Reviews

The Book of Happenstance – Ingrid Winterbach

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If there is something both moving and reassuring about looking back to the classics, to those texts, paintings, and sculptures of beauty that both precede and will surpass our lives and at the same time speak to us at a human level, what then do we make of the shell?

Love’s Work – Gillian Rose

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It was in New York, in an intellectual and cultural ferment consisting of rock music, contemporary German philosophy, LSD, homosexuality, and Abstract Expressionism, that Rose began her Lehrjar – her real apprenticeship.

American Masculine – Shann Ray

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The Montana men of Shann Ray’s debut collection American Masculine: Stories drink and hunt, wrestle steers and reckon with fathers who beat their wives. They are Northern Cheyenne, Crow, Assiniboine-Sioux, and white. They are men shouldering troubled pasts.

The White Woman on the Green Bicycle – Monique Raffey

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Encompassing fifty years, The White Woman on the Green Bicycle introduces readers to the birth and early development of independence in Trinidad through the life story of an expatriate couple who arrived as colonialism left.

By Nightfall – Michael Cunningham

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It’s a wonderful deception, and in turns sly and elegant, with language that is delicate without being florid, Cunningham transforms what appears to be a book about painters and curators into a treatise on the wingspan of the young and the disappointment of the aging.

The London Train – Tessa Hadley

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Each character struggles with the existential questions they find themselves forced into: being only children and losing a parent; facing romantic commitments and romantic upheavals; finding themselves with children or childless.

Daughters of the Revolution – Carolyn Cooke

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This novel brought back a nostalgic draft of the feeling I associate with discovering literature, when reading was a process of constant blossoming, feeling like my mind was being tended by the deceptively gentle hand of a master of immense talent and wisdom. It’s not a feeling I have very often as an adult reader, and it’s a gift.

My New American Life – Francine Prose

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Francine Prose’s latest novel of near-realism, My New American Life, chronicles its heroine Lula’s attempts to find her niche as an Albanian immigrant in a land of dreams: New Jersey.

Ten Thousand Saints – Eleanor Henderson

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The book is less hagiography than Peter Pan, a band of orphans fighting their own way through a land of make-believe

The Great Night – Chris Adrian

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Chris Adrian’s new novel THE GREAT NIGHT is a lively dramatization of the grief that attends love and its loss and the complicated ties that bind the present to the past.