| New
Fiction |
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The Time Traveller’s
Wife, by Audrey Niffenegger (MacAdam/Cage, $25.00)
Audrey Niffenegger's innovative debut, The
Time Traveler's Wife, is the story of Clare, a beautiful art student,
and Henry, an adventuresome librarian, who have known each other
since Clare was six and Henry was thirty-six, and were married when
Clare was twenty-three and Henry thirty-one. Impossible but true,
because Henry is one of the first people diagnosed with Chrono-Displacement
Disorder: periodically his genetic clock resets and he finds himself
misplaced in time, pulled to moments of emotional gravity in his
life, past and future. His disappearances are spontaneous, his experiences
unpredictable, alternately harrowing and amusing. The
Time Traveler's Wife depicts the effects of time travel on Henry
and Clare's marriage and their passionate love for each other
as the story unfolds from both points of view. Clare and Henry
attempt to live normal lives, pursuing familiar goals –
steady jobs, good friends, children of their own. All of this
is threatened by something they can neither prevent nor control,
making their story intensely moving and entirely unforgettable. |
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The
Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini (Riverhead, $24.95, 1573222453)
The unforgettable, heartbreaking story of
the unlikely friendship between a wealthy boy and the son of his
father's servant, The Kite Runner is a beautifully crafted novel
set in a country that is in the process of being destroyed. It is
about the power of reading, the price of betrayal, and the possibility
of redemption, and it is also about the power of fathers over sons-their
love, their sacrifices, their lies.
The first Afghan novel to be written in English, The Kite Runner
tells a sweeping story of family, love, and friendship against a
backdrop of history that has not been told in fiction before, bringing
to mind the large canvases of the Russian writers of the nineteenth
century. But just as it is old-fashioned in its narration, it is
contemporary in its subject –the devastating history of Afghanistan
over the last thirty years. As emotionally gripping as it is tender,
The Kite Runner is an unusual and powerful debut. |
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The
Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, by Mark Haddon (Doubleday,
$22.95, 0385509456)
Christopher John Francis Boone knows all the countries
of the world and their capitals and every prime number up to 7,057.
He relates well to animals but has no understanding of human emotions.
He cannot stand to be touched. Although gifted with a superbly logical
brain, Christopher is autistic. Everyday interactions and admonishments
have little meaning for him. Routine, order and predictability shelter
him from the messy, wider world. Then, at fifteen, Christopher’s
carefully constructed world falls apart when he finds his neighbor’s
dog, Wellington, impaled on a garden fork, and he is initially blamed
for the killing.
Christopher decides that he will track down the
real killer and turns to his favorite fictional character, the
impeccably logical Sherlock Holmes, for inspiration. But the investigation
leads him down some unexpected paths and ultimately brings him
face to face with the dissolution of his parents’ marriage.
As he tries to deal with the crisis within his own family, we
are drawn into the workings of Christopher’s mind.
And herein lies the key to the brilliance of Mark
Haddon’s choice of narrator: The most wrenching of emotional
moments are chronicled by a boy who cannot fathom emotion. The
effect is dazzling, making for a novel that is deeply funny, poignant,
and fascinating in its portrayal of a person whose curse and blessing
is a mind that perceives the world literally.
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the
Night-Time is one of the freshest debuts in years: a comedy, a
heartbreaker, a mystery story, a novel of exceptional literary
merit that is great fun to read. |
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Deafening,
by Frances Itani (Atlantic Monthly Press, $24.00, 0871139022)
Deafening is a tale of remarkable virtuosity
and power. At the age of five, Grania – the daughter of hardworking
hoteliers in small-town Ontario – emerges from a bout of scarlet
fever profoundly deaf, and is suddenly sealed off from the world
that was just beginning to open for her. Her mother cannot accept
her daughter's deafness, so Grania's indefatigable grandmother tries
to teach her language from the inside out. But when it becomes clear
that Grania can no longer thrive in the world of the hearing, her
family sends her to live at the Ontario School for the Deaf where
she learns sign language and speech. After graduation Grania stays
on to work at the school, and it is there that she meets Jim Lloyd,
a hearing man. In wonderment the two begin to create a new emotional
vocabulary that encompasses both sound and silence. But two weeks
after their wedding, Jim must leave to serve as a stretcher-bearer
on the blood-soaked battlefields of Flanders. During the war, Jim
and Grania's letters – both real and imagined – attempt
to sustain their intimacy, even while they are both pulled into
cataclysmic events that will alter the world forever. |
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The
Known World, by Edward P. Jones (Amistad Press, $24.95, 0060557540)
Henry Townsend, a black farmer, bootmaker, and former slave, has
a fondness for Paradise Lost and an unusual mentor – William
Robbins, perhaps the most powerful man in antebellum Virginia's
Manchester County. Under Robbins's tutelage, Henry becomes proprietor
of his own plantation – as well as of his own slaves. When
he dies, his widow, Caldonia, succumbs to profound grief, and things
begin to fall apart at their plantation: slaves take to escaping
under the cover of night, and families who had once found love beneath
the weight of slavery begin to betray one another. Beyond the Townsend
estate, the known world also begins to unravel: low-paid white patrollers
stand watch as slave "speculators" sell free black people
into slavery, and rumors of slave rebellions set white families
against slaves who have served them for years. An
ambitious, luminously written novel that ranges seamlessly between
the past and future and back again to the present, The Known World
weaves together the lives of freed and enslaved blacks, whites,
and Indians – and allows all of us a deeper understanding
of the enduring multidimensional world created by the institution
of slavery. |
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The
Pursuit of Alice Thrift, by Elinor Lipman (Random House, $23.95,
0679463135)
Meet poor Alice Thrift, surgical intern in
a Boston hospital, high of I.Q. but low in social graces. She doesn’t
mean to be acerbic, clinical, or painfully precise, but where was
she the day they taught Bedside Manner 101? Into Alice’s workaholic
and romantically challenged life comes Ray Russo, a purveyor of
fairground fudge, in need of rhinoplasty and well-heeled companionship,
not necessarily in that order. Is he a con man or a sincere suitor?
Good guy or bad? His well-engineered cruise into carnal waters introduces
Alice to a new and baffling concept, chemistry – and not of
the organic kind. Is it possible for a woman of science to cure
her own loneliness in the unsuitable arms of a parental nightmare?
Luckily, Leo Frawley, R.N., who has a high threshold for Alice’s
left-footed people skills, and Sylvie Schwartz, M.D., fellow resident
and woman of the world, take on the task of guiding Alice through
the narrow straits of her own no-rapport zone. |
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Four
Spirits, by Sena Jeter Nasland (Morrow, $26.95, 0066212383)
From the author of the national bestseller Ahab's Wife comes an
inspiring, brilliantly rendered new novel of the awakening conscience
of the South and of an entire nation.
Written with the same scope and emotional depth as her previous
award-winning novel, Four Spirits is set in Sena Jeter Naslund's
home city of Birmingham, Alabama, a city that in the 1960s was
known as Bombingham. Naslund brings to life this tumultuous time,
weaving together the lives of blacks and whites, civil rights
advocates and racists, and the events of peaceful protest and
violent repression, to create a tapestry of American social transformation.
Stella Silver is an idealistic, young white college student brought
up by her genteel, mannered aunts. She first witnesses the events
of the freedom movement from a safe distance but, along with her
friend Cat Cartwright, is soon drawn into the mounting conflagration.
Stella's and Cat's lives are forever altered by their new friendships
with other committed freedom fighters.
A student at a black college, Christine Taylor is inspired to
action by the examples of Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr.,
and the Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth. She courageously struggles
to balance her family responsibilities, education, and work with
the passions and dangers of the demonstrations. Her friend Gloria
Callahan, a gifted young cellist and descendant of a runaway slave,
tries to move beyond her personal shyness and family coziness
to enter a wider circle, including blacks and whites, men and
women, all involved with the protests. Lionel Parrish, teacher,
preacher, and peddler of funeral insurance, battles his own demons
of lust and self-preservation, while New York activist Jonathan
Green gives up a promising career as a pianist to work for racial
justice in the South.
These characters all add their voices
to the chorus that makes up this symphony of innocent children
and the mythic elderly, the devoutly religious and the skeptical
humanist, the wealthy and the poor, the city and the country.
Poignant and evocative, rich in historical detail, and filled
with the humanity that is the hallmark of Naslund's fiction, Four
Spirits is a compelling tale that transcends tragedy and evokes
redemptive triumph. |
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Stone
Garden, by Molly Moynahan (Morrow, $23.95, 0060544260)
A smart young woman making her way through the privileged terrain
of northeastern prep-school land, Alice McGuire is certain of her
world and her future – until the summer her best friend and
soul mate, Matthew Swan, vanishes on a trip to Mexico. Stunned,
Alice and the rest of the close-knit town that adored Matthew search
for answers. For Alice, the journey of heartbreak leads from everything
that is familiar to forbidden places and forgotten people who will
teach her about kindness and forgiveness: lessons that will open
her to new possibilities and unexpected hope.
Each night before I went to sleep I imagined exactly how his
hand felt in mine, the ring he inherited from his grandfather,
heavy, inside my palm. And I told him how much I loved him. Whispering
in the dark like when we were little and slept over at each other's
house, telling secrets until one of us dropped off the edge of
the night. ... That's what you do when you love someone: You hold
on tight and you don't forget anything.
With sensitivity, and astonishing realism,
Molly Moynahan skillfully unfolds a funny and devastating tale
of pain and courage, love and transcendence, honesty and memory.
Vividly wrought, deeply resonant, and told in a remarkable voice
that sparkles with wit and wisdom, Stone Garden is a splendid
triumph from an accomplished new writer. |
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The
Mammoth Cheese, by Sheri Holman (Atlantic Monthly Press, $24.00,
0871139006)
With The Mammoth Cheese, Holman delivers a sharp, contemporary story
steeped in history that will captivate a new audience while gratifying
readers of her acclaimed earlier work, The Dress Lodger. Beautifully
crafted and driven by warm, vibrant characters, The Mammoth Cheese
follows the residents of rural Three Chimneys, Virginia, on their
historic journey to re-create the making of the original Thomas
Jefferson-era, 1,235-pound "Mammoth Cheese."
As the book opens, the town is joyously celebrating the birth
of the Frank Eleven (eleven babies simultaneously born to Manda
and James Frank after fertility treatments) and enjoying the thrill
of notoriety as reform-minded presidential hopeful Adams Brooke
visits the newborns. But as autumn progresses and the babies start
to die, the community seeks to redeem itself through the making
and transporting of a symbolic Mammoth Cheese to Washington, as
a gift for the newly elected President Brooke.
Sheri Holman seamlessly weaves together
the lives of Three Chimneys, delving into her characters' inescapable
family histories as they grapple with religion, divorce, politics,
and unrequited love. The Mammoth Cheese is a triumphant exploration
of the burdens and joys of rural America and the debts we owe
to history, our parents, and ourselves. |
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Reunion,
by Alan Lightman (Pantheon, $22.00, 037542167X)
The New York Times has called Alan Lightman “highly original
and imaginative.” Each of his novels is a new exploration
of that imagination, utterly unlike the others. Einstein’s
Dreams was a whimsical and provocative tone poem about time. The
Diagnosis, hailed by the Washington Post as a “major accomplishment”
and a finalist for the National Book Award, was a disturbing examination
of our obsession with speed, information, and money, and the resulting
poverty of our spiritual lives. Lightman’s new novel, Reunion,
is a delicate and haunting story of how we shape our identity through
memory.
Charles is a middle-aged professor at a minor liberal-arts college,
a once promising poet, admiring of passion but without passion
himself. Without knowing why, he decides to attend his thirtieth
college reunion. And there, he magically witnesses a replay of
his senior year.
Drawn back into his memories, Charles watches his tender and
romantic twenty-two-year-old self embark on an all-consuming love
affair with a beautiful dancer. As the two young people struggle
to find themselves amidst the social and political chaos of the
late 1960s, the older Charles recalls contradictory versions of
his past, ultimately confronting for the second time a series
of devastating events that would forever change his life.
Written with crystalline prose, at once
precise and mysterious, Reunion explores the pain of self-examination,
the clay-like nature of memory, and the impossible hopefulness
of youth. |
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Hell
at the Breech, by Tom Franklin (Morrow, $23.95, 0688167411)
In 1897, in the rural southwestern area of Alabama known as Mitcham
Beat, an aspiring politician is mysteriously murdered. Seeking retribution,
his outraged friends – mostly poor cotton farmers –
form a secret society, Hell-at-the-Breech, to punish the townsfolk
they believe are responsible. The hooded members of this gang wage
a bloody year-long campaign of terror that culminates in a massacre,
where the innocent suffer alongside the guilty.
Caught in the maelstrom of the Mitcham War are four people: the
county's aging sheriff, sympathetic to both sides; the widowed
midwife who delivered nearly every member of Hell-at-the-Breech;
a ruthless detective who wages his own private war against the
gang; and a young store clerk harboring a terrible secret.
Based on incidents that occurred a few miles from the author's
childhood home, Hell at the Breech chronicles the dark events
of dark days, events that lead the people involved to discover
their capacity for good, for evil, or for both. It is a mesmerizing
and unforgettable display of talent by a writer of immeasurable
gifts.
The Orlando Sentinel notes that this is
“Arguably the most extraordinary first novel to come out
of the South since Charles Frazier’s National Book Award-winning
Cold Mountain. In one fell swoop, Franklin leaps to the forefront
of contemporary Southern writers.” |
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American
Woman, by Susan Choi (HarperCollins, $24.95, 0060542217)
Susan Choi's first novel, The Foreign Student, was published to
remarkable critical acclaim. The New Yorker called it "an auspicious
debut," and the Los Angeles Times touted it as "a novel
of extraordinary sensibility and transforming strangeness,"
naming it one of the ten best books of the year. American Woman,
this gifted writer's second book, is a novel of even greater scope
and dramatic complexity, about a young Japanese-American radical
caught in the militant underground of the mid-1970s.
When 25-year-old Jenny Shimada steps out of the Rhinecliff train
station in New York's Hudson Valley, the last person she expects
to see is Rob Frazer, a shadowy figure from her previous life.
On the lam for an act of violence against the American government,
Jenny agrees to take on the job of caring for three younger fugitives
whom Frazer has spirited out of California. One of them, the granddaughter
of a wealthy newspaper magnate in San Francisco, has become a
national celebrity. Kidnapped by a homegrown revolutionary group,
Pauline shocked America when she embraced her captors' ideology,
denouncing family and class to enlist in their radical cell.
American Woman unfolds the story of Jenny
and her charges – Pauline, Juan, and Yvonne, the remains
of the busted revolutionary cadre – as they pursue their
destinies from an old farmhouse in upstate New York back to California.
Provocative, suspenseful, and often wickedly comic, the novel
explores the psychology of the young radicals – outsiders
all – as isolation and paranoia inevitably undermine their
ideals. American Woman is a tour-de-force with chilling resonance
for readers today. |
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The
Quality of Life Report, by Meghan Daum (Viking, $24.95, 0670032131)
Critics hailed Meghan Daum's My Misspent Youth as "pretty damn
irresistible" (New York Newsday) for its fresh, funny, bracing
take on modern life. In The Quality of Life Report, Meghan picks
up on a timely theme and embodies it to perfection in the persona
of Lucinda Trout. Jaded by a life of eating
from plastic containers, dodging the feng shui in her boss's office,
and reporting on thong underwear as a lifestyle correspondent
for New York morning television, the thirtyish Trout is ripe for
escape. So when the rent on her tiny mouse-ridden apartment doubles
overnight, she heads for Prairie City, USA, to feed her own and
every New Yorker's heartland fantasy in dispatches tagged "The
Quality of Life Report." "Real life" is what Lucinda's
after—and, if possible, a man who knows how to wield a hammer.
Fantasy becomes reality (in Prairie City, deviled eggs are a delicacy
and fake nails are de rigueur); but reality has surprises up its
sleeve. It takes Lucinda through an epiphany and an unlikely romance
in a tale that is redemptive, wickedly witty, and heartbreaking
all at once. |
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The
Photograph, by Penelope Lively (Viking, $24.95, 0670032050)
Penelope Lively is a grande dame of British letters whose novels
have attracted readers of notable authors Ian McEwan and Iris Murdoch
– as well as those enthralled by her insight into relationships
and family. The Photograph brings her talents into a whole new page-turning
realm.
It opens with a snapshot: a young woman, Kath, at an unknown
gathering, hands clasped with a man not her husband, their backs
to the camera. Its envelope is marked DO NOT OPEN – DESTROY.
But Kath's husband, Glyn, does not heed the warning. The mystery
of the photograph, and of Kath herself and her recent death, propels
him on a journey of discovery that sends shock waves through the
lives of her family and friends. The elfin Kath – with her
mesmerizing looks and casual ways – moves like an insistent
ghost through the thoughts and memories of everyone who knew her:
self-centered Glyn, past his lusty, passionate professorial prime;
her remorselessly competent sister Elaine, a doyenne garden designer
married to feckless ne'er-do-well Nick; and their daughter Polly,
beloved of Kath, who oscillates between home and family and the
tumultuous new era she inhabits.
The Photograph, with Lively's signature
mastery of narrative and psychology, explores issues that extend
far beyond its London suburban setting: a woman's beauty and its
collision with her own happiness, sisters' rivalry and lovers'
cooling, a marriage in supreme crisis, and the cost of professional
"success" as life unfolds. It is Penelope Lively at
her very best, the dazzling and intriguing climax to all she has
written before. |
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The
Valley of Light, by Terry Kay (Atria Books, $24.00, 0743475941)
On a sunny summer day in 1948, Noah Locke arrives
in Bowerstown, a small North Carolina community bordered by lakes
and set deep in the Valley of Light. A quiet, simple man and a war
veteran, Noah has a mystical gift for fishing, yet he remains haunted
by the war and by the terrible scenes he witnessed when his infantry
unit liberated Dachau. His wandering – doing odd jobs and
catching fish for sale or trade – is both an escape from his
past and a search for a place to call home.
In the valley, Noah is initially treated with amusement by the locals
he meets at Taylor Bowers's general store – until he begins
fishing. Once they see his almost magical skills, however, he becomes
the talk of the valley and is urged to stay long enough to participate
in the annual school fishing contest. He agrees, accepting a job
offer by Taylor to paint his store when he isn't filling orders
for fish. He finds lodging in an abandoned shack by a small lake
the locals call the Lake of Grief and, also, the Lake of No Fish,
because they think all the fish have disappeared. Noah knows they
are wrong. Beneath the water is a warrior bass waiting to test Noah's
gift.
In the way that innocence creates powerful events,
Noah meets Eleanor Cunningham, a young widow whose husband supposedly
killed himself after returning home from the war. Over the course
of a week, Noah will be led into the secret lives of the residents
of the Valley of Light, will join them as they mourn a tragedy,
and will experience a miracle that will guide him home at last.
Luminous, memorable, and deeply moving, The Valley of Light is
the finest work to date from a brilliant storyteller.
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Orchard,
by Larry Watson (Random House, $24.95, 037550723X)
From the author of Montana 1948 comes the explosive story of an
artist, his muse, and the staggering price they pay for their chance
at immortality.
Ned Weaver, an internationally acclaimed painter, is famous in
Door County, Wisconsin, for his luminous work – and for
his affairs with his models. His wife, Harriet, has learned to
accept these dalliances in the belief that his immense talent
will ultimately make up for his shortcomings as a husband.
Sonja Skordahl, a Norwegian immigrant, came to America looking
for a new life. Instead, she married Henry House, only to find
herself defined, like so many other mid-twentieth-century women,
by her roles as wife and mother. As circumstances and destiny
land Sonja in Ned’s studio, she becomes more than his model
and more than an object of desire – she becomes the most
inspiring muse Ned has ever known. When both Ned and Henry insist
on possessing her, their jealousies threaten to erupt into violence,
and Sonja must find a way to placate both men without sacrificing
her hard-won sense of self.
With the stark, lyrical prose that Larry Watson is known for
(“as fresh and clear as [a] trout stream” –
The Washington Post Book World) and vivid characters who seem
to breathe on the page, Orchard explores the lives of four very
different people bound together by beauty, art, obsession, and
betrayal.
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Lucia,
Lucia, by Adriana Trigiani (Random House, $24.95, 1400060052)
Set in the glittering, vibrant New York City of 1950, Lucia, Lucia
is the enthralling story of a passionate, determined young woman
whose decision to follow her heart changes her life forever.
Lucia Sartori is the beautiful twenty-five-year-old daughter
of a prosperous Italian grocer in Greenwich Village. The postwar
boom is ripe with opportunities for talented girls with ambition,
and Lucia becomes an apprentice to an up-and-coming designer at
chic B. Altman’s department store on Fifth Avenue. Engaged
to her childhood sweetheart, the steadfast Dante DeMartino, Lucia
is torn when she meets a handsome stranger who promises a life
of uptown luxury that career girls like her only read about in
the society pages. Forced to choose between duty to her family
and her own dreams, Lucia finds herself in the midst of a sizzling
scandal in which secrets are revealed, her beloved career is jeopardized,
and the Sartoris’ honor is tested.
Lucia is surrounded by richly drawn New
York characters, including her best friend, the quick-witted fashion
protégé Ruth Kaspian; their boss, Delmarr, B. Altman’s
head designer and glamorous man-about-town; her devoted brothers,
Roberto, Orlando, Angelo, and Exodus, self-appointed protectors
of the jewel of the family; and her doting father, Antonio. Filled
with the warmth and humor that have earned Adriana Trigiani hundreds
of thousands of devoted readers with her Big Stone Gap trilogy,
Lucia, Lucia also bursts with a New York sensibility that shows
the depth and range of this beloved author. As richly detailed
as the couture garments Lucia sews, as emotional as the bonds
in her big Italian family, it is the story of one woman who believes
that in a world brimming with so much promise, she can –
and should be able to – have it all.
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Happiness,
by Will Ferguson (Perennial, $12.95, 006052510X)
Why would there be a contract out on Edwin
de Valu's life? Edwin – the wiry low-level editor at Panderic
Press. Why has rage disappeared from the roads and McDonald's gone
alfalfa? How come everyone seems so damn happy? And most importantly,
who, or what, is Tupak Soiree?
When an enormous self-help manuscript lands on Edwin's desk, it's
headed for the trash. Edwin's cynicism of self-help books, coupled
with his filthy mood that morning, results in him dismissing Tupak
Soiree's What I Learned on the Mountain and using it as a doorstop.
However, Tupak's manuscript is unique – a self-help book that
actually works. Before Edwin knows it, a chain of events begins
that affects not only his own life but the world at large.
For those who choke on Chicken Soup for the Soul or have choice
words for Dr. Phil, Will Ferguson offers up a killer dose of Happiness™
-- a masterpiece of comic fiction. |
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Isle
of Palms, by Dorothea Benton Frank (Berkley, $22.95, 0425191362)
Anna Lutz Abbot thinks she has her independence,
and therefore her happiness, intact. She is a capable woman, a sensible
woman, not someone given to risky living. This all seems to be true
enough until her lovely daughter returns from college for the summer
a very different person, her wild and wonderful ex-husband arrives,
and her flamboyant new best friend takes up with her daddy, turning
a hot summer into a steaming one – only to be cranked up another
ten degrees by Anna's own fling with Arthur, who is, heaven help
us, a Yankee. All the action unfolds under the watchful eyes of
Miss Mavis and Miss Angel, her next-door neighbors of a certain
age, who have plenty to say about Anna's past, present, and future.
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The
Song Reader, by Lisa Tucker (Downtown Press, $12.00, 0743464451)
Mary Beth and her younger sister Leeann are trying to support themselves
in their small Southern hometown. So Mary Beth works to make ends
meet by practicing her own unique talent: "song reading."
By making sense of the song lyrics people have stuck in their heads,
Mary Beth can help people make sense of their lives. In no time,
Mary Beth's readings have the entire town singing her praises, including
the handsome scientist Ben, who falls hard for Mary Beth and her
unearthly intuition. When
Mary Beth reveals a long-muted secret in the community, however,
she turns off the music and gives up song reading for good. Soon
everyone's lives are out of tune: Leeann worries she'll never
graduate from high school, and Ben can't conduct his experiments.
Without Mary Beth's music the town's silence is louder than ever.
Could it be that all the lyrics to all those foolish love songs
really aren't so foolish after all? |
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Lunch
at the Piccadilly, by Clyde Edgerton (Algonquin, $22.95, 1565121953)
In his eighth deliciously funny novel, Clyde
Edgerton introduces us to the irrepressible Lil Olive, who's recently
arrived at the Rosehaven Convalescence Center to recuperate from
a bad fall. Lil longs to be back in her own apartment, and since
her driver's license doesn't expire until her ninety-seventh birthday,
she also longs to get back behind the wheel of her sporty '89 Olds.
To pass the time until independence, Lil strikes up some new friendships.
Mrs. Maudie Lowe and Mrs. Beatrice Satterwhite, who are laying bets
on whether Clara Cochran's glass eye comes out at night. And L.
Ray Flowers, the freelance evangelical preacher with fancy white
hair who sings his sermons, strums a mean guitar, and aspires to
an even higher calling. Keeping a watchful eye on them all is Carl,
Lil's middle-aged bachelor nephew with a heart of gold and the patience
of a saint. But soon Rosehaven is turned upside down and the outcome
is anyone's guess. Lil and the girls steal a car and hit the highway.
L. Ray's vision of a national movement to unite churches and nursing
homes (Nurches of America) is embraced by the residents. And then
there's Darla Avery's dirty little secret, which could spell the
end for the visionary preacher.
Edgerton looks at the challenges of aging with sympathy, sensitivity
– and his trademark sense of humor. Like the bestseller Walking
Across Egypt, this is vintage Edgerton: wise, wistful, and laugh-out-loud
funny. |
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Easter
Island, by Jennifer Vanderbes (Dial, $22.95, 038533673X)
In this extraordinary fiction debut –
rich with love and betrayal, history and intellectual passion –
two remarkable narratives converge on Easter Island, one of the
most remote places in the world.
It is 1913. Elsa Pendleton travels from England
to Easter Island with her husband, an anthropologist sent by the
Royal Geographical Society to study the colossal moai statues,
and her younger sister. What begins as familial duty for Elsa
becomes a grand adventure; on Easter Island she discovers her
true calling. But, out of contact with the outside world, she
is unaware that World War I has been declared and that a German
naval squadron, fleeing the British across the South Pacific,
is heading toward the island she now considers home.
Sixty years later, Dr. Greer Farraday, an American
botanist, travels to Easter Island to research the island’s
ancient pollen, but more important, to put back the pieces of
her life after the death of her husband.
A series of brilliant revelations brings to life
the parallel quests of these two intrepid young women as they
delve into the centuries-old mysteries of Easter Island. Slowly
unearthing the island’s haunting past, they are forced to
confront turbulent discoveries about themselves and the people
they love, changing their lives forever.
Easter Island is a tour-de-force of storytelling
that will establish Jennifer Vanderbes as one of the most gifted
writers of her generation. |
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The
Dogs of Babel, by Carolyn Parkhurst (Little, Brown $21.95, 0316168688)
When his wife dies in a fall from a tree in their backyard, linguist
Paul Iverson is wild with despair. In the days that follow, Paul
becomes certain that Lexy's death was no accident. Strange clues
have been left behind: unique, personal messages that only she could
have left and that he is determined to decipher.
So begins Paul's fantastic and even perilous search for the truth,
as he abandons his everyday life to embark on a series of experiments
designed to teach his dog Lorelei to communicate. Is this the
project of a madman? Or does Lorelei really have something to
tell him about the last afternoon of a woman he only thought he
knew?
At the same time, Paul obsessively recalls
the early days of his love for Lexy and the ups and downs of life
with the brilliant, sometimes unsettling woman who became his
wife. |
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The
Center of Everything, by Laura Moriarty (Hyperion, $22.95, 1401300316)
In Laura Moriarty's extraordinary first novel, a young girl tries
to make sense of an unruly world spinning around her. Growing up
with a single mother who is chronically out of work and dating a
married man, 10-year old Evelyn Bucknow learns early how to fend
for herself.
Offering an affecting portrayal of a troubled mother/daughter relationship,
one in which the daughter is very often expected to play the role
of the adult, the novel also gives readers a searing rendering of
the claustrophobia of small town midwestern life, as seen through
the eyes of a teenage girl. Evelyn must come to terms with the heartbreaking
lesson of first love – that not all loves are meant to be
– and determine who she is and who she wants to be. Stuck
in the middle of Kansas, between best friends, and in the midst
of her mother's love, Evelyn finds herself . . . in The Center of
Everything. |
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Push
Not the River, by James Conroyd Martin (St. Martin’s Press,
$24.95, 0312311508)
A panoramic and epic novel in the grand romantic style, Push Not
the River is the rich story of Poland in the late 1700s –
a time of heartache and turmoil as the country's once peaceful people
are being torn apart by neighboring countries and divided loyalties.
It is then, at the young and vulnerable age of seventeen, when Lady
Anna Maria Berezowska loses both of her parents and must leave the
only home she has ever known.
With Empress Catherine's Russian armies streaming in to take
their spoils, Anna is quickly thrust into a world of love and
hate, loyalty and deceit, patriotism and treason, life and death.
Even kind Aunt Stella, Anna's new guardian who soon comes to personify
Poland's courage and spirit, can't protect Anna from the uncertain
future of the country.
Anna, a child no longer, turns to love and comfort in the form
of Jan, a brave patriot and architect of democracy, unaware that
her beautiful and enigmatic cousin Zofia has already set her sights
on the handsome young fighter. Thus Anna walks unwittingly into
Zofia's jealous wrath and darkly sinister intentions.
Forced to survive several tragic events, many of them orchestrated
by the crafty Zofia, a strengthened Anna begins to learn to place
herself in the way of destiny – for love and for country.
Heeding the proud spirit of her late father, Anna becomes a major
player in the fight against the countries who come to partion
her beloved Poland.
Push Not the River is based on the true
eighteenth century diary of Anna Maria Berezowska, a Polish countess
who lived through the rise and fall of the historic Third of May
Constitution. Vivid, romantic, and thrillingly paced, it paints
the emotional and unforgettable story of the metamorphosis of
a nation – and of a proud and resilient young woman. |
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Science
Fiction and Fantasy |
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Quicksilver:
Volume One of the Baroque Cycle, by Neal Stephenson (Morrow, $27.95,
0380977427)
In this wonderfully inventive follow-up
to his bestseller Cryptonomicon, Neal Stephenson brings to life
a cast of unforgettable characters in a time of breathtaking genius
and discovery, men and women whose exploits defined an age known
as the Baroque.
Daniel Waterhouse possesses a brilliant scientific mind –
and yet knows that his genius is dwarfed by that of his friends
Isaac Newton, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, and Robert Hooke. He rejects
the arcane tradition of alchemy, even as it is giving birth to new
ways of understanding the world.
Jack Shaftoe began his life as a London street urchin and is now
a reckless wanderer in search of great fortune. The intrepid exploits
of Half-Cocked Jack, King of the Vagabonds, are quickly becoming
the stuff of legend throughout Europe.
Eliza is a young woman whose ingenuity is all that keeps her alive
after being set adrift from the Turkish harem in which she has been
imprisoned since she was a child. Daniel,
Jack, and Eliza will traverse a landscape populated by mad alchemists,
Barbary pirates, and bawdy courtiers, as well as historical figures
including Samuel Pepys, Ben Franklin, and other great minds of
the age. Traveling from the infant American colonies to the Tower
of London to the glittering courts of Louis XIV, and all manner
of places in between, this magnificent historical epic brings
to vivid life a time like no other, and establishes its author
as one of the preeminent talents of our own age. |
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Ilium,
by Dan Simmons (Eos, $25.95, 0380978938)
From the towering heights of Olympos Mons on Mars,
the mighty Zeus and his immortal family of gods, goddesses, and
demigods look down upon a momentous battle, observing – and
often influencing – the legendary exploits of Paris, Achilles,
Hector, Odysseus, and the clashing armies of Greece and Troy.
Thomas Hockenberry, former twenty-first-century professor and
Iliad scholar, watches as well. It is Hockenberry's duty to observe
and report on the Trojan War's progress to the so-called deities
who saw fit to return him from the dead. But the muse he serves
has a new assignment for the wary scholic, one dictated by Aphrodite
herself. With the help of fortieth-century technology, Hockenberry
is to infiltrate Olympos, spy on its divine inhabitants ... and
ultimately destroy Aphrodite's sister and rival, the goddess Pallas
Athena.
On an Earth profoundly changed since the departure of the Post-Humans
centuries earlier, the great events on the bloody plains of Ilium
serve as mere entertainment. Its scenes of unrivaled heroics and
unequaled carnage add excitement to human lives devoid of courage,
strife, labor, and purpose. But this eloi-like existence is not
enough for Harman, a man in the last year of his last Twenty.
That rarest of post-postmodern men – an "adventurer"
– he intends to explore far beyond the boundaries of his
world before his allotted time expires, in search of a lost past,
a devastating truth, and an escape from his own inevitable "final
fax." Meanwhile, from the radiation-swept reaches of Jovian
space, four sentient machines race to investigate – and
perhaps, terminate – the potentially catastrophic emissions
of unexplained quantum-flux emanating from a mountaintop miles
above the terraformed surface of Mars ...
The first book in a remarkable two-part
epic to be concluded in the upcoming Olympos, Dan Simmons's Ilium
is a breathtaking adventure, enormous in scope and imagination,
sweeping across time and space to connect three seemingly disparate
stories in fresh, thrilling, and totally unexpected ways. A truly
masterful work of speculative fiction, it is quite possibly Simmons's
finest achievement to date in an already storied literary career.
|
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Altered
Carbon, by Richard K. Morgan (Del Rey, $13.95, 0345457684)
In the twenty-fifth century, humankind has spread throughout the
galaxy, monitored by the watchful eye of the U.N. While divisions
in race, religion, and class still exist, advances in technology
have redefined life itself. Now, assuming one can afford the expensive
procedure, a person’s consciousness can be stored in a cortical
stack at the base of the brain and easily downloaded into a new
body (or “sleeve”) making death nothing more than a
minor blip on a screen. Ex-U.N. envoy Takeshi
Kovacs has been killed before, but his last death was particularly
painful. Dispatched one hundred eighty light-years from home,
re-sleeved into a body in Bay City (formerly San Francisco, now
with a rusted, dilapidated Golden Gate Bridge), Kovacs is thrown
into the dark heart of a shady, far-reaching conspiracy that is
vicious even by the standards of a society that treats “existence”
as something that can be bought and sold. For Kovacs, the shell
that blew a hole in his chest was only the beginning. . . . The
London Times notes that “This seamless marriage of hardcore
cyberpunk and hard-boiled detective tale is an astonishing first
novel.” |
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Lord
of Snow and Shadows: Book One of the Tears of Artamon, by Sarah
Ash (Spectra, $21.95, 0553803344)
Combining the best of fantasy traditions with her own unique vision,
Sarah Ash brings to dazzling life a new saga filled with epic adventure
and unforgettable characters. Far-reaching in scope and imagination,
Lord of Snow and Shadows embarks on a journey like no other –
into a shape-shifting world teeming with political intrigue, astonishing
magic, and passions both dark and light.
Raised by his protective mother in the sunny clime of the south,
Gavril Andar knows nothing of his father – or the ominous
legacy that awaits him. But his innocence is about to be shattered.
The man who ruled the wintry kingdom of Azhkendir, a man infused
with the burning blood of the dragon-warrior known as Drakhaoul,
has been murdered by his enemies. It is his fiery, chameleonlike
blood that pulses through Gavril’s veins. The news is Gavril’s
first taste of death – but it will not be his last. For
blood is the liquid that seals his fate.
Expected by clan warriors from the north to avenge his father’s
murder – and still his unquiet ghost – Gavril is kidnapped.
He soon learns that becoming Drakhaon means not only ascending
to the throne of Azhkendir but changing, in subtle ways at first,
into a being of extraordinary power and might. A being that must
be replenished with the blood of innocents in order to survive.
Ensconced in Kastel Drakhaon with no means of escape from the
icebound kingdom, and carefully watched by neighboring rulers
waiting to move against him, the untested Gavril must fight to
retain his human heart and soul in the face of impending war –
and the dark instincts that threaten to overpower him.
Man and beast, spymaster and insurgent,
nature and the netherworld – all collide in phenomenal twists
and turns. A masterwork of adventure fantasy, Lord of Snow and
Shadows will leave you stunned – and longing for more. |
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Idlewild,
by Nick Sagan (Putnam, $24.95, 0399150978)
Set in the day after tomorrow, Idlewild opens
as a young man awakes with amnesia: He cannot remember who he is
and doesn't recognize anything around him-all he knows for sure
is that someone is trying to kill him. Not certain whom he can trust,
he becomes reacquainted with eight companions, all of whom are being
trained at a strange school run by an enigmatic figure named Maestro.
Working to uncover the identity of the person who has attempted
to murder him, the young man quickly starts to unravel a series
of truths, making it clear that much more than just his life is
at stake. Taking the best of the genre and transcending it, Sagan's
cool debut will appeal to fans of Neil Gaiman and Orson Scott Card,
while also drawing in readers of novels such as House of Leaves
by Mark Danielewski and Lullaby by Chuck Palahniuk. |
| |
Mystery
and Thrillers |
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The
Amber Room, by Steve Berry (Ballantine, $24.95, 0345460030)
The Amber Room is one of the greatest treasures ever made by man:
an entire room forged of exquisite amber, from its massive walls
to its finely crafted furniture. But it is also the subject of one
of history’s most intriguing mysteries. In 1941, German troops
invaded the Soviet Union, looting everything in their wake and seizing
the Amber Room. When the Allies began the bombing of Germany in
August 1944, the Room was hidden. And despite the best efforts of
treasure hunters and art collectors from around the world, it has
never been seen again.
Now, two powerful men have set their best operatives loose in
pursuit, and the hunt has begun once more . . . . .
Life is good for Atlanta judge Rachel Cutler. She loves her job,
loves her kids, and remains civil to her ex-husband, Paul. But
everything changes when her father, a man who survived the horrors
of World War II, dies under strange circumstances – and
leaves behind clues to a secret he kept his entire life . . .
a secret about something called the Amber Room.
Desperate to know the truth about her father’s suspicious
dealings, Rachel takes off for Germany, with Paul close behind.
Shortly after arriving, they find themselves involved with a cast
of shadowy characters who all claim to share their quest. But
as they learn more about the history of the treasure they seek,
Rachel and Paul realize they’re in way over their heads.
Locked in a treacherous game with ruthless professional killers
and embroiled in a treasure hunt of epic proportions, Rachel and
Paul suddenly find themselves on a collision course with the forces
of power, evil, and history itself.
A brilliant adventure and a scintillating
tale of intrigue, deception, art, and murder, The Amber Room is
a classic tale of suspense – and the debut of a strong new
voice in the world of the international thriller. |
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The
Winter Queen, by Boris Akunin (Random House, $24.95, 1400060494)
Moscow, May 1876: What would cause a talented young student from
a wealthy family to shoot himself in front of a promenading public
in the Alexander Gardens? Decadence and boredom, most likely, is
what the commander of the Criminal Investigation Division of the
Moscow Police thinks, but still he finds it curious enough to send
the newest member of the division, Erast Fandorin, a young man of
irresistible charm, to the Alexander Gardens precinct for more information.
Fandorin is not satisfied with the conclusion that this is an
open-and-shut case, nor with the preliminary detective work the
precinct has done – and for good reason: The bizarre and
tragic suicide is soon connected to a clear case of murder, witnessed
firsthand by Fandorin. There are many unresolved questions. Why,
for instance, have both victims left their fortunes to an orphanage
run by the English Lady Astair? And who is the beautiful “A.B.,”
whose signed photograph is found in the apparent suicide’s
apartment? Relying on his keen intuition, the eager sleuth plunges
into an investigation that leads him across Europe, landing him
at the deadly center of a terrorist conspiracy of worldwide proportions.
In this thrilling mystery that brings
nineteenth-century Russia to vivid life, Akunin has created one
of the most eagerly anticipated novels in years. |
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Bangkok
8, by John Burdett (Knopf, $24.00, 1400040442)
Under a Bangkok bridge, inside a bolted-shut Mercedes: a murder
by snake – a charismatic African American Marine sergeant
killed by a methamphetamine-stoked python and a swarm of stoned
cobras.
Two cops – the only two in the city not on the take –
arrive too late. Minutes later, only one is alive: Sonchai Jitpleecheep
– a devout Buddhist, equally versed in the sacred and the
profane – son of a long-gone Vietnam War G.I. and a Thai
bar girl whose subsequent international clientele contributed
richly to Sonchai’s sophistication.
Now, his partner dead, Sonchai is doubly compelled to find the
murderer, to maneuver through the world he knows all to well –
illicit drugs, prostitution, infinite corruption – and into
a realm he has never before encountered: the moneyed underbelly
of the city, where desire rules and the human body is no less
custom-designable than a raw hunk of jade. And where Sonchai tracks
the killer – and a predator of an even more sinister variety.
Thick with the authentic – and hallucinogenic
– atmosphere of Bangkok, crowded with astonishing characters,
uniquely smart and skeptical, literary and wildly readable, Bangkok
8 is one of a kind. This is an electrifying, darkly comic, razor-edged
thriller not to be missed! |
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The
Sinner, by Tess Gerritsen (Ballantine, $24.95, 0345458915)
Not even the icy temperatures of a typical New England winter can
match the bone-chilling scene of carnage discovered in the early
morning hours at the chapel of Our Lady of Divine Light. Within
the sanctuary walls of the cloistered convent, now stained with
blood, lie two nuns – one dead, one critically injured –
victims of an unspeakably savage attacker.
The brutal crime appears to be without motive, and the elderly
nuns in residence can offer little help in the police investigation.
But medical examiner Maura Isles’s autopsy of the dead woman
yields a shocking surprise: Twenty-year-old Sister Camille, the
order’s sole novice, gave birth before she was murdered.
Then the disturbing case takes a stunning new turn when another
woman is found murdered in an abandoned building, her body mutilated
beyond recognition.
Together, Isles and homicide detective Jane Rizzoli uncover an
ancient horror that connects these terrible slaughters. As long-buried
secrets come to light, Maura Isles finds herself drawn inexorably
toward the heart of an investigation that strikes closer and closer
to home – and toward a dawning revelation about the killer’s
identity too shattering to consider.
As spine-tingling as it is mind-jolting,
The Sinner showcases Tess Gerritsen in peak form – bringing
her intimate knowledge of the dark depths of criminal investigation
brilliantly to bear. Beneath its layers of startling insight into
the souls of its characters, and the richly wrought depiction
of the everyday war between good and evil, beats the unstoppable
heart of an irresistible thriller. |
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2182
Kilohertz, by David Masiel (Random House, $12.95, 0812968123)
By all accounts, Henry Seine should have packed
it in long ago, certainly before he started scanning marine distress
channels for fun. But sixteen-hour days spent hauling heavy cargo
aboard tugs and icebreakers along the frozen arctic offshore (not
to mention smoking copious amounts of Cannabis indica) can warp
a man’s sense of reality. Desperate for real human contact,
he tunes the sideband radio to 2182 kHz (twenty-one eighty-two kilohertz),
the international distress channel, in the vague hope of finding
someone he can save.
Soon, though, even the paycheck that fattens his wallet each
season isn’t enough to fix his interest. Seine journeys
south, but weathers a capsizing that leaves his fellow crewmen
dead. Unable to break from his old habits, and haunted by the
ghosts of dead shipmates, he flies north for another season. One
day, idly monitoring 2182, Seine catches a fading distress call
from somewhere out in the circumpolar twilight. A scientist named
Louis Moneymaker is trapped alone on an ice floe that threatens
to melt beneath his feet. Cobbling together a motley rescue team–the
frostbitten Wolf, a six-foot-eight Russian known as Big Man, a
tattooed Eskimo nicknamed the Buff, and an intrepid, dark-eyed
sailor named Julia–Seine travels farther north than he’s
ever gone, determined to save Moneymaker and exorcise his demons
in one grand sweep.
2182 kHz combines the white-knuckle adventure
of The Perfect Storm with the dark humor and deadpan wit of Chuck
Palahniuk to create an absorbing tale of search-and-rescue. David
Masiel introduces us to a compelling antihero who is only one
step away from either destruction or salvation.
|
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Maisie
Dobbs, by Jacqueline Winspear (Soho, $25.00, 1569473307)
She started as a maid in an aristocratic London household when she
was thirteen. Her employer, Lady Rowan Compton, a suffragette, took
the remarkably bright youngster under her wing and became her patron,
aided by Maurice Blanche, a friend often retained as an investigator
by the elite of Europe. It was he who first recognized Maisie's
intuitive gifts and helped her to earn admission to prestigious
Girton College at Cambridge where Maisie planned to complete her
education. The outbreak of war changed everything. Maisie trained
as a nurse, then left for France to serve at the Front, where she
found – and lost – an important part of herself. Ten
years after the Armistice, in the spring of 1929, Maisie sets up
on her own as a private investigator, one who has learned that coincidences
are meaningful, and truth elusive. Her very first case involves
suspected infidelity but reveals something very different. In the
aftermath of the Great War, a former officer has founded a convalescent
refuge for those grievously wounded, ex-soldiers too shattered to
resume normal life. It is a working farm known as The Retreat. When
Fate brings Maisie a second case involving The Retreat she must
confront the ghost that has haunted her for over ten years.
Maisie Dobbs is an inspired debut novel –
a delightful mix of mystery, war story and romance set in WWI-era
England. |
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The
Kill Clause, by Gregg Hurwitz (Morrow, $24.95, 0060530383)
Tim Rackley is a dangerous man of honor, a deputy U.S. marshal who
is very good at his job – until everything he believes in
is shattered by the brutal murder of his own daughter.
Betrayed by an imperfect judicial system, Rackley watches helplessly
as the killer walks free on a legal technicality. Devastated,
furious, and burning with a righteous need for vengeance, he is
suddenly forced to explore his own deadly options – a quest
that leads him into a shadowy no-man's-land between justice and
the law ... and into the welcoming fold of "the Commission."
A vigilante group made up of people like him -- relentless streetwise
operators who have each lost a loved one to violent crime –
the Commission confronts the failings of a system that sets predators
loose to hunt again, cleaning up society's "mistakes"
covertly, efficiently, and permanently. But as he is dragged deeper
into a deadly morass of hidden agendas and murderous justice,
Rackley discovers that playing God is an excruciating and fearsome
task. When his new secret life starts coming unwound at an alarming
speed, he is suddenly caught in the most terrifying struggle he
has ever faced – a desperate battle to save his marriage,
his career, his life, his soul ... and everything left that's
worth fighting for.
A riveting and explosive novel, The Kill
Clause is a brilliantly inventive tour-de-force by a powerful
new master of suspense. |
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Dead
I May Well Be, by Adrian McKinty (Scribner, $24.00, 0743246993)
This Irish bad-boy thriller – set in the hardest streets of
New York City – brims with violence, greed, and sexual betrayal.
"I didn't want to go to America, I didn't want to work for
Darkey White. I had my reasons. But I went."
So admits Michael Forsythe, an illegal immigrant escaping the
Troubles in Belfast. But young Michael is strong and fearless
and clever – just the fellow to be tapped by Darkey, a crime
boss, to join a gang of Irish thugs struggling against the rising
Dominican powers in Harlem and the Bronx. The time is pre-Giuliani
New York, when crack rules the city, squatters live furtively
in ruined buildings, and hundreds are murdered each month. Michael
and his lads tumble through the streets, shaking down victims,
drinking hard, and fighting for turf, block by bloody block.
Dodgy and observant, not to mention handy with a pistol, Michael
is soon anointed by Darkey as his rising star. Meanwhile Michael
has very inadvisably seduced Darkey's girl, Bridget – saucy,
fickle, and irresistible. Michael worries that he's being followed,
that his affair with Bridget will be revealed. He's right to be
anxious; when Darkey discovers the affair, he plans a very hard
fall for Michael, a gambit devilish in its guile, murderous in
its intent.
But Darkey fails to account for Michael's
toughness and ingenuity or the possibility that he might wreak
terrible vengeance upon those who would betray him.
A natural storyteller with a gift for dialogue, McKinty introduces
to readers a stunning new noir voice, dark and stylish, mythic
and violent – complete with an Irish lilt. |
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The
Footprints of God, by Greg Iles (Scribner, $25.95, 0743234693)
In the heart of North Carolina's Research Triangle stands a corporate
laboratory much like the others nearby. But behind its walls, America's
top scientists work around the clock to attain the holy grail of
the twenty-first century – a supercomputer that surpasses
the power of the human mind.
Appointed by the president as ethicist to Project Trinity, Dr.
David Tennant finds himself in a pressure cooker of groundbreaking
science and colossal ambition. When his friend and fellow scientist
is murdered, David discovers that the genius who runs Project
Trinity was responsible and that his own life is in danger. Unable
to reach the president, and afraid to trust his colleagues, David
turns to Rachel Weiss, the psychiatrist probing the nightmares
that have plagued him during his work at Trinity. Rachel is skeptical
of David's fears, but when an assassin strikes, the two doctors
must flee for their lives.
Pursued across the globe by ruthless National Security Agency
operatives, David and Rachel struggle to piece together the truth
behind Project Trinity and the enormous power it could unleash
upon the world. As constant danger deepens their intimacy, Rachel
realizes the key to Trinity lies buried in David's disturbed mind.
But Trinity's clock is ticking… Mankind is being held hostage
by a machine that cannot be destroyed. Its only hope – a
terrifying chess game between David and the Trinity computer,
with the cities of the world as pawns. But what are the rules?
How human is the machine? Can one man and woman change the course
of history? Man's future hangs in the balance, and the price of
failure is extinction.
Considered one of the most insightful and ingenious of the new
generation of suspense authors, Greg Iles has written a techno-thriller
that maps the fascinating territory where science and spirit clash
in a battle for the future of humanity. Stunning in its scope,
The Footprints of God is a brilliant realization of its author's
talent.
|
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Uniform
Justice, by Donna Leon (Atlantic Monthly Press, $19.95, 0871139030)
Neither Commissario Brunetti nor his wife Paola have ever had much
sympathy for the Italian armed forces, so when a young cadet is
found hanged, a presumed suicide, in Venice's elite military academy,
Brunetti's emotions are complex: pity and sorrow for the death of
a boy, close in age to his own son, and contempt and irritation
for the arrogance and high-handedness of the boy's teachers and
fellow-students. The young man is the son of a doctor and former
politician, a man of an impeccable integrity all too rare in Italian
politics. Dr. Moro is clearly and understandably devastated by his
son's death; but while both he and his apparently estranged wife
seem convinced that the boy's death could not have been suicide,
neither appears at all keen to talk to the police nor to involve
Brunetti in any investigation of the circumstances in which he died.
As Commissario Brunetti – and the indispensable Signorina
Elettra – investigates the doctor's political career and the
circumstances of his estrangement from his wife, they are faced
by a wall of silence, as the military protects its own and civilians
are unwilling to talk. Is this the natural reluctance of Italians
to involve themselves with the authorities, or is Brunetti facing
a conspiracy of silence? European reviewers
consistently put Leon in the same class as Ruth Rendell and Patricia
Highsmith, and American critics are starting to do the same. Don’t
miss this one! |
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The
Da Vinci Code, by Dan Brown (Doubleday, $24.95, 0385504209)
While in Paris on business, Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon receives
an urgent late-night phone call: the elderly curator of the Louvre
has been murdered inside the museum. Near the body, police have
found a baffling cipher. While working to solve the enigmatic riddle,
Langdon is stunned to discover it leads to a trail of clues hidden
in the works of Da Vinci – clues visible for all to see –
yet ingeniously disguised by the painter.
Langdon joins forces with a gifted French cryptologist, Sophie
Neveu, and learns the late curator was involved in the Priory
of Sion – an actual secret society whose members included
Sir Isaac Newton, Botticelli, Victor Hugo, and Da Vinci, among
others.
In a breathless race through Paris, London, and beyond, Langdon
and Neveu match wits with a faceless powerbroker who seems to
anticipate their every move. Unless Langdon and Neveu can decipher
the labyrinthine puzzle in time, the Priory's ancient secret –
and an explosive historical truth – will be lost forever.
The Da Vinci Code heralds the arrival
of a new breed of lightning-paced, intelligent thriller that is
utterly unpredictable right up to its stunning conclusion. A fascinating
blend of art, theology, and feminist studies, The Da Vinci Code
may well be one of the best books of 2003. |
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Foul
Matter, by Martha Grimes (Viking, $25.95, 067003259X)
Sophisticated intrigue, dry humor, and eccentric characters flow
effortlessly from Martha Grimes's rich imagination. Not to mention
the atmospheric and storytelling genius that has made her a consistently
bestselling author. Her newest novel, Foul Matter, is set in a world
she knows all too well and unfolds with a consummate deadly irony.
Author Paul Giverney is between publishers. Despite
stratospheric sales of his books and frenzied competition to sign
him up, he lives modestly in New York's East Village and nurses
a secret ambition of a very different sort. In fact, he has a
byzantine plan for accomplishing it: the #1 condition of his proposed
contract with the literary giant Mackenzie-Haack. They must drop
Ned Isaly, a brilliant but far less successful author, and assign
his equally gifted editor to Paul. In the hornets' nest of preening
egos and cutthroat career moves this stirs up, ambitious editor
Clive Esterhaus covets the glossy megastar Paul for himself. But
Isaly's book contract is unbreakable and Clive never dreams how
a very different kind of contract will force him – and his
ambition – into a very foul matter, indeed. |
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The
6th Lamentation, by William Brodrick (Viking, $24.95, 0670031917)
Larkwood Priory, England: Father Anselm is stopped by an old man.
What, he is asked, should a man do when the world has turned against
him? Anselm's response: claim sanctuary. But the answer sets off
more trouble than he ever could have imagined when the man returns,
demanding the protection of the Church. He is Eduard Schwermann,
a suspected Nazi war criminal.
Agnes Aubret has unburdened a secret to her granddaughter Lucy.
Fifty years earlier, Agnes was in occupied Paris, risking her
life to smuggle Jewish children to safety – until her group
was exposed by an SS officer: Eduard Schwermann.
Not only has the Church granted Schwermann sanctuary before;
in 1944 it helped him escape from France to begin a new life in
Britain. As Anselm attempts to find out why and as Lucy delves
deeper into her grandmother's past, their investigations dovetail
to form a remarkable story.
William Brodrick makes a dazzling debut
in this literary thriller where two seemingly unconnected lives
gradually, shockingly converge. Brodrick, himself a former Augustinian
friar, is a master of precision plotting, morally complex characterization,
and crisp historical re-creation. In Father Anselm, Brodrick has
crafted a unique and compelling hero. The 6th Lamentation is a
great find for fans of John LeCarre and Alan Furst. |
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Split
Second, by David Baldacci (Warner Books, $26.95, 0446530891)
From his blockbuster debut, Absolute Power, to his most recent runaway
bestseller, Last Man Standing, David Baldacci has redefined and
re-energized the thriller novel. In his new work, Baldacci delivers
his most relentlessly paced high-octane ride yet: the explosive
story of careers shattered, lives lost, and worlds changed forever
in a single split second.
Michelle Maxwell has just blown her future with the Secret Service.
Against her instincts, she let a presidential candidate out of
her sight to comfort a grieving widow. Then, behind closed doors,
the politician whose safety was her responsibility vanished into
thin air.
Living a new life on a quiet lake in central Virginia, Sean King
knows how the younger agent feels. He's been there before. In
an out-of-the-way hotel eight years earlier, the hard-charging
Secret Service man allowed his attention to be diverted for a
split second. And the presidential candidate Sean was protecting
was gunned down before his eyes.
Living a new life on a quiet lake in central Virginia, Sean King
knows how the younger agent feels. He's been there before. In
an out-of-the-way hotel eight years earlier, the hard-charging
Secret Service man allowed his attention to be diverted for a
split second. And the presidential candidate Sean was protecting
was gunned down before his eyes.
Now Michelle and Sean are about to see their destinies converge.
She has become obsessed with Sean's case. And he needs a friend-especially
since a series of macabre killings has brought him under suspicion
and prompted the reappearance of a seductive woman he's tried
hard to forget.
As the two discredited agents enter a maze of lies, secrets,
and deadly coincidences, they uncover a shocking truth: that the
separate acts of violence that shattered their lives were really
a long time in the making-and are a long way from over…
With an adrenaline rush on every page
and a plot that springs one jaw-dropping surprise after another,
David Baldacci's new novel will plunge you into a dangerous realm
of rage, desire, betrayal, and revenge. You won't put it down
for a second. |
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Avenger,
by Frederick Forsythe (St. Martin’s Press, $26.95, 0312319517)
Attorney Calvin Dexter hangs his shingle in a quiet New Jersey town,
has a reasonably successful practice, and takes the hills strong
while triathlon training. But Dexter is no ordinary lawyer. On Sundays,
he reads the paper and shuffles around his dark, empty house, trying
to forget about a life he has lost forever.
Until, of course, Dexter reads something in the papers that sends
him the necessary signal. Until one of the handful who know of
Dexter's other life tries to contact him. For in a world that
has forgotten right and wrong, few can settle a score like Cal
Dexter can.
But the game is changing, and this time CIA agent Kevin McBride
must find a way to stop Dexter before his quest for vengeance
throws the world into chaos.
With his best thriller since The Day of
the Jackal, master storyteller Frederick Forsythe returns with
this strong and memorable novel. His best in decades, and as good
as The Odessa File and The Dogs of War, readers will be delighted
by the narrative drive and surprising twists in this first-rate
thriller. |
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