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- 18 June 2013
'The Ocean at the End of the Lane' by Neil Gaiman
This new modern fable—which, at 192 pages, is more of a novella—tells the story of a man who returns to his native English village and suddenly realizes the cost of the horrible evil he fought as a child, with the help of Lettie Hempstock and her extraordinary mother and grandmother.
- 25 June 2013
'The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells' by Andrew Sean Greer
Greta Wells experiences three alternate lives during a therapy session, all with different secrets and losses, pain and happiness. Which one will she ultimately choose?
'Sisterland' by Curtis Sittenfeld
Sittenfeld returns with the story of twin sisters: Vi, a professed psychic, and Kate, a wife and mother in denial of her talents. When Vi predicts a devastating earthquake is around the corner, Kate must decide whether to support her sister and out herself for the potential good of the community, or continue to ignore her own instincts.
- 9 July 2013
'Fin & Lady' by Cathleen Schine
Fin is 11 when his parents die in 1964, and he is sent to live with his older sister, Lady. But Lady is a free spirit, and Fin soon realizes he's as much her caregiver as she is his.
'Amy Falls Down' by Jincy Willett
A sequel of sorts to her last book The Writing Class, Amy Falls Down also stars bitter novelist Amy Gallup. When an interviewer arrives shortly after Amy takes a nasty bump on the head, the resulting article—where Amy's rambling quotes are dubbed pure genius—turns around her failing career.
- 16 July 2013
'The Never List' by Koethi Zan
Zan's story of a young woman marked by the consequences of her time spent as the prisoner of a sadistic kidnapper is drawing lots of buzz already.
- 13 August 2013
'The People in the Trees' by Hanya Yanagihara
This ambitious first novel, billed as an "anthropological adventure," was a decade in the making and is already being compared to Norman Rush and Ann Patchett.
- 19 August 2013
'Archangel' by Andrea Barrett
It's been too long since the National Book Award-winning author released a book. This time it's a collection of short stories about scientific firsts—subject matter that Barrett fans love to see her sink her teeth into.
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Tag Archives: Blue Nights by Joan Didion
25 most anticipated books for fall
It seems like just yesterday that we posted our 20 most anticipated books for summer, but alas—that was more than two months ago, and now we’re looking forward to fall. Below you’ll find our 25 most anticipated books for the … Continue reading →
Posted in best of 2011
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Tagged 11/22/1963, Alice Hoffman, Ann Beattie, Blue Nights by Joan Didion, Blueprints for Building Better Girls, Boomerang, Candice Millard, Catherine the Great, Chad Harbach, Chris Bohjalian, Colson Whitehead, Denise Mina, Elissa Schappell, Erin Morgenstern, Ha Jin, Haruki Murakami, Hilary Jordan, IQ84, Jeffrey Eugenides, Karl Marlantes, life itself, Michael Lewis, Midnight Rising, Mrs. Nixon, Nanjing Requiem, Neal Stephenson, Nora Roberts, Reamde, Rin Tin Tin, Robert K. Massie, Roger Ebert, Stephen Greenblatt, Stephen King, Susan Orlean, The Art of Fielding, The Destiny of the Republic, The Dovekeepers, The End of the Wasp Season, The Marriage Plot, The Next Always, The Night Circus, The Night Strangers, The Prague Cemetery, The Swerve, Tony Horwitz, Umberto Eco, What It Is Like to Go to War, When She Woke, Zone One
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