Bookmarks selections: staff favorites from among the most highly rated books in this issue.LITERARY Page 29 **** The Family Man By Elinor Lipman Lipman returns with another comedic novel populated by deep, charming characters. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Washington Post "Lipman mesmerized me. she hypnotized me." LITERARY Page 31 **** The Cradle By Patrick Somerville The Cradle is a moving debut about the meaning of family and its power to heal. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] New York Times "It would be better to recommend The Cradle, a deeply gratifying modern fable, than to reveal too much about its plot." LITERARY Page 34 **** The Little Stranger By Sarah Waters Set in post--World War II Britain, Waters's new novel is an ominous and spooky tale of ghosts and family secrets. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Seattle Times "If you want a ghost story that creeps up your spine, The Little Stranger delivers." LITERARY Page 37 **** The Missing By Tim Gautreaux After World War I, Sam works as a security guard in New Orleans. But when a little girl is kidnapped under his watch, he sets out to find her. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] NY Times Book Review "Gautreaux is an old-fashioned story teller, a spinner of yarns with a moral." LITERARY Page 39 **** Sag Harbor By Colson Whitehead Benji is one of the few African Americans at his Manhattan prep school, but he spends his summers in a mostly black neighborhood on Long Island. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Boston Globe "It is Whitehead's most enjoyable book--warm and funny, carefully observed, and beautifully written, studded with small moments of pain and epiphany." CRIME Page 45 **** The Scarecrow By Michael Connelly Journalist Jack McEvoy reports on one more high-profile case in an attempt to save his job. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Houston Chronicle "His fans--of which I am one--will count this as among his best books, as was The Poet." CRIME Page 46 **** The Manual of Detection By Jedediah Berry This PI novel is also an absurdist work of art. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Wall Street Journal "The Manual of Detection might not follow the detective-fiction manual, but there is nothing mysterious about the appeal of this inventive, outrageous and often amusing dream-within-a-dream." SF Page 52 **** Cyberabad Days Return to the India of 2047 By Ian Mcdonald This future India is steeped in technological and cultural transformation. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Sci Fi Wire "Ambitiously extrapolated and beautifully written, Cyberabad Days doesn't just demonstrate the unique virtues of SF, it makes them a pure pleasure for readers." GENERAL NF Page 54 **** Columbine By Dave Cullen Cullen spent the last ten years working to record an accurate record of the tragedy at Columbine High School in 1999. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Salon.com "I was blown away by the pacing and story-telling he mastered in Columbine, a disturbing, inspiring work of art." HISTORY Page 60 ***** The Third Reich at War By Richard J. Evans In the third book in his trilogy, Evans brings nuance and clarity to the all-too-familiar details of the final years of Germany under Nazi power. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Washington Post "This is history in the grand style, the kind of large-scale narrative that few historians dare to write." |
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