Category: Fiction
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The Age of Miracles by Karen Thompson WalkerRandom House, 2012
I really like the premise of The Age of Miracles: it’s set in California in the not-too-distant future, and the world is not so different from ours, except for one thing, one big thing: the rotation of the planet has started slowing down. The Age of Miracles is partly the story of the slowing, as…
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John Saturnall’s Feast by Lawrence NorfolkGrove Press, 2012 (Originally Bloomsbury)
John Saturnall’s Feast starts with a book within a book: it opens with an excerpt from “The Book of John Saturnall, with the Particulars of that famous Cook’s most Privy Arts, including the Receipts for his notorious Feast“: the book’s fictional protagonist, then, is both a cook and an author, and this is the story…
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This Isn’t the Sort of Thing That Happens to Someone Like You by Jon McGregorBloomsbury, 2012
This Isn’t the Sort of Thing That Happens to Someone Like You is a collection of short stories: 30 stories, of varying lengths (one is just one sentence; one is thirty pages) and varying styles (1st-person, 2nd-person, and 3rd person narration are all used; one story is in the form of a numbered list of…
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Savage by Jacques JouetTranslated by Amber ShieldsDalkey Archive Press, 2009
I read and liked Jacques Jouet’s Upstaged last year, so I was excited to happen upon another book by him at the library. But where I found Upstaged smart and funny and engaging, I found Savage odd and distant. There were moments of humor, and moments of beauty, but when I finished reading I wished…
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The Uncommon Reader by Alan BennettFarrar, Straus and Giroux (originally Faber and Faber), 2007
The Uncommon Reader is short and sweet, charming and funny. I feel like every book blogger other than me read this one years ago, so you probably already know the premise, but if you don’t, here it is: the Queen of England (yes, the current one) happens upon a mobile library parked outside Buckingham Palace.…
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NW by Zadie SmithThe Penguin Press, 2012
NW is about the intersecting/intertwined lives of four Londoners (two women and two men) who grew up on the same housing estate in the northwest part of the city. Leah and Natalie, who have been best friends since childhood (back when Natalie was called Keisha: she renamed herself when she left for university) are the…
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The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel BarberyTranslated by Alison AndersonEuropa Editions, 2008 (Originally published in French in 2006, by Editions Gallimard)
Renée, who’s 54, has been the concierge of a luxury apartment building in Paris for the past 27 years. She’s a widow, and lives alone with her cat (because, you know, all lady concierges have cats). She does her job competently, and counts on people not really seeing her (because people only ever see what…
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The Drowned World by J.G.BallardLiveright Publishing (W.W. Norton), 2012(Originally Berkley Books, 1962)
I won a free advance reading copy of the 50th anniversary edition of The Drowned World, with a new introduction by Martin Amis, from W.W. Norton via a Goodreads giveaway. I’ve been meaning to read something by Ballard for a while, and this book, an early vision of a world in which global warming has…
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Crusoe’s Daughter by Jane GardamEuropa Editions, 2012 (Originally Hamish Hamilton, 1985)
Crusoe’s Daughter is the story of Polly Flint, who, when she’s six years old, comes to live with her two aunts in a big yellow house on a marsh in the North-East of England. Polly’s mother has been dead since Polly was one; her father is a sea-captain and not around much, and, as it…
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Satantango by László KrasznahorkaiTranslated by George SzirtesNew Directions, 2012
I started reading Satantango without many preconceptions: the cover, designed by Erik Carter and Paul Sahr, caught my eye in the window of McNally Jackson, and then when I saw the book at the library I figured I might as well pick it up. The book, originally published in Hungarian in 1985, is Krasznahorkai’s first…