Dear BookBrowsers,
With this issue, we bring you two intense debuts featuring fraught romance. In
A Private Man by Stephanie Sy-Quia, a theology teacher and a Catholic priest fall in love, while in Djamel White's
All Them Dogs, a man returning to the gang scene in Dublin experiences an attraction to his literal partner in crime.
Veronica Roth, author of the popular YA Divergent series, returns with a novel for adults,
Seek the Traitor's Son, boasting its own slow-burn romance between a character destined for impressive military victory or crushing defeat and the Knight sworn to protect her. Other fantastic new works of fiction are Ray Nayler's
Palaces of the Crow, in which four children hide out in the Lithuanian forest during World War II,
Returns and Exchanges by Kayla Rae Whitaker, following a family at the helm of a discount store chain over more than a decade, and Fran Fabriczki's
Porcupines, about a Hungarian immigrant mother in Los Angeles and her daughter's determination to discover the truth of her paternity.
Plus, enjoy nonfiction navigating the outdoors just in time for summer: David George Haskell's
How Flowers Made Our World, a biological and social history of flowering plants, and
Nightfaring by Megan Eaves-Egenes, which seeks to rediscover the darkness of the night sky in an era of overwhelming light pollution.
Beyond the Book articles for the above include reflections on both natural and human-created wonders:
the rose windows of Notre-Dame Cathedral,
the intelligence of crows (as we might perceive it), and
the complex ways that plants communicate (often unbeknownst to humans).
You can also read other reviews and articles, check out
our latest list of previews, enter our giveaway of Yrsa Daley-Ward's novel
The Catch, and find much more to explore.
Thank you for supporting BookBrowse!
— The BookBrowse Team
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