Most Popular Posts
-
Recent Posts
- What they’re reading: Lily Koppel
- Summer reading poll: The results!
- Monday contest: Top Picks edition
- Friday links: Bookish eye-candy edition
- Happy Birthday, Peter Mayle
- A Smurfy new collection
- Recipe of the week: A Perfect BLAT
- Happy Birthday, Audrey Niffenegger
- Up next from Maria Semple
- What we’re reading Wednesday: ‘I’ll Be Seeing You’
Popular Categories
Posts About
What we’re tweeting
BookPage on your ereader
- BookPage on Facebook
Our most-anticipated releases
- 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.
People are talking
- Rosemary on Monday contest: Top Picks edition
- Scott on Monday contest: Top Picks edition
- Jackie on Monday contest: Top Picks edition
- Janet W on Monday contest: Top Picks edition
- Christine on Monday contest: Top Picks edition
Watch us
Categories
- Audio
- author interviews
- awards
- best of 2010
- best of 2011
- best of 2012
- best of the blogs
- Bestseller Watch
- book club discussions
- book fortunes
- Book to film
- bookstores
- Children's books
- contests
- ebooks
- events
- fiction
- guest posts
- holiday
- Midweek Treat
- News
- nonfiction
- Online Marketing
- podcasts
- poetry
- provocative title
- Publicity
- publishing
- read it next
- Reader Poll
- Reader survey
- recipes
- Reviews
- seven questions
- technology
- Top 10 lists
- Top Pick
- top picks
- Trailer Tuesday
- trends
- TV
- Uncategorized
- weekly links
- What They're Reading
- what we're reading
Tag Archives: Lolita
Top 5 literary affairs that are so, so wrong
guest post by Rebecca Coleman author of The Kingdom of Childhood Highbrow or lowbrow, blockbuster or art film, it’s hard not to love a good love story—especially one in which the obstacles to happily-ever-after seem (almost) insurmountable. But there’s one … Continue reading
Posted in guest posts
Tagged Audrey Niffenegger, Lolita, Marguerite Duras, Notes on a Scandal, Rebecca Coleman, Stephenie Meyer, The Kingdom of Childhood, The Lover, The Time Traveler's Wife, Twilight, Vladimir Nabokov, Zoe Heller
Comments Off
The inside scoop on a literary marriage
RT (Russia’s English-language news channel) reports that next year Vladimir Nabokov‘s unpublished letters to his wife, Vera, will be published in a book called Letters to Vera. This news was of interest to me because, of course, Nabokov is a … Continue reading


