![080912_vowell_main 080912_vowell_main](//cache.thephoenix.com/secure/uploadedImages/The_Phoenix/Arts/Books/BOOKS_Sarah-Vowell_credit_B.jpg) HISTORY LESSON: Sarah Vowell looks back at Puritan life in The Wordy Shipmates. |
Fiction
Ah, fall, when Nobel Prize winners are announced — and, now, when past winners turn up with more good reading. It’s A Mercy (Knopf; November 14) that TONI MORRISON has chosen to revisit the emotional territory of Beloved; her latest recounts a 1680s Anglo-Dutch trader’s cancellation of a debt in exchange for a slave girl whose mother wished her a better life. Everyone’s having a good time in JOSÉ SARAMAGO’s Death with Interruptions (Harcourt; October 6), since Death has decided that she needs a break.
More prize winners going for another gold: in PHILIP ROTH’s Indignation (Houghton Mifflin; September 16), a young man fleeing 1950s Newark — and his overwhelming father — encounters college life in far-off Ohio. Remember The Witches of Eastwick? They’re now The Widows of Eastwick (Knopf; October 30), courtesy of JOHN UPDIKE. Recent Booker Award winner ANNE ENRIGHT offers a story collection with Yesterday’s Weather (Grove; September 16). PER PETTERSON follows up his IMPAC Dublin Literary Prize winner, Out Stealing Horses, with To Siberia (Graywolf; September 30), in which two Danish children watch the Nazis march in.
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Now that the late ROBERTO BOLAÑO has caught our attention, it’s time we read his masterpiece, 2666 (Farrar Straus Giroux; November 11), a complex tale of murder in Santa Teresa (read: Juárez) that will appear in a single-volume hardcover and a three-volume paperback. CARLOS FUENTES offers cozy vignettes in Happy Families (Random House; September 23); a ship called the Ibis floats across AMITAV GHOSH’s Sea of Poppies (Farrar Straus Giroux; October 14) en route to the Opium Wars.
And now for something completely different. In The Given Day (Morrow; September 23), DENNIS LEHANE moves away from crime fiction to paint a stark portrait of post–World War I Boston. And FRANCINE PROSE’s Goldengrove (HarperCollins; September 16), the study of a 13-year-old’s relationship with her drowned sister’s boyfriend, is not acid satire.
Stalin biographer SIMON MONTEFIORE revisits early-20th-century Russia in the debut novel Sashenka (Simon & Schuster; November 11); noted journalist IAN BURUMA also tries out fiction with The China Lover (Penguin Press; September 18), reimagining the life of film star Yoshiko Yamaguchi. Speaking of fictionalized lives: who knew that WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS and JACK KEROUAC got together to re-create friend Lucien Carr’s killing of David Kammerer? The novel, And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks (Grove; November 1), is appearing only now.
The hero of JIM HARRISON’s The English Major (Grove; October 7) takes an improbable road trip after his ex-wife snares the family farm, but for the ultimate trip, try BURTON RAFFEL’s new translation of Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales (Modern Library; November 18). Folks in JOHN BARTH’s The Development (Houghton Mifflin; October 7) stay put, if badly behaved; family, friends, and community cope with the disappearance of a popular high-school girl in STEWART O’NAN’s Songs for the Missing (Viking; October 30).
JOHN LE CARRÉ’s A Most Wanted Man (Scribner; October 7) is Issa, a young Russian who’s snuck into Hamburg claiming to be a Muslim medical student. LOUIS DE BERNIÈRES’s A Partisan’s Daughter (Knopf; October 10) is Roza, scion of a Tito supporter, who overwhelms bland Chris in 1970s London. P.D. JAMES’s The Private Patient (Knopf; November 19) is, alas, stuck at a clinic where murder is afoot. Gaze into MICHAEL COX’s The Glass of Time (Norton; October 13) and you’ll find reflected the sequel to his intriguing neo-Victorian thriller, The Meaning of Night.
At the New England prep school featured in ANITA SHREVE’s Testimony (Little, Brown; October 21), lives are demolished by a sex scandal — too bad about that videotape. Dark secrets also surface when scary-smart Sol travels to Germany with his family in NANCY HUSTON’s Prix Femina winner, Fault Lines (Black Cat; October 1). This French bestseller is available in 18 languages.
Non-Fiction
Hey, don’t blink. In Outliers: Why Some People Succeed and Some Don’t (Little, Brown; November 18), MALCOLM GLADWELL argues that it’s not an 80-hour work week but family and cultural particulars that put folks on top. Fall books from folks who got there: ANNE RICE limns her return to Catholicism in Called Out of Darkness: A Spiritual Confession (Knopf; October 7), and ART SPIEGELMAN offers Breakdowns: Portrait of the Artist As a Young %@&*! (Pantheon; October 7).
Success? If you think it means big bucks, try NIALL FERGUSON’s The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World (Penguin Press; November 13). If not, you might appreciate RUSSELL SHORTO’s Descartes’ Bones: A Skeletal History of the Conflict Between Faith and Reason (Doubleday; October 14), or JAY PARINI’s Promised Land: Thirteen Books That Changed America (Doubleday; November 4).
Among this fall’s surge of Lincoln celebrations, try JAMES M. MCPHERSON’s Tried by War: Abraham Lincoln As Commander-in-Chief (Penguin Press; October 7) and Our Lincoln: New Perspectives on Lincoln and His World (Norton; October 22), with offerings from contemporary historians edited by ERIC FONER. ANNETTE GORDON-REED reports on Jefferson’s slave relations in The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family (Norton; September 29); H.W. BRANDS revisits FDR in Traitor to His Class: The Privileged Life and Radical Presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Doubleday; November 4).
Don’t read SARAH VOWELL’s The Wordy Shipmates (Riverhead; October 7) if you think the Puritans were quaint. Likewise, KATHLEEN BURK’s Old World, New World: Great Britain and America from the Beginning (Atlantic Monthly; October 14) upends smug views of the special US-British relationship.
Want something current? BERNARD-HENRI LÉVY challenges totalitarianisms present and future in Left in Dark Times: A Stand Against the New Barbarism (Random House; September 16), and ANTONIA JUHASZ challenges fuel inefficiency in The Tyranny of Oil: The World’s Most Powerful Industry — And What We Must Do To Stop It (Morrow; October 7). In The Ayatollah Begs To Differ: The Paradox of Modern Iran (Doubleday; September 23), HOOMAN MAJD explains the deep-seated insecurities of his native land.
Poetry
Savage Detective lovers: ROBERTO BOLAÑO saw himself as a poet first, so grab his poetry collection, The Romantic Dogs (New Directions; November 28), when you pick up 2666. SHARON OLDS’s One Secret Thing (Knopf; September 25) offers a typically raw account of the mother-daughter relationship over time. GLYN MAXWELL’s Hide Now (Houghton Mifflin; September 25) plumbs contemporary life in fresh, colloquial language. And try to read NICK LAIRD’s latest collection On Purpose (Norton; October 6): it’s a knockout study of human relations.