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BookBrowse Free Newsletter 09/19/2013

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Sept 19, 2013

Dear Reader

 
I hope you enjoy this issue of BookBrowse Highlights!

Best regards,

Davina,
BookBrowse Editor


 
Become a BookBrowse Member
 
The content in this email is a fraction of the reviews, previews, backstories and more available to our members. For example, in the latest issue of The BookBrowse Review we offer reviews of, and backstories about, 12 featured books, plus previews of almost 50 notable books publishing in the next two weeks.

 
 
 
Readers Recommend

Each month we give away books to US resident members to read and review (or discuss). Members who choose to take part receive a free book (including free shipping) about every three months. Here are their opinions on two recently published books:


Book Jacket Songs of Willow Frost
by Jamie Ford


Publisher: Ballantine Books
Publication Date: 09/10/2013
Historical Fiction, 352 pages

Number of reader reviews: 31
Readers' consensus:


BookBrowse Members Say
"Songs of Willow Frost is a poignant story about family, tradition, and what we do for love. A young Chinese American woman and her son must cope with the hardships of the Great Depression, both together and apart. The combination of setting and characters creates a world of believable and sympathetic humanity. Highly recommended." - Maggie S. (Durango, CO)

"I would highly recommend this wonderful book to, really, anyone who loves to read, and definitely to book groups for the wealth of discussion topics throughout the book." - Mary Q. (Greeley, CO)

"I was thrilled to see Jamie Ford's second novel Songs of Willow Frost as a First Impressions book. I absolutely loved his first, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet so was apprehensive that Songs would not live up to Hotel. I was not disappointed!" - Nancy M. (Hillsborough, CA)

"This is an incredible story, both heartfelt and heartrending and very heart warming." - Sharon P. (Jacksonville, FL)

"This is a winner! While I liked Ford's previous book Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, I loved Songs Willow Frost. Bravo Ford!" - Carole A. (Denver, CO)

"I can't wait for it to be published so both my book clubs will be able to read and discuss it." - Rita K. (Bannockburn, IL)

Above are 6 of the 31 reader reviews for this book
Read all the Reviews

Buy at Amazon

 
Readers Recommend


Book JacketThe Edge of Normal
by Carla Norton
 


Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur
Publication Date: 09/10/2013
Thrillers, 320 pages

Number of reader reviews: 31
Readers' consensus:  

 

 

BookBrowse Members Say

"Bestselling true crime author Carla Norton delivers her first novel, The Edge of Normal. After enduring four-years of captivity and six-years of therapy herself, twenty-two year old Reeve LeClaire decides to help when a thirteen-year-old girl is rescued from a year of imprisonment. Avoiding many of the gritty details of what these victims suffer at the hands of their captors, Norton draws a complex character striving to recover her life despite intrusions from the public, the media and law enforcement. Timely and compelling, this book should have wide appeal. Even the anticipated final showdown kept me on the edge of my seat." - Connie H. (Evanston, IL)

"A captivating and timely novel by Carla Norton. This author clearly knows her subject matter as her previous non-fiction book, Perfect Victim, is used by the FBI's Behavioral Science Unit and makes her an expert in captivity and survival." - Tracy N. (Mill Valley, CA)

"An excellent choice for a mystery book club." - Robert S. (Henderson, NV)

"I liked this book very much. It was a page-turner and certainly very timely in subject matter. I will suggest this book for a future read for my book discussion group." - Nancy G. (Oceanside, CA)

"I thought about this book long after I had read it." - Barbara C. (Hawthorn Woods, IL)

"I highly recommend this book to readers who love a psychological thriller that not only is difficult to put down, but also stays in your mind and heart well after finishing it." - Cheryl K. (East Aurora, NY)

Above are 6 of the 31 reviews for this book
Read all the Reviews

Buy at Amazon
 

Featured Review    

   

Below is BookBrowse's review of


Book Jacket

Burial Rites 

by Hannah Kent

Hardcover (Sep 2013), 336 pages.

Publisher: Little Brown & Company
ISBN 9780316243919

BookBrowse Rating:
Critics' Consensus:


Review:
Hannah Kent's novel Burial Rites is as dark and cunning as the recurrent ravens in her exceptional debut. Based on real events, the novel recounts the story of Agnes Magn�sd�ttir, an Icelandic workmaid charged with murder in 1828.

Born in Adelaide, Australia, in 1985, the author was a teenager when she traveled to Iceland and first heard Agnes's story. Kent's fictional interpretation is informed by years of research, including interviews with Icelanders, ministerial records, parish archives, censuses, local histories and publications.

In the novel's opening chapters, Agnes's sentence-beheading-is revealed. While she awaits execution she is moved from a holding with brutal, deplorable conditions to a farm called Korns�. Using one of her few remaining rights, she requests as her spiritual advisor a young assistant reverend named T�ti.

At first, Agnes is feared and shunned by the family she joins at Korns�: a district officer who is duty-bound to house her, as well as his wife Margr�t and their two daughters, Steina and Lauga. Even the reverend is horrified in Agnes's presence and describes the seemingly doomed 33-year-old "like a new corpse, fresh dug from the grave." Early on, T�ti admits to Agnes that his training is incomplete. Secretly he agonizes about what kind of reverend he will be if he can't stand the sight of suffering.

During one of his visits to the Korns� farm, Margr�t confides in T�ti her resentment about sheltering Agnes (one of the Devil's children, she says), then focuses her attention on a small flock of ravens flying over a nearby mountain range. Citing traditional belief, Margr�t asserts the correct name for a flock of ravens is a conspiracy. Yet the reverend says, "I thought they were called an unkindness." Later, as Margr�t starts to soften toward the prisoner in her house, we discover that a conspiracy of sorts may apply to Agnes, as well, and the circumstances surrounding her impending fate.

While unkindness abounds in this richly plotted story, small yet significant good deeds also prevail. T�ti, for instance, is chosen by Agnes, not for the purpose of absolution but because he once helped her over a flooded river, a fleeting occurrence he had forgotten. And Steina, the eldest of the two daughters at Korns�, remembers when she and her sister were children they had a brief, but impressionable, encounter with Agnes.

Despite Agnes's growing reservations about T�ti's youth ("They condemn me to death and I ask for a boy to coach me for it"), along with his own increasing doubts about saving her soul, he perseveres, hoping he may gain Agnes's trust and she will finally atone. Instead, as she reveals details from her past, she unnerves the earnest but na�ve reverend with her cleverness and wariness, her insight about the ways of the world that still elude him. In one scene she says, "To know what a person has done, and to know who a person is, are very different things."

Through a varied narrative that includes multiple perspectives, letters and haunting poems, Kent's novel unravels with superb pacing and suspense, eventually revealing the truth of what happened the winter night two men were murdered at Illugastadir, a farm by the sea. Chapters employing Agnes's direct voice are especially powerful. Determined to close herself to the world and those who have condemned her, she thinks, "They will see the whore, the madwoman, the murderess, the female dripping blood into the grass and laughing with her mouth choked with dirt...They might see the lamb circled by ravens, bleating for a lost mother. But they will not see me. I will not be there."

Kent also keenly captures the uniqueness of her novel's setting: Iceland's beauty and isolation, its sense of solitude-and despair. Remembering Illugastadir, Agnes says to Toti, "The shore is of pebbles, and huge tangles of seaweed float in the bay and look like the hair of the drowned." Threaded throughout the novel are other striking (and frightening) images: "blizzards that howl like the widows of fishermen," shrieking seagulls, and a two-headed lamb.

In her author's note, Kent explains that after reading publications that were particularly contemptuous of Agnes's character, she wanted to supply a more ambiguous portrayal. What defies equivocation, however, is Kent's riveting account that imaginatively and thoughtfully explores who Agnes was, and what she did, resulting in a story as wrenching as it is emotionally chilling.

Reviewed by Suzanne Reeder

Above is BookBrowse's review of Burial Rites.
Read the review and backstory in full


 

 

Beyond the Book    

 

At BookBrowse, we go 'beyond the book' to explore interesting aspects relating to each book we feature.

 
Here is a recent "Beyond the Book" feature for Dissident Gardens by Jonathan Lethem

 

 

 

 

The Role of Jewish Women in American Communism

While communism might be a dirty word today, its principles held a lot of appeal for the working poor in the United States for much of the 1920s through the 50s. The idea of a "workers' revolution" akin to the Russian October revolution of 1917 didn't seem too far-fetched. The stock market crash of 1929 followed by the Great Depression further cemented the popularity of a movement that promised better labor arrangements in general - improved working conditions and equal rights for all. Communism grew to such a strong extent that it soon became a vital part of left-wing American politics.

Religious organizations with their emphasis on "social justice" also found roots in this left-wing movement. Soon Jewish women played a large part in keeping numbers strong, especially in New York City. Most of these members of the American Communist Party (CP) were East European Jews working in the trades. As the movement grew and the makeup and identity of these women evolved, the Communist Party changed along with them. Rose Zimmer, the primary character in Dissident Gardens, is modeled after these Jewish women organizers. She works for a pickle factory in Brooklyn while helping to implement community projects in the neighborhood and sowing the seeds of communism in her neighborhood.

Many of the communist parties members were funneled through the Jewish Federation, a Yiddish-language organization with roots in socialism. Even in the communist party, this faction of Jewish women members emphasized work on cultural projects that protected Jewish heritage while remaining true to the principles of communism. Over the decades, the influence of these women on the larger communist party declined; for one thing there was infighting about the direction to pursue and second, foreign-language federations within the Communist Party were diminished under a directive from the Soviet branch.

Clara LemlichThe generation of women that followed in the 40s and early 50s (which is when Rose Zimmer is involved) carved their own path in the party and weren't as strongly defined by their Jewishness as their predecessors were. These women galvanized fellow workers to protest against low pay or harsh working conditions - the work was not always focused on Jewish cultural enrichment projects. This movement eventually birthed the United Council of Working Class Women. Over the years, it was not just workers who were part of the Communist Party - many left-wing intellectuals, including playwrights and artists, joined... continued     


Above is part of BookBrowse's backstory to Dissident Gardens. Read the review and backstory in full

By Poornima Apte

 
News

Sep 17 2013: 
The Rail Book Club, a Twitter based book club has opened in the UK with the aim of bringing passenger reviews and book recommendations to commuters via digital screens in stations throughout the country...(more)

Sep 17 2013: 
James Patterson plans to give $1 million to support independent bookstores that have a children's section. No specifics have been released as yet but interested parties can sign up for more information on his...(more)

Sep 17 2013: 
In its final brief before oral arguments, the Authors Guild this week closed by imploring Judge Denny Chin to shoot down Google's book scanning program, and let Congress ask questions later...(more)

Sep 16 2013: 
The Sunday Times reported yesterday that entries for the Man Booker Prize would be opened to American authors from 2014. Currently, the prize is only open to writers from the UK, Ireland and the Commonwealth (sovereign states that used to be part of the British colonies including Canada,...(more)

Sep 13 2013: 
Saturday Sept 14 marks the biggest ever campaign for bookstores in the UK, with the launch of the Books Are My Bag campaign, starting with the Big Bookshop Party on Saturday...(more)

Sep 12 2013: 
The National Book Foundation have announced their 5 Under 35 authors for 2013. Two of the authors' books are yet to publish and another is not available yet in the USA. All five of the authors are women...(more)

Sep 12 2013: 
JK Rowling is to make her screenwriting debut in a new Harry Potter-themed film series, Warner Bros has announced. The first film of the series will be titled Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. It, and the later films, will be adapted from the book of the same name that...(more)

Sep 10 2013: 
The shortlist for the Man Booker Prize has just been announced:
(more)

Sep 09 2013: 
A U.S. judge who found Apple conspired to fix e-book prices imposed new restrictions on the iPad maker on Friday, limiting its agreements with publishers. An external monitor is also to be appointed to review Apple's antitrust compliance policies, procedures and training for two...(more)

Sep 09 2013: 
Oyster, a book subscription service that launched a few days ago, provides an all-you-can-read experience for a monthly fee of $9.95 a month. Currently Oyster offers 100,000 titles including books from from HarperCollins, Workman, Melville House, and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt...(more)


Read these news stories, and many others, in full


 

Win   

   

Alex by Pierre Lemaitre

 

Published by: Quercus
Publication Date: Sep 2013   

 

Enter the Giveaway 

  

Past Winners


 

From the Jacket

In this gripping, fiendishly plotted detective novel, Alex Pr�vost is kidnapped, savagely beaten, and suspended from the ceiling of an abandoned industrial building in a wooden cage - she is running out of time. Her abductor/torturer appears to desire only one thing: to watch her die. Will hunger, thirst, or the rats get her first?

One witness has filed a report with the police, but apart from this insubstantial bit of evidence Police Commandant Camille Verhoeven has nothing to go on: no suspect, no other leads. To understand what has happened to Alex, the detective - a man with a tragic past but extraordinary abilities as an investigator - must first understand more about the girl whose life he is trying to save. As he slowly uncovers the story of the girl's unusual childhood, he comes to realize she is no ordinary victim. She is beautiful, yes, but also extremely tough and resourceful - and unconventional in the extreme.

As the manhunt is drawing to its conclusion, the case shifts in the most shocking way. Before long, saving Alex's life will be the least of Commandant Verhoeven's considerable challenges.



Reviews:

"Starred Review. Some unexpected plot twists will keep readers turning the pages." - Publishers Weekly

"Starred Review. An eloquent thriller with a denouement that raises eyebrows as it speeds the pulse." - Kirkus

"Fascinating, horrifying, not to be missed." - Rolling Stone (Italy)

"Alex ... moves from read-as-fast-as-you-can horror to an intricately plotted race to a dark truth." - The Guardian (UK)

"Enthralls at every stage of its unpredictability." - The Times (UK)     



5 people will each win a hardcover copy of Alex.  

This giveaway is open to residents of the USA only, unless you are a BookBrowse member, in which case you are eligible to win wherever you might live.

Enter the giveaway here

 

 

 

 

Contents
 
Readers Recommend
Featured Review
News
Win
Book Discussion
Read-Alikes
Reading List
Book Clubs
Publishing Soon
Interviews
Wordplay
 

 

 

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Summary & Reviews 



 
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opens Sept 24


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opens Oct 1
 
 

 
Read-Alikes

If you liked...

Try these...

Atonement

Runaway

Swimming Home



If you liked...

Try these...

All Woman and Springtime

I'll Be Seeing You

In Darkness

Pretty Birds




If you liked...

Try these...

Cold Mountain

The Special Prisoner

The Surrendered


More Readalikes

 
Featured Reading 1940s & '50s
A Moment Comes
The Lion in the Lei Shop
Saving Italy
Helga's Diary
This is a small selection of the titles to be found in our 1940s & '50s recommended reading list

 
Recommended
for Book Clubs

Live by Night

The Headmaster's Wager

More reading guides & book club advice

 
Publishing
 Soon
Book Jacket
Book Jacket
Book Jacket
Book Jacket

 

Author Interviews
 


Vaddey Ratner discusses her first book, In the Shadow of the Banyan, and how it reflects her family's - and her - experiences during the time when the Khmer Rouge took power in Cambodia, and how these experiences led to her debut as an author.




Two recordings of artist and Holocaust survivor Helga Weiss, who wrote Helga's Diary, about her time in a concentration camp and the responsibility of being a survivor.

 

 

Wordplay

Solve this clue 
"S O O A Half
A D O T O"

and be entered
to win the book of your choice

Entry & Details

 

 
Answer to
Last Wordplay

P A L P Crust,
T A M T B B


Promises are like pie crust, they are made to be broken

Meaning:  Promises should not be trusted.

Background:  The first recorded use of this expression is by Ridens on Aug 16, 1681:

"He makes no more of breaking Acts of Parliaments, than if they were like Promises and Pie-crust, made to be broken."

The internet has little in the way of information on the life of Heraclitus Ridens but a glance at his writings shows him to have been an essayist, poet and satirist. The chances are that he was named for the pre-Socratic Greek philosopher Heraclitus of Ephesus.


Irish writer and satirist Jonathan Swift, however, popularized the expression in his 1738 book, Polite Conversation, and thus is often attributed with being the author of it... more

 

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