Fiction A to Z
by Myriam J.A. Chancy
The setting: Haiti, in the aftermath of 2010's devastating earthquake. This vividly rendered novel of place explores survivors' lives (and those no longer among them). Unified by the story of Port-au-Prince market woman Ma Lou, the novel is also a bold critique of societal rifts created by post-colonialism, which the quake only further exposes.
Why you might like it: After years spent interviewing and speaking with Haitian survivors, the author has crafted a narrative by turns bright, nuanced, and brutally tragic.
Want a taste? "The earth had buckled [falling] upon the earth’s children, upon the blameless as well as the guilty, without discrimination."
by Jenny Colgan
The setup: Sisters Carmen (suddenly unemployed) and Sofia (ever-perfect, now with another baby on the way) aren't crazy about moving in together, but Sofia could use an extra pair of hands.
The hook: Sofia also knows a friend who is trying to revive his ancient bookstore before the Christmas rush. Carmen tackles the task while juggling a romantic dilemma and (hopefully) healing long-standing family tensions.
Read it for: Heartwarming relationship fiction in an atmospheric Edinburgh setting.
by Jocelyn Nicole Johnson
What it is: An own voices collection of short stories that explore race, identity, and the shadow of slavery that haunts characters' lives. The titular novella centers on a descendant of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemmings, who aids neighbors driven from their home by white supremacists even as she questions her own relationship with a white man.
Why you'll like it: This debut ranges memorably from heart-wrenching and thought-provoking to lyrical and witty.
Try this next: The Office of Historical Corrections by Danielle Evans.
by Toshikazu Kawaguchi
Read it for: A refreshing take on time-travel.
What happens: Four customers at a special café can revisit their pasts so long as they return before their coffee gets cold -- and knowing that whatever they do won't change the present. So, why bother? Because sometimes it's the journey, not the destination that matters -- and their journeys will include heart-breaking loss, meaningful self-discovery, and unexpected joy.
For fans of: The Midnight Library by Matt Haig.
by Helene Tursten
Starring: Eight-eight-year-old Maude, whose life unfolds in six interconnected stories that lead up to the present -- where police detectives have made the grisly discovery of a dead body in her apartment. Maude is also capable of great magnanimity, which may just get her off the hook for that corpse.
Series alert: This book is a follow-up to the author's An Elderly Lady Is Up to No Good, and both are perfect for fans of Arsenic and Old Lace.
by Patricia Engel
The first line: “It was her idea to tie up the nun.”
What it is: Timely commentary of the U.S. border-crisis, told in multiple perspectives of a divided Colombian family -- with members trapped in various places, but all desperate to be reunited.
Why you might like it: This intricately plotted, issue-oriented novel centers primarily on the willful, determined 15-year-old Talia and will hold special appeal to readers who enjoyed Julia Alvarez's Afterlife.
by Anissa Gray
The first line: "You do a lot of thinking in jail."
What it's about: Three sisters lean on one another to survive their dysfunctional childhoods. Younger siblings Lillian and Viola come to the aid of the eldest, Althea, who now faces prison charges that cast the family from respect to disgrace.
Who it's for: This moving novel of family relationships will suit fans of Tayari Jones, Brit Bennett, Jessmyn Ward, and Caroline Leavitt.
by Zak Salih
The first line: "That my first encounter with Mitko B. ended in a betrayal, even a minor one, should have given me greater warning at the time, which should in turn have made my desire for him less, if not done away with it completely."
The setup: Childhood friends reunite as thirty-something gay men who find themselves with differing perspectives on what it means to be queer -- from the (often) closeted days of their youth, to the present in which a younger generation can more freely define their sexuality.
by Jake Wolff
The first line: “I can’t say precisely when the Emperor developed the cough.”
What it's about: As a depressed gay teen, Conrad begins an affair with his chemistry teacher, Sammy. After Sammy's death, Conrad becomes obsessed with continuing his lover/mentor's quest for alchemical immortality.
Why you might like it: Spanning decades and alternating between past and present, this sweeping debut novel delves into the mysteries of love, scientific inquiry, and mental illness.
by Susie Yang
The first line: “Ivy Lin was a thief but you would never know it to look at her.”
What happens: Ivy Lin, raised through age five by her grandmother in China, has been well-schooled in the fine arts of deception and theft. Ivy's aloof parents bring her back to Boston, where she grows up and eventually falls in love with an upper-crust politician's son. Will Ivy's past catch up and ruin her chances at happily-ever-after?
Reviewers say: "A sophisticated and darkly glittering gem of a debut." (Kirkus Reviews)
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