jewish American who lives in Mumbai with her Kolkata-born husband, and her perspective informs her latest novel. Set in the busy, noisy and chaotic world of modern Mumbai, Mother Land (William Morrow, $27.99, 9780062938848) is the story of an expat, Rachel Meyer, who knows she’s living the dream—but whose dream exactly, she isn’t sure. Upon meeting her now-husband Dhruv in a Manhattan bar, Rachel instantly fell in love with his boyish charm and assertiveness. His sense of purpose was a welcome change in her listless life, so she married him and followed him to India to make a home together. To Rachel, Mumbai is mesmerizing—at first. Then cultural expectations, language barriers and mounting loneliness start revealing all the voids that can’t easily be filled. Things get even more confusing when Swati, Rachel’s mother-in-law, arrives unannounced one day from Kolkata with the intention of leaving her husband and moving in permanently with the newlyweds. The shock of it all, coinciding with Dhruv’s departure for a monthlong business trip, leaves Rachel paralyzed with fear. Thus, Franqui resurrects the age-old struggle between mother-in-law and daughter-inlaw—and topples it with a spot-on exploration of what it means to stand up against other people’s expectations. Mother Land is unexpected. It’s funny and relatable even if your mother-in-law isn’t anything like Swati. It’s a tender tale of two women who are lost and alone, but who eventually become allies and each other’s biggest champions. —Chika Gujarathi

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reviews | nonfiction

H Lot Six By David Adjmi

Memoir The memoir of a gay New York playwright who grew up in a conservative Jewish community in Brooklyn might sound a bit niche, but David Adjmi’s Lot Six (Harper, $27.99, 9780061990946) ushers readers into fundamental questions of identity, community and belonging. The writing is vibrant, edgy, scenic and exciting. The figures of Adjmi’s childhood—such as Howie, a brilliant outcast who befriends him in elementary school—come off the page as though the reader is meeting them in person. Adjmi also emerges as a sensitive and faithful—and funny!—narrator who is keen to notice his own reactions to particular moments and perceptive about how his early experiences fostered a kaleidoscopic inner life that informed both the formation of his identity and the art he would later make.

H This Is Major By Shayla Lawson

Essays A few years ago, the phrase “Black girls are magic” was introduced online to subvert the dehumanizing narrative attached to black girls and women. The mantra is intended to uplift black girls in a society that maintains a legacy of systemic racism and violence to oppress marginalized people. Yet Shayla Lawson, the director of creative writing at Amherst College and author of three poetry collections, looks beyond the notion that black girls are magic. This Is Major: Notes on Diana Ross, Dark Girls, and Being Dope (Harper Perennial, $16.99, 9780062890597) not only spotlights the nuances of black womanhood but also rejects the claim that their power is rooted in an inherent superhuman disposition. Lawson examines the inner lives of black girls and how these private lives are routinely misconstrued, misunderstood and vilified. In the collection’s opening essay, “You Are Here,” Lawson invokes a wide range of talent

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From his adoration of the gruesome musical Sweeney Todd to his alienation from the popular children at his elementary school, Adjmi moves on to chronicle his adolescent and high school years. He leaves behind the cultural and social confines of his community by attending an art school with only one friend from his neighborhood. Adjmi becomes almost ethnographically obsessed with observing the behavior of his peers—and he goes through some changes of his own, too, growing his hair into dreadlocks and attending a college in California against his counsel-

and creative ingenuity: Grace Jones, Diana Ross, Josephine Baker, SZA, Simone Biles, Janet Jackson and more. Lawson calls upon these influential women to highlight their brilliance, resilience and ability to thrive in a world determined to cut them down. These women are very different, but they all prove one monumental truth: There is no one “right” way to be a black girl. We are able to take on many forms. Yet despite black girls’ ability to transform, it doesn’t mean we are otherworldly. Black girls are magic, but Black Girl Magic “doesn’t set us free.” Notably, freedom is a topic that is explored repeatedly throughout Lawson’s essays. What does it mean to be free? What does freedom cost? How do black girls get free? And once you get free, how do you stay free? Whether she’s discussing the politics of Twitter popularity, the pitfalls of interracial dating, the ever-­shifting cultural definition of “black” or the reality of gentrification, Lawson is a master of her craft. Her keen poetic sensibilities sharpen topics that may seem amorphous or expansive. She seamlessly blends deeply personal memories with overarching moments in history and pop culture, and the result is a sense of familiarity among the writer and the black women who pick up this book. In This Is Major, Lawson’s voice can be smooth like honey or cut to the quick. This essay collection is a necessary study of self-­ enlightenment and the unique power of black girls. We contain multitudes. —Vanessa Willoughby

or’s advice that the East Coast Sarah Lawrence might be a better fit. (He eventually transfers.) Adjmi had always been a competent student, but his passions alight when he realizes he wants to write plays. His entrance to the cloistered, insulated world of New York theater showcases both his brilliance and his increasing contrariness. As Adjmi realizes who he is, he finds it harder to fill his teachers’ perceptions of what he should be. Ultimately—and fittingly—his first major professional success is a mashup of his own favorite plays and his memories of growing up queer in his Syrian Jewish community. In all, Lot Six is about finding out who you really are and learning to, as Nietzsche famously wrote, “amor fati” (love your fate). —Kelly Blewett Visit BookPage.com to read a Behind the Book essay by David Adjmi.

Cross of Snow

By Nicholas A. Basbanes

Biography During his lifetime, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807–1882) was one of America’s most highly regarded poets, a phenomenally successful bestselling writer both here and abroad. An author of stories and essays, a translator of Dante and an editor of a multivolume anthology of poetry from around the world, he played a major role in shaping middle-class culture during the 1800s. As the Smith Professor of Modern Languages at Harvard, he brought a cosmopolitan vision to his writing and was influential in bringing European culture to the U.S. and dramatizing American themes overseas. (He is still the only American to have a bust of his likeness in Poets’ Corner at Westminster Abbey.) His many literary friends included Nathaniel Hawthorne, Julia Ward Howe and Charles Dickens. Longfellow and his times are brought vividly to life by Nicholas A. Basbanes in his author-


reviews | nonfiction itative and wonderfully readable Cross of Snow: A Life of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (Knopf, $37.50, 9781101875148). He traces the poet’s life from Maine, where Longfellow knew early on that he wanted to be a professional writer, to becoming a major literary presence. Basbanes draws on a rich abundance of correspondence, diaries, journals and notebooks and gives readers generous excerpts from Longfellow and many others. At the heart of the book is the relationship between Longfellow and his second wife, Frances Appleton Longfellow. Fanny, as she was called, was educated, multilingual and skilled as an artist. She was remarkably well read and wrote very well herself, and her relationship with Longfellow thrived on intellect as much as romance. Describing their relationship, a friend once remarked, “Of all happy homes theirs was in many ways the happiest.” Longfellow usually preferred not to be involved in controversial issues but was a noted antislavery advocate who decried war and violence of any kind. His best friend was Charles Sumner, a noted abolitionist who almost lost his life for the cause of abolition when he was attacked in the U.S. Senate. Long before that incident, Longfellow published Poems on Slavery at Sumner’s request. Basbanes uses his sources well, transporting readers beautifully to the world of a poet who is often overlooked. If you enjoy literary biography, this is a book to savor. —Roger Bishop

unusual. “It’s so simple, what happened at St. Paul’s. It happens all the time,” she writes. “First, they refused to believe me. Then they shamed me. Then they silenced me.” She describes St. Paul’s as a lauded, sometimes lonely place where privileged teens were obsessed with their academic futures. (The author, when faced with the possibility of not returning for her senior year, pleaded with her parents: But what about Princeton?) Crawford, a novelist, uses her storytelling skill to illuminate the myriad ways female students were taught that their desires and bodies were less valuable than—even subject to—those of their male peers. She’d had other sexual experiences as a teenager, a fact her teachers later used against her. When she began to experience physical ailments because of her assault, Crawford was certain it was a result of “what she had done.” She was so wrecked by the experience that she saw herself, not the boys, as the one to blame. Crawford’s detailed account of her assault and its aftermath relies on an indelible memory as well as careful research. Medical reports and other documentation help her piece together the school’s reaction when she revisits it decades later, after other victims began holding the school accountable. Notes on a Silencing is a ghastly account, beautifully told, of a teenage girl learning that people in power often value reputation above all else. —Carla Jean Whitley

H Notes on a Silencing

The Vapors

By Lacy Crawford

Memoir One night in October 1990, a young Lacy Crawford took a phone call at her dorm, surprised to hear an older boy pleading for her to come help him. Crawford was mystified but convinced there must be a reason, so she slipped across her boarding school campus and met the boy at his dorm window. When she climbed inside, she was confronted by the boy and his roommate, both stripped down to their underwear. That night would haunt her for decades to come. In Notes on a Silencing (Little, Brown, $28, 9780316491556), Crawford emphasizes that the sexual assault she experienced was not

By David Hill

American History Those of us who are fans of gangster stories have been saturated (oversaturated, perhaps?) in the Lucky-BugsyMeyer saga, rooted in New York but with memorable offshoots in Havana, Los Angeles and Las Vegas. Well, here’s a fresh cast and venue: the casino crowd of Hot Springs, Arkansas, arguably America’s gambling capital until it all came crashing down in the mid-1960s. Lucky Luciano and Meyer Lansky do make cameos in The Vapors: A Southern Family, the New York Mob, and the Rise and Fall of Hot Springs, America’s Forgotten Capital of Vice

(FSG, $28, 9781250086112), David Hill’s true crime narrative of the spa resort town from the ’30s through the ’60s. But the big players are the less-remembered mobster Owney Madden, casino boss Dane Harris and a raft of crooked homegrown pols, judges and cops— with a fleeting appearance by Hot Springs resident Virginia Clinton and her promising son Bill. It’s still astonishing how open Hot Springs’ vice industry was, with city leaders acting as an integral part of the criminal establishment. Madden was the mob’s guy in town, but he quickly assimilated to the local landscape. Harris, the son of a bootlegger, had aspirations of respectability; he’s the Michael Corleone of the story. He wanted the clubs, led by his gang of Vapors, to be glossy entertainment palaces. Harris did his best with payoffs and vote-­buying, but internecine fighting that featured bomb explosions and pressure from Bobby Kennedy’s Department of Justice ended his dream. The history is fascinating, but what makes The Vapors a compelling—and ultimately heartwrenching—book is the author’s account of his own family, who lived in Hot Springs during the casino heyday. His grandmother Hazel Hill landed there as a teen, drifted into casino work after leaving her violent, alcoholic husband and neglected her sons as she fell into her own sad addictions. Hill tells the hard truth of her life with compassion and context. Amid all this mayhem, one person in the book emerges as a beacon of decency: Jimmy Hill, Hazel’s youngest son and the author’s father. Intelligence, hard work, athletic talent and loyal friends led him to a better life. Dane Harris should have been so lucky. —Anne Bartlett

H Bright Precious Thing By Gail Caldwell

Memoir At a Cambridge, Massachusetts, bookstore several years ago, Pulitzer Prize-­winning critic Gail Caldwell paused her reading to say, “There’s a lot of heart and soul in this room, and I would like to share the evening with you.” Sitting with her memoir Bright Precious Thing (Random House, $27, 9780525510055) feels like an

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reviews | nonfiction invitation into her own heart and soul. With a breath-catching, lyrical grace, yet enough focus to avoid sentiment, Caldwell lays down the path her life has taken. She credits the women’s movement with inspiring her evolution from rebellious Texan teenager to acclaimed Boston Globe critic. The friends and lovers she spent time with along the way are vividly here as well, for better and for worse. Date rape, an abortion and a long love affair with alcohol run right alongside the things that have sustained and inspired her. What makes Caldwell’s memoir so much more than a skillful retelling is the way she balances her long past with visits from her present-­day neighbor’s child, Tyler. When they meet, the 5-year-old falls in love with Caldwell’s beloved Samoyed dog, Tula. Over the years, that love comes to encapsulate all three of them—the writer helping along the little girl’s imagination, Tyler flashing the fearless self-awareness she seems to have been born with, and Tula blessing them both with her steadfast company. Caldwell calls it “a mutual learning society.” The child reminds Caldwell of “the innocence of forward motion,” and she tries to give Tyler “a palette for all that hope.” For Caldwell, that palette got its beginnings in the women’s movement of the 1960s and ’70s, which “delivered” her from the “traditional paths” of marriage and motherhood. Diving into the past, alternating with sprints into the present, she observes herself as a writer, swimmer, rower, dog lover and friend. She can see the totality of her experiences from her perch much better as she nears 70, and they compose a “bright, precious thing . . . my life.” —Priscilla Kipp

Sex and Lies

Union

By Colin Woodard

By Leila Slimani

Social Science When bestselling author Leila Slimani published her debut novel, Adéle, in 2014, she spent two weeks on a book tour around Morocco. After her events at bookshops, universities and libraries, numerous women were hungry to discuss their own personal and political struggles to express their sexuality in a country that represses women’s sexual natures. Slimani collects many of these

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testimonies, woven together with her own reflections on Morocco’s social attitudes toward sex, in Sex and Lies: True Stories of Women’s Intimate Lives in the Arab World (Penguin, $17, 9780143133766). Soraya, an attractive woman, perhaps in her 40s, locates Slimani in the hotel bar one evening after an event and, reticently at first, opens up to Slimani about her mother’s marital counsel: “Don’t forget to stay a virgin.” Soraya shares that she never experienced sexual pleasure in her marriage but that, after her divorce, she wants to discover pleasure and freedom. Slimani uses Soraya’s story as an illustration of the many ways women in Morocco face humiliation—humiliations that men never face. They must be good girls, and if they lose their virginity, they are “spoiled.” Malika is a 40-year-old doctor who’s single and has never been married. Although she feels freer than many women who lack her income and social status, she still must live a life of subterfuge when she wants to sleep with her partner, checking into French hotels where no one will ask them for an ID. As Malika puts it, “Hypocrisy is growing here, and conservatism, too.” Slimani reflects on Malika’s story by pointing out that the more freedom women gain in Moroccan society, the more they take up public space, which leaves men feeling unmoored. Provocative and disturbing, fervent and moving, Sex and Lies offers a glimpse into a world often hidden from view, allowing Moroccan women to express in their own words their desires and hopes for a sexual revolution in their society. —Henry L. Carrigan Jr.

American History Historian, Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of the bestselling American Nations Colin Woodard tackles the evolution of ideas about America’s nationhood leading up to the Civil War in Union: The Struggle to Forge the Story of United States Nationhood (Viking, $30, 9780525560159). Part biography, part political and intellectual history, Union chronicles the tumultuous clash of regional cultures and competing visions of America’s

destiny through the lives, writings and ideas of five very different men. In 1817, future historian and diplomat George Bancroft had graduated from Harvard and was heading to Germany for further study. Attending a school at the bottom of the rung was his future rival, author William Gilmore Simms of South Carolina, who became an avid proponent of slavery and secession. Sometime in February of 1818, Freddy Bailey was born into slavery in Maryland. If that name isn’t familiar, it’s because he later assumed the name Frederick Douglass after becoming a fugitive in Massachusetts in 1838. Douglass soon made a name for himself as a powerful orator for the cause of equality, both in America and on his famous 1846 visit to Britain, where English abolitionists purchased his freedom legally.

Union is timely and thought-provoking, accomplishing much more than a static history. In the following years, both Douglass and Bancroft met with Lincoln. These sections are some of the most powerful of the book. (It was Bancroft who asked Lincoln to write out a copy of the Gettysburg Address, now considered the definitive version and preserved in the Library of Congress.) While Douglass pressed Lincoln for equality, Simms and others in the South set forth to find ways “to dispossess” formerly enslaved people, wrenching efforts at reconstruction away from the federal government. As the narrative moves into Reconstruction and beyond, Woodard focuses on two other figures: Woodrow Wilson, who influenced the creation of a federal government that “actively resisted making diversity an official part of American life,” and Frederick Jackson Turner, a scholar best known for his “frontier thesis,” tracing the role of westward expansion in shaping American values and democracy. This choice of narrative structure makes for a fascinating journey through history. However, given the centurylong time frame, chapter titles and defined sections might have added welcome context. It’s also worth noting that not much attention is paid to women’s contributions. In the end, though, Union is timely and thought-provoking, accomplishing much more than a static history. In an author’s note dated December 2019, Woodard writes that several paths lie before us and that “the survival of the United States is at stake in the choices we make about which one to follow.” —Deborah Hopkinson


feature | summertime romps

It’s romp season Times are tough, and you may find your spirits in need of a lift. These books score a perfect 10 on the romp-o-meter, in case your summer could use a heaping dose of full-throttle fun.

Gatecrasher

The Hungover Games

Action Park

Society journalism—that is, the gossip pages—doesn’t carry the same gravitas as other areas of journalism. That might change with Gatecrasher (Simon & Schuster, $27, 9781982128838). Author Ben Widdicombe, a former gossip reporter, shares lessons about the world’s wealthiest people gleaned from attending Academy Awards parties, lunches at Elaine’s and weddings at Mar-a-Lago for the past two decades. Widdicombe worked at three of the biggest outlets in gossip: Page Six (New York Post), Rush & Malloy (New York Daily News) and TMZ. Gatecrasher could have been just a dishy memoir about the sex tapes, prison sentences and infidelities of A-listers and the upper crust. And yes, there is plenty of dirt in these pages. However, Gatecrasher’s strength is in its thoughtful cultural critique of celebrity and wealth, and the media’s symbiotic relationship to both. Widdicombe delivers some uncomfortable home truths about American cultural appetites. Take, for instance, his assertion that Paris Hilton is the “most culturally influential person in twenty-first-century America.” Surely that’s incorrect. It must be Beyoncé or Bob Dylan or Oprah or . . . well, anyone but a hotel heiress who made a sex tape. Yet it makes perfect sense when Widdicombe spells it out: Hilton’s shameless willingness to cash in on being a wealthy person paved the way for everything from “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” to the Trumps. “A gossip culturalist understands how the trashy stuff connects to the bigger picture, and that we ignore it at our peril,” he writes. Whether you’re a student of US Weekly or cultural studies, Gatecrasher manages to be fun, frothy and just the #inspo you need to topple the bourgeoisie. —Jessica Wakeman

British writer Sophie Heawood was living her dream, working as a journalist covering the entertainment industry in LA. She wrote breezy celebrity profiles, went out every night and came home to her tiny Sunset Boulevard apartment. Then she unexpectedly became pregnant by a man who emphatically did not want to be a father. In the hilarious and intimate The Hungover Games (Little, Brown, $27, 9780316499064), she chronicles her bumpy journey from womanabout-town to single parent. Heawood relies on her group of friends (whom she calls her “holy congregation”) and her loving yet judgmental parents as she returns to London to have her baby. She finds

Do you think helmets are for wimps and seat belts are for suckers? Is following rules something other people do? If your answer is “Hell, yeah!” then you would’ve loved Action Park, a 35-acre New Jersey amusement park that provided dangerous entertainment for 20 crowded, wild summers beginning in 1978. Gene Mulvihill was the charismatic, impulsive, creative, law-avoiding, retail magnate, millionaire founder, and Andy Mulvihill, who wrote Action Park (Penguin, $17, 9780143134510) with journalist Jake Rossen, is his son. When Andy was 13, his dad came up with a way to monetize his Vernon Valley/Great Gorge ski property in the warm months: He was going to be “the Walt Disney of New Jersey.” The Alpine Slide was the park’s main attraction in its debut 1978 summer, and people flocked to the mountain to try it. Speeding 2,700 feet down a winding track, riders perched in a small cart with a steering rod and iffy brakes. There were no helmets, and thrill-seekers were likely to fly off the track into the woods. Was it dangerous? Definitely. Did people love it? Absolutely. The park hosted about a million people per year over its two decades, which saw the introduction of additional high-risk attractions like the Speed Slide (100-foot drop + 45 mph = actual enema) and the Wave Pool (25 water rescues daily). Andy recalls his years at the park—during which he went from laborer to reluctant ride tester to lifeguard to manager— with a mix of fondness and frustration, pride and disbelief. It’s indeed amazing that Gene essentially did whatever he wanted for nearly 20 years. Not even countless injuries and six deaths at the park, plus a 1980s indictment for insurance fraud, could put him out of business for long. Action Park is a fascinating up-close portrait of an eccentric father and gonzo businessman who angered loads of people and was beloved by even more. And it’s a nostalgic chronicle of a place that was horrible or wonderful, depending on your perspective—“a place that, by all rights, should never have existed.” —Linda M. Castellitto

By Ben Widdicombe

By Sophie Heawood

a funky house in a neighborhood affectionately known as Piss Alley, a home with “a bench where you could sit and inhale some of East London’s less aggressive pollution, because there was a house three doors down that had managed to plant a tree.” Like so many new mothers, Heawood is flooded with love, hormones and responsibility. She’s a fantastically funny and unapologetic writer and is candid about the weirdly overlapping bouts of joy and boredom that come with parenting. In a just-between-us tone, she shares her birth story, the “ghost that sat on my shoulder” of the baby’s father who couldn’t commit and what it’s like to venture out in the dating world while still nursing a baby. The Hungover Games is by and about a single mom, but Heawood’s story of finding love where you least expect it is universal. —Amy Scribner

By Andy Mulvihill

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feature | class of 2020

most likely to become First-time YA authors and seasoned veterans

FRESHMEN A refugee and a princess find themselves on a romantic, dangerous collision course in A Song of Wraiths and Ruin (Balzer + Bray, $18.99, 9780062891495), a West Africa-­ inspired fantasy. Brown raises the stakes by exploring how we all have a responsibility to right the wrongs of injustice. —Luis G. Rendon

What do you hope readers will love about A Song of Wraiths and Ruin? The protagonists represent characters I wish I’d gotten to read when I was growing up. Their struggles are informed by the emotional roller coaster of my teen years, so I hope readers see themselves in these characters’ lows and triumphs. How did you feel when you found out you were going to be published? I got the call when I was living in Japan; my agent called me at 5 a.m. to break the news, and I was so delirious with sleep that I was half-convinced I was dreaming. As a black immigrant, the thought that I could actually get anything traditionally published had always felt about as likely as me becoming the first person on Mars. Some days, I wake up and it still doesn’t feel real.

Lora Beth Johnson

© KAILAN SINDELAR

© ASHLEY HIRASUNA

Roseanne A. Brown

What are you most proud of in Goddess in the Machine? The dialect of some of the characters is my own rendition of a futuristic English, based on trends in linguistic evolution. It was difficult to develop and a challenge to write in, but it’s been amazing to experience early readers using it to communicate with me. A year from now, what impact do you hope your novel will have made on readers? It would be cool if readers were using my futuristic dialect in casual conversation! I also hope the book helps readers realize the power of their words—the way that language literally creates and re-creates the world around us.

What do you hope readers will love about A Sky Painted Gold? Setting the book in the 1920s meant that I could go all out on the clothes and the music and the parties. It’s decadent, not just in the Gatsby-­esque sense of the word, but in the pleasure it takes in small things, in warm seas and moonlit swims and the whisper of a silk dress. How did you feel when you found out you were going to be published? Stunned. I’d had the idea for such a long time, and it really is an amalgamation of all of my favorite things. I knew I would want to read it, but it’s a quiet book in a lot of ways—delicate, maybe a little old-fashioned— so I wasn’t sure anyone would want to publish it.

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Lori M. Lee

© PRETTYGEEKY PHOTOGRAPHY

© ASHLEY HIRASUNA

Laura Wood

In the summer of 1929, Lou Trevelyan feels hemmed in by her small Cornwall town, under pressure to grow up and settle down, until she is swept into the intoxicating, glamorous world of the wealthy Cardew siblings. Wood creates an atmosphere in A Sky Painted Gold (Random House, $17.99, 9780593127223) that readers can dive into headfirst. Lou’s whole world is tinted with an undercurrent of magic. —Sarah Welch

Andra wakes up after a long journey to a new planet and slowly puts together a horrifying truth: She’s been asleep for hundreds of years longer than she should have been. Goddess in the Machine (Razorbill, $18.99, 9781984835925) offers a vision of how society, technology and language will be transformed over time that’s thoughtful and inventive but never weighs down the emotional urgency of Andra’s plight. —Annie Metcalf

When Sirscha’s best friend, Saengo, is killed in battle and Sirscha unexpectedly resurrects her, the awakening of Sirscha’s magical powers forces the two to undertake a dangerous journey to the Dead Wood and its ruler, the ancient and mysterious Spider King. The horrors faced by the heroines of Forest of Souls (Page Street, $18.99, 9781624149245) echo their inner conflicts as they confront terrifying spirits and bloody battles as well as fear, prejudice and loss. —Tami Orendain

What do you hope readers will love about Forest of Souls? I want the story to linger inside readers. I hope they will love the friendship between Sirscha and Saengo. It was really important to me to portray a friendship between girls that was unconditional and sweet but also real and complex. I hope that Sirscha’s path toward self-acceptance resonates as well. When did you know you wanted to be a writer? I wanted to be a writer from a very early age. I’ve always loved stories because they hold a very specific escapist kind of magic. Writing was my way of claiming that magic for myself.


your new favorite author

feature | class of 2020

alike reflect on their creative journeys.

sophomores Liara Tamani

In the small town where her mom grew up, Margot uncovers darkness lurking in the poisonous roots of her family tree. Whip-smart and suspenseful, Burn Our Bodies Down (Delacorte, $18.99, 9780525645627) builds to a fantastically unsettling resolution. —Sharon Verbeten

What do you hope readers will love about Burn Our Bodies Down? I hope they’ll love getting to hang out in the town of Phalene. It was a joy to create this run-down farming town in the middle of nowhere, full of secrets and creepy cornfields. How was writing your second book different than your first book? Burn Our Bodies Down was a more difficult book to construct. With Wilder Girls, I took great care to cut my characters off from the world, which meant I could bring in speculative elements without having to consider any response from law enforcement or the media, but Burn operates on a larger scale and interacts with the world around it, which was entirely new to me.

© SHAHARA BRAND

© HENRIETTE LAZARIDIS

Rory Power

Carli and Rex have promising basketball careers ahead of them, but their whirlwind romance is challenged by loss, grief and the pressure to succeed. All the Things We Never Knew (Greenwillow, $18.99, 9780062656919) offers a raw, honest portrait of the bond between two teens on and off the court. —Olivia Rhee

What are you most proud of in All the Things We Never Knew? I’m most proud that Carli and Rex’s love feels real. Experiencing love for the first time is such an overwhelming sensation. I remember feeling like every ounce of my teenage body was buzzing with it. But knowing the feeling and putting it into words are different. I had to dive deep into their psyches and find language to articulate the very specific love between Rex and Carli. What’s one of your favorite things you’ve heard from readers since your first book, Calling My Name, was published? Many teens have written me to say Calling My Name inspired them to be themselves, and every time, I’m filled with so much gratitude.

upperclassmen After her parents are murdered by the king’s army, Gul’s desire for vengeance could destroy the kingdom—and with it, everyone she has come to care about. Hunted by the Sky (FSG, $18.99, 9780374313098) is a medieval India-inspired fantasy that’s beautiful, brutal, fresh and feminist. —Kimberly Giarratano

What are you most proud of in Hunted by the Sky? It’s in a completely different genre! I spent 10 years focusing on contemporary fiction. I’d dabble in fantasy, but I never had the courage to write a whole novel—until now. What themes have you carried forward from your previous books into this new novel? Love and courage are common themes in all my novels, and they’re usually explored through flawed main characters. Gul is a fierce girl who loves deeply, but her mission of avenging her parents’ murders sets off a chain of events with disastrous consequences. Love and courage bring out the best and the worst in us, even when we are aiming for great things.

Rachel Lynn Solomon

© SABREEN KAKHANI

© NETTIE PHOTOGRAPHY

Tanaz Bhathena

On the last day of high school, Rowan is determined to beat her nemesis, Neil, in the annual senior class scavenger hunt. Today Tonight Tomorrow (Simon Pulse, $18.99, 9781534440241) is a puzzle, a nostalgic reflection on a rite of passage and a delicious romance. —Jill Ratzan

What do you hope readers will love about Today Tonight Tomorrow? The slow burn of the rivals-to-lovers relationship! Rowan begins the book despising Neil, but over the course of 24 hours, they share secrets and fears and a slow dance in an empty library. “Just kiss already” is what I hope readers will think as they turn the pages. What themes have you carried forward from your previous books into this new novel? Every female protagonist I write is ambitious and full of yearning, wanting something just out of reach. Rowan wants to write romance novels, a passion she hides because she’s been judged in the past. Her story is about gaining the confidence to embrace what she loves without shame.

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q&a | deb caletti

The bad and the beautiful Critically acclaimed YA author Deb Caletti explores the dark consequences of treating people like objects.

Can you talk about the unique structure of Girl, Unframed? The format of the book is, very literally, Sydney speaking to someone else. I thought her story would be most powerfully told using her own voice, confessional and intimate. The first person limits you to what a character has observed or overheard, but that sense of being a witness felt right. Keeping each line as conversational as possible meant reading a lot of it aloud as I went along. Did any real-life events inform the story? This book was the biggest, strangest, most uneasy merging of truth and my subconscious—more so than anything Girl, Unframed I’ve written. Girl, Unframed is loosely Simon Pulse, $18.99 based on a true story: the murder of 9781534426979 Johnny Stompanato, the husband of actress Lana Turner, by Lana’s daughMystery ter, Cheryl Crane, in 1958. What actually happened that night is still a mystery. Lana’s daughter was a teen at the time, and Lana, who was one of the biggest Hollywood stars back then, was a sex symbol/femme fatale. I’d kept an article about it in my “book ideas” file for years, and finally, the need to write it rose to the surface. But it was only after I started writing that I realized why Lana’s news clip had been in my file all those years, and why I made the creative choices I did. The story of Girl, Unframed has connections to my own family history I hadn’t been consciously aware of when I began. Both sides of my family have ties to San Francisco, but on my mother’s side, right during Lana’s time, there was criminal activity, dangerous relationships—and intergenerational trauma and narcissistic beauty, too. Writing can be weirdly and uncomfortably insistent like that. The relationship between Sydney and Lila is central to Girl, Unframed. How does it change over the course of the book, and why? What drew you to explore a relationship like theirs? I wanted to explore familial trauma, internalized misogyny and the way that people who are objectified can go on to treat others like objects. And as with all of my books, I was drawn to those themes out of a need to understand how they have played out in my own life. In my family history, going back

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many generations, ideas of beauty as currency, beauty as power, beauty as the only thing you had to wield in the world led to a nest of complications with sometimes dark ramifications. Many women and their daughters (and sons!) deal with the effects of this legacy. I hope readers will understand that objectification can come from many—and sometimes unexpected—people, and for very complicated reasons. Sydney eventually has to set her own firm boundary. I loved the way the novel uses real works of art to prompt Sydney’s evolving perspective on how women are both objectified and commodified. Did writing Girl, Unframed change the way you look at or think about art, or about particular works of art? I love art and art history, and so I was already familiar with many of the paintings and the backgrounds of the artists I mention. I did learn new details, though. I often still think about a fact about Willem de Kooning that I mention in the book: When he was painting women, he’d often start with the mouth. He’d cut a woman’s lips from a cigarette ad in a magazine, and then paste them on a canvas and paint around them. He didn’t know why he did it. But it’s haunting to me, the way the mouth was such a problem for him. Sydney imagines some life-changing “IT” that’s going to mark the beginning of her adult life. Do you remember feeling this way as a teen? Oh, I definitely remember feeling that way. It’s such a great feeling—expansive and hopeful, the knowledge that your whole life is stretched in front of you, and that maybe something is about to magically arrive to make you different and somehow larger. I wanted to show the evolution of that feeling, how the world can bang it up and bruise it, but the best “IT,” your own personal power, is there all along. I wanted Sydney, especially as a young woman, to recognize that she was already large, and larger still after the things she survives. Something Sydney begins to navigate and confront in this book is the tension between the shame and pride she feels when others sexualize or objectify her. What advice would you give someone who is navigating these complicated emotions? This is so hard. I’m not sure if I have even resolved those feelings myself. But I would want to tell them that their body and the decisions they make about their body are theirs. Whole, and beautiful, and theirs. —Norah Piehl © SUSAN DOUPE

Sydney Reilly, nearly 16, is reluctantly spending the summer in a San Francisco beach-side mansion with her mother, Lila, a once famous actress whose star has dimmed, and Lila’s latest boyfriend, Jake, a realtor-­turnedart dealer who is both charismatic and controlling. Each chapter of Girl, Unframed opens with an excerpt from an evidence list, suggesting criminal stakes to the story, but Caletti keeps tensions high and readers guessing as to the crime, the victim and the perpetrator until the very end.

Visit BookPage.com to read an expanded version of this Q&A and our starred review of Girl, Unframed.


reviews | children’s

H Something to Say By Lisa Moore Ramée

Middle Grade Jenae is content in her social solitude, having already realized that “the world is full of people . . . who think fitting in is more important than being yourself.” However, her first day at John Wayne Junior High presents a challenge when her teacher announces that students must pair up to debate in front of the class. Something to Say (Balzer + Bray, $16.99, 9780062836717, ages 8 to 12), like Jenae herself, is quietly commanding. Lisa Moore Ramée’s breezy chapters fly by as she thoughtfully explores friendship, activism and other serious issues. The heart of the story is the budding friendship between Jenae and Aubrey, a new boy in school and her partner in the debate challenge. They bond over a fictional superhero but are

otherwise total opposites. Aubrey is loud and energetic, and he couldn’t be more excited about the debate assignment. Aubrey helps Jenae navigate her worries about her brother, whose athletic career has been sidelined by injury, and Jenae begins to appreciate the value of their friendship. But Jenae’s life becomes more complicated when her beloved grandfather, Gee, has a stroke, and her absentee father lets her down again.

Meanwhile, Jenae’s community is deciding whether to change her school’s name because of white supremacist comments made by the school’s namesake, an actor whom Gee admires. Community leaders want to rename it to honor Sylvia Mendez, the girl at the center of Mendez v. Westminster, a 1947 school desegregation case that set a precedent used in Brown v. Board of Education. Ramée weaves this conflict into the story skillfully, avoiding didacticism while acknowledging why many people resist change. As Jenae discovers her own powerful voice, she must overcome her fear of using it in order to spark positive change in her community. The book’s message about the importance of righting the wrongs of history and taking a stand for what you believe will resonate loud and clear. —Alice Cary

meet  JESSIE SIMA How would you describe your book?

What books did you enjoy as a child?

Who has been the biggest influence on your work?

What one thing would you like to learn to do?

Who was your childhood hero?

What message would you like to send to young readers?

In Jessie Sima’s Jules vs. the Ocean (Simon & Schuster, $17.99, 9781534441682, ages 4 to 8), Jules is determined to impress her big sister by building the most excellent sandcastle ever, but the ocean keeps washing her efforts away. It’s a charming story of determination with a beachy twist perfect for summer reading. Sima is the author-­ illustrator of four previous picture books, including Not Quite Narwhal. She grew up in New Jersey and lives outside New York City.

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