Category: Fiction
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Our Tragic Universe by Scarlett ThomasHoughton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010 (Originally Canongate, 2010)
Meg, the narrator of Our Tragic Universe, is a writer: she’s been working for years on a novel that she can’t seem to finish, or even properly start. In the meantime, she’s been ghostwriting YA books, and also writing her own genre fiction, and also reviewing pop science books for a newspaper, the latter of…
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Errantry: Strange Stories by Elizabeth HandSmall Beer Press, 2012
The ten stories in Errantry range in length from sixty pages to three pages, with most falling somewhere in the middle, and, as the subtitle puts it, they’re all “strange.” Often, the strangeness is something unexplained or not fully resolved: a man goes to Cornwall in part to repeat a trip his now-dead wife took…
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Speaking from Among the Bones by Alan BradleyDelacorte Press (Random House), 2013
Oops, so much for sticking to the TBR Double Dog Dare until April 1st. I heard that there was a new Flavia de Luce mystery out, and promptly put a hold on it at the library, expecting it might take a while to get to me. But it didn’t, and once I got the email…
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Cryptonomicon by Neal StephensonAvon Books, 2002 (Originally 1999)
I should perhaps start by saying that Cryptonomicon probably isn’t a book I would have picked up on my own. I’d heard good things about it, and all my friends on Goodreads who have rated this book either liked it or really liked it (four gave it five stars, two gave it four stars, and…
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The Casual Vacancy by J.K. RowlingLittle, Brown (2012)
It was Ian Parker’s piece in the New Yorker back in October that made me want to read The Casual Vacancy: in that piece, Parker describes it as “a rural comedy of manners that, having taken on state-of-the-nation social themes, builds into black melodrama,” and says the plot focuses on several households in a fictional…
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Vicky Swanky Is a Beauty by Diane WilliamsMcSweeney’s Publishing, 2012
One of the quotes on the back cover of Vicky Swanky Is a Beauty is from Ben Marcus, who calls Diane Williams’s stories the “ideal delivery system” for “the uncanny”: that was the closest thing I could find as a point of entry to these fifty-one short short stories. Or maybe that’s not entirely true:…
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The Duel by Heinrich von KleistTranslated by Annie JanuschMelville House, 2011
This is the second of the five books called The Duel in Melville House’s Art of the Novella series that I’ve read, and the second that I haven’t been crazy about, though I’m still curious to read the others and see how I feel about them. I think there are two main things that contribute…
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The Thing about Thugs by Tabish KhairHoughton Mifflin Harcourt, 2012 (Originally HarperCollins, 2010)
The thing about The Thing about Thugs that’s most pleasing to me is the way it’s told, the way the narrative perspective and style shifts. There’s the first-person narration of a present-day author-figure who finds a bundle of notes from the mid-1800s in his grandfather’s library in India: the notes are in Farsi and are…
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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…