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It is, to be clear, 100 percent fan fiction. |
The Thread's Must-Read |
"The Great Believers" by Rebecca Makkai Buy this book “A page turner.” “Powerful, unforgettable.” “Devastating.” “Deeply moving.” That’s just a fraction of the praise pouring in for Rebecca Makkai’s “The Great Believers,” a sprawling novel worth toting around with you for the rest of the summer. “The Great Believers” opens in Chicago in the 1980s, as a group of friends is just beginning to grapple with the devastation of the AIDS epidemic. As they gather at a wake for one friend, they live with the knowledge that the line of funerals has only just begun. One of the friends is Yale Tishman, who works at a university art gallery and has just received a strange offer from a donor who claims to have sketches dating back to the 1920s from prominent artists — Modigliani and more. In alternating chapters, Makkai jumps into the near-present, tracing the aftershocks, three decades later. The plots that kick off in the '80s have long-reaching consequences, as a mother searches for her long-lost daughter, entangled with a cult. At 400-plus pages, it’s not a beach read — unless you’ve got far more time at the beach than I do — but it will be one of the most engrossing, powerful books of the year. -Tracy Mumford |
This Week on The Thread |
How American history can be used as a weapon "Lies My Teacher Told Me" by James Loewen Buy this book James Loewen's 1995 book explained how history textbooks got the story of America wrong. Now, in a new edition, Loewen champions critical thinking in the age of fake news. More |
Spooky and off-kilter, "Come Again" shows Nate Powell's virtuosity "Come Again" by Nate Powell Buy this book Nate Powell is known for his work on John Lewis' autobiography "March" — but his new graphic novel goes in a different direction, digging into family secrets and supernatural horrors in an Ozarks commune. More |
Reading horror can arm us against a horrifying world Why read horror stories when the real world is scary enough on its own? Because horror does more than scare us — it teaches us how to live with being scared, and how to fight back against evil. More |
In new book, Barack and Joe solve a murder mystery "Hope Never Dies: An Obama-Biden Mystery" by Andrew Shaffer Buy this book The new noir novel "Hope Never Dies" rekindles a presidential buddy-cop bromance in order to unravel a suspicious death in Delaware. It is, to be clear, 100 percent fan fiction. More |
A look at the history of Canada's residential schools "Indian Horse" by Richard Wagamese Buy this book Bookseller Mara Panich-Crouch recommends a novel about the experiences of an Ojibwe boy caught in Canada's residential school system. More |
"American Hate" profiles survivors, but also brings hope "American Hate" by Arjun Singh Sethi Buy this book Amid the ugly realities of contemporary America, Arjun Singh Sethi's collection of stories affirms our courage and inspiration, opening a road map to reconciliation through the stories of victims. More |
Bonding over bog bodies? "Meet Me at the Museum" by Anne Youngson Buy this book Anne Youngson's debut novel is the charmer of the summer. Told in epistolary form, it follows a dissatisfied farmer's wife and a lonely museum curator who find that it's never too late for a fresh start. More |
An unapologetic heroine who's no gentle flower "Orchid and the Wasp" by Caoilinn Hughes Buy this book Caoilinn Hughes's new novel introduces a young Irish woman named Gael Foess, who is both exploitative and highly effective. The author says her protagonist is unlikable on purpose. More |
A novel packed with personality — maybe too much "This Body's Not Big Enough for Both of Us" by Edgar Cantero Buy this book Edgar Cantero's madcap new novel stars a brother-and-sister pair of private eyes with wildly differing personalities — who just happen to share the same body. (There's an explanation. Sort of.) More |
"Marvellous Equations" pulses with rhythmic power "The Marvellous Equations of the Dread" by Marcia Douglas Buy this book Marcia Douglas' new book imagines a resurrected Bob Marley, living in a clock tower and conversing with spirits — but Douglas also honors and elevates the voices of the women in Marley's orbit. More |
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