22 Britannia Road
Angelology
The Astronomer: A Novel of Suspense
An Atlas of Impossible Longing by Anuradha Roy . “It's a family saga set in India in the early part of the last century. Men, women, love, lust, struggle, families, the meaning of work... all tackled with a mystical slant. Like very much.”
Belong to Me
Between Here and April
Burnt Mountain
Summer and the City: A Carrie Diaries Novel by Candace Bushnell. "For those of us still mourning the termination of Sex and the City, these two prequels help satiate the grieving process. They are light and perfect for the beach. It is like an archeological dig into Carrie's life pre Sex in the City."
The City & The City
Clara and Mr. Tiffany
Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell. “Matryoshka dolls with one inside the other and then pulling back out to our original story. Mitchell is such a fantastic writer. As I would start each story I was thinking ‘damn, I was really getting into that other story - I don't care about a spoiled music student/reporter/old age home captive/futuristic clone/apocalyptic hillbilly’ but then I found myself caring very much about each of these new stories to the point where I was so frustrated when they would abruptly change to the next. Each story takes on a new voice and a new technique (journal, letters, interview, 3rd person and 1st) that give each a completely different feel and perspective from the previous story.”
Comfort & Joy
The Confession by John Grisham. “I hadn’t read a Grisham book since his first few, but the Washington Post surprised me by giving the Confession a good review. Plus I had occasion to be exposed to the particulars of the ‘Norfolk Four’ case and how coerced confessions of the sort depicted in this novel can so thoroughly corrupt justice. The book was very suspenseful with a fairly well crafted story, and I finished it in a day. It was also better written than I remember Grisham being (should I read something he's written in the past fifteen years?). The negative was that I felt clubbed over the head with his caricatures. The novel is “advocacy fiction” (I think I’m making up that phrase, but you know what I mean) -- everyone is either angel or devil, depending on which side they are on. The innocent are perfect and pure and the pro-capital punishment characters are either: 1) corrupt and evil (anyone in an official role) or 2) ignorant, vengeful Texas rubes (all the rest). Shades of gray might have helped him Grisham deliver his message more effectively. I kept thinking of Tom Wolfe's book, I am Charlotte Simmons, where characters were so gratuitously cruel as to lack credibility. But again ... I read it in a day, so it obviously made a perfect beach read.”
Eighteen Acres by Nicolle Wallace, former White House Communications Director. “A great ‘beach’ read. Nicolle did a great job, I thought. Couldn't put it down. Although, fiction, It's full of insider info on the workings of the White House from someone who's been there!”
Everything Changes
Family Album by Penelope Lively “About a family with 6 kids and all the dysfunction of growing up in a large family...a few plot twists that will remind you of the Schwarznegger love triangle.”
Fly Away Home by Jennifer Weiner “While I think Jennifer Weiner is a formulaic writer whose book endings are sooooo predictable, they still make for a great beach read. Family drama. Affairs. Rehab. Intricate relationships. And, an ending that might make you say 'oh, BARF' -- but it's still a good read, I promise.”
The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton “A woman discovers that her past may not be precisely what she thought it was. She travels from Australia to England to discover who she truly is (and to fall in love with a hunky gardener).”
Freedom by Jonathan Franzan – “SO good! Characters are so good, normal flawed people making mistakes, giving into temptations they should not; long book but worth it… “ … “This work of fiction from the author of the bestseller The Corrections offers a bittersweet 'commentary' highlighting the contradiction between the ideals and realities of ‘freedom.’ It follows a family in the 2000's as each member wrestles with the decisions they make for themselves in order to 'be free'. Sometimes freedom looks more like 'escape from' rather than a 'pursuit of'. It's long, but hard to put down. Sometimes shockingly explicit, it attempts to put reality into a stark focus, with all of the raw elements that challenge idealism. Perfect for long summer afternoons on the beach.”
The Girl with Glass Feet by Ali Shaw. “An adventuresome girl returns to a cold island that she once vacationed on to try to find a cure for her feet, which are turning into glass. While there, she falls in love with an odd local man who helps her find other native islanders who might have the power to save her. There is a mystical, sad feel to the characters and the book; one review calls it ‘dreamlike’ - a perfect description.”
Great House by Nicolas Krauss. A new novel by the author of History of Love, which was a top pick a couple of years ago. “Several stories entwined about different characters lives that does not wrap up neatly at the end.”
Groundswell
Hazard
The House at Riverton by Kate Morton “A filmmaker explores a dramatic murder at a vast English estate which took place 70 years ago. What new details will emerge? Who was sleeping with whom? Why did the family fall apart shortly after the murder? Who's the starlet and what's her story? [guilty pleasure book]” … “The House at Riverton and The Forbidden Garden both by Kate Morton (an Australian author) are turn of the century sagas, drama, romance, mystery, that kind of thing. It was a pleasant change after going through the 3 Stieg Larsson novels!”
How to Talk to a Widower by Jonathan Tropper. [Ed: Tropper’s This Is Where I Leave You
The Hundred-Foot Journey by Richard Morais. From Amazon: “Grandson of an entrepreneurial lunchbox deliveryman, Chef Hassan Haji tells of his rise to culinary success in Paris via Bombay, London, and a small town in the French Alps. With a fond, over-the-shoulder regard, he presents the lively family members, friends, and former foes who shaped him as a young chef, leading him to face his destiny and realize that cooking is not only in his heritage but also in his blood and bones. The novel floats along a bounty of vivid food imagery, a twisty-turny river of dishes Indian, French, and everything in between. … Bound to please anyone who has ever been happily coaxed to eat beyond the point of fullness, overwhelmed by the magnetism of just one more bite.”
Imperium: A Novel of Ancient Rome
The Informationist: A Thriller
I Think I Love You
Invisible
Leaving Unknown by Kerry Reichs. Kerry is a local Washington author. Her first novel, The Best Day of Someone Else's Life
Left Neglected
The Man in the Wooden Hat by Jane Gardam “This is the same story as Old Filth (see below), but told from the perspective of Filth’s wife, Betty, concentrating on their courtship and marriage and then their final days in Dorset, ‘revealing a backstory of secret trysts and desires that each concealed from the other during their long, childless marriage.’ The two books are marvelous together.”
Matterhorn: A Novel of the Vietnam War
My Name is Memory
My Sisters Made of Light
Never Knowing
New York
An Object of Beauty by Steve Martin. "The plot revolves around a young woman climbing up through the art world in New York. Martin has a fascinating way of developing characters that are completely unique. It felt current and alive." (Is there nothing Steve Martin can't do?)
That Old Cape Magic by Richard Russo. From the Amazon review: “…a novel of deep introspection and every family feeling imaginable, with a middle-aged man confronting his parents and their failed marriage, his own troubled one, his daughter’s new life and, finally, what it was he thought he wanted and what in fact he has. The storytelling is flawless throughout, moments of great comedy and even hilarity alternating with others of rueful understanding and heart-stopping sadness, and its ending is at once surprising, uplifting and unlike anything this Pulitzer Prize winner has ever written.”
Old Filth
Past Imperfect
The Rebellion of Jane Clarke by Sally Gunning. “An historical fiction based on Jane Clark who is an independent young women living during the Revolutionary War in Cape Cod. After refusing to marry a man selected by her father, she is sent to live in Boston and take care of an elderly aunt. During her stay, she meets Henry Knox, John Adams and a host of other Revolutionary characters who all play a role in Boston’s history as well as help Jane make important decisions which show her courage, wisdom and independence. I personally loved the conflict between Jane and what she felt was right verses what was expected of her and the customs of the time. I also loved the emphasis placed on the important role letter writing had during this time frame. And what a ‘hell hole’ Boston was during this very tumultuous time. I read this is two nights … I could not put it down!”
Red Hook Road
Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier. "Tracy is a local author who grew up in Bethesda and went to BCC. She became famous for Girl with A Pearl Earring. I enjoyed her latest historic novel based on a female paleontologist and a female fossil collector in 18th century England- a time when women weren’t even allowed to study science at college. It takes place in Lyme Regis on the coast and is based on the true story of a working class girl who makes some of the most important discoveries of dinosaurs ever but is used and dismissed by the male scientists. The fossil collector explores the tension of science versus religion – how can dinosaurs exist if they pre-date the creation of the world as described in the bible."
Rules of Civility by Amor Towles (another from my "inside publishing" pal – release date 7/26/2011) “About the Book: A sophisticated and entertaining debut novel about an irresistible young woman with an uncommon sense of purpose. Set in New York City in 1938, Rules of Civility tells the story of a watershed year in the life of an uncompromising twenty-five-year- old named Katey Kontent. Armed with little more than a formidable intellect, a bracing wit, and her own brand of cool nerve, Katey embarks on a journey from a Wall Street secretarial pool through the upper echelons of New York society in search of a brighter future.”
Sisterhood Everlasting: A Novel (The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants) by Ann Brashares (also from friend in publishing – release date 6/14/2011) “About the Book: Return to the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants . . . ten years later. From #1 New York Times bestselling author Ann Brashares comes the welcome return of the characters whose friendship became a touchstone for a generation. Now Tibby, Lena, Carmen, and Bridget have grown up, starting their lives on their own. And though the jeans they shared are long gone, the sisterhood is everlasting.”
Skippy Dies by Paul Murray. “I don't think I'm spoiling anything by saying that Skippy Dies in the very first chapter during a doughnut eating contest with his boarding school room mate, Ruprecht Van Doren. Paul Murray then turns back the clock give us 600+ pages of the events leading up to that moment as well as the its aftermath. Murray clearly remembers what its like to be 14 years old. Skippy and his friends are obsessed with sex, bodily functions, sex, girls, quantum physics and more sex. Some of the funniest moments (and there are plenty of them) come from the boys' banter, flammable flatulence, and finding sex in the most unlikely places (Robert Frost's The Road Less Traveled will really never be the same again for me - but will forever make me smile!). But these kids are also naive, innocent, pretending to be tougher and more worldly than they are and the pain of trying to fit in, get a girl, and be cool all come through with humor and heartbreak. 14 is all about trying on adulthood without knowing your size and style and Murray nails it.”
The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement
by David Brooks. “It's fiction with a lot of non fiction factoids about our generation. Sort of a social study of the educated class which he is always good at pegging well. It's an interesting read and helps you step back and observe what's going on around us and how much intuition influences how we behave.”
The Submission by Amy Waldman (from my publishing insider – release date 8/2/2011) “About the Book: Claire Harwell hasn’t settled into grief; events haven’t let her. Cool, eloquent, raising two fatherless children, Claire has emerged as the most visible of the widows who became a potent political force in the aftermath of the catastrophe. She longs for her husband, but she has found her mission: she sits on a jury charged with selecting a fitting memorial for the victims of the attack. Of the thousands of anonymous submissions that she and her fellow jurors examine, one transfixes Claire: a garden on whose walls the names of the dead are inscribed. But when the winning envelope is opened, they find the designer is Mohammad Khan—Mo—an enigmatic Muslim-American who, it seems, feels no need to represent anyone’s beliefs except his own. When the design and its creator are leaked, a media firestorm erupts, and Claire finds herself trying to balance principles against emotions amid escalating tensions about the place of Islam in America.”
Tales from the Yoga Studio by Rain Mitchell. “Truthfully, I picked this up because in the nano second that I scanned the cover, I saw Anita Diamant's (The Red Tent) name, thinking she was the author... Only when I got home did I realize she just provided a promotional quote. That being said, the book is a great summer read. It reminded me of reading "Something Borrowed," in that it's a quick light read. Very LA, although perhaps it could be very DC or very NYC. “
The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet by David Mitchell. “Mitchell can take spit globules, gout, puss, blood letting, beatings, anal exploratories, overall bad hygiene, and organized rape and turn it into poetry. I'll admit that the idea of a historical novel set in a 1799 Dutch trading post off the coast of Japan didn't readily appeal to me. And the dialect of the first section (something like garbled cockney that Mitchell calls ‘bygonese’ in an interview in the back of the book) was a little difficult to process at first. Give it time and let yourself absorb Mitchell's deliberate language and vivid imagery. You are in the hands of a master storyteller. A Thousand Autumns pulls in elements of romance, action, political thriller and high seas adventure. His characters are varied and complex - even minor characters have multi-dimensions that add depth to the story. By the end of the book I was fully invested, cheering and mourning the various outcomes of each character's fate.”
The Toss of a Lemon
Under Heaven
The Weird Sisters
The White Woman on the Green Bicycle by Monique Roffey “Roffey beautifully delivers Trinidad - first in its modern day state and then in its various revolutionary phases over several decades of political turmoil. In the middle of it all are Sabine and George Harwood. George takes a position in an international company and falls in love with the island. His wife Sabine agrees to the initial three year commitment but finds herself trapped by the island's hold on her husband as well as herself. They arrive in Trinidad just as a new political force is taking over the landscape and Sabine becomes obsessed with this new voice of change...only to become disillusioned by his eventual empty promises and the complex hierarchy of race and heritage that permeates every relationship.”
A Young Wife by Pam Lewis (Publishing insider recommendation – release date 6/14/2011) “About the Book: When fifteen-year-old Minke van Aisma travels to Amsterdam to care for the dying wife of an older, wealthy man named Sander DeVries, she has no idea what awaits her. Within hours of his wife's death, Sander proposes marriage, and within days the couple sets sail for the burgeoning oil fields of Argentina. But the future that seemed so bright takes a dark turn the morning their son, Zef, is kidnapped. Dire circumstances dictate that Sander immigrate to New York at once, leaving Minke little choice but to wait for their new baby's arrival, follow Sander to America, and abandon her firstborn. What follows is a triumphant turn-of-the-century saga of love, betrayal, and redemption that takes readers from the opulent life in Amsterdam during the 1900s to rough life on the Argentine coast to the impoverished life of a recent immigrant in New York.”
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