
For this week’s newsletter, we asked author Karan Mahajan to tell us about the books he read in preparation for his sprawling novel, The Complex, about immigration and Indian politics and centered on an Indian American woman whose family dismisses her claim that an in-law sexual assaulted her.
We also spoke with Judy Blume biographer Mark Oppenheimer on Blume’s legacy of writing about divorce and puberty, while author Will Self candidly discussed his ongoing health issues in relation to his latest novel, The Quantity Theory of Morality, which concerns a group of aging literati in London, and Hache Pueyo told us about her neo-noir horror novel, Cabaret in Flames, which follows a woman who lost all four of her limbs in a vampire attack.
Lastly, my colleagues and I enthuse over the books hitting shelves next week that we’re the most excited about.
—David Varno
By Alexis Hall (Tor)
I'm on the record as a fan of Alexis Hall's romance novels, so I was eager to check out his sci-fi debut, a gender-swapped retelling of Moby-Dick in space. Hall pulls off this staggeringly ambitious concept remarkably well, engaging deeply with the original while conjuring a wildly inventive universe all his own. —Phoebe Cramer, SFF, horror, and romance reviews editorBy Francis Spufford (Scribner)
“Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they’re not after you,” wrote Joseph Heller in Catch-22. I’m not paranoid, but the line has echoed in my head lately (as rasped by Kurt Cobain on Nevermind) while reading Gravity’s Rainbow. Once I’m done with Pynchon, I’m going to pick up the latest from Spufford, which is also set in London and covers WWII-era conspiracies with strange supernatural elements, in this case a cabal of British time-traveling fascists. I can’t wait. —David Varno, literary fiction reviews editorBy T Kira Madden (Mariner)
I adored Madden's 2019 memoir Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls, so I've been eagerly anticipating her fiction debut. Following three women who are interconnected by one man and his crimes in the aftermath of his murder, Whidbey is epic and genre-pushing in its scope. But it above all else shows the endless well of empathy that Madden gives to her characters and the reader in her writing. —Kerensa Cadenas, news director|
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Theo of Golden
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Stripped Down: Unfiltered and Unapologetic
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Green Eggs and Ham
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One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish
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