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STACKED

books

  • STACKED
  • About Us
  • Categories
    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
      • Cover Redesigns
      • Cover Trends
    • Feminism
      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
      • Size Acceptance
    • In The Library
      • Challenges & Censorship
      • Collection Development
      • Discussion and Resource Guides
      • Readers Advisory
    • Professional Development
      • Book Awards
      • Conferences
    • The Publishing World
      • Data & Stats
    • Reading Life and Habits
    • Romance
    • Young Adult
  • Reviews + Features
    • About The Girls Series
    • Author Interviews
    • Contemporary YA Series
      • Contemporary Week 2012
      • Contemporary Week 2013
      • Contemporary Week 2014
    • Guest Posts
    • Link Round-Ups
      • Book Riot
    • Readers Advisory Week
    • Reviews
      • Adult
      • Audiobooks
      • Graphic Novels
      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

The 90s Are Alive and Well in YA

March 9, 2020 |

It’s weird to write “many years ago” on a blog post, but when you’ve been writing a blog for 11 years (whoa!), it’s a true statement. Many years ago, I wrote about what I perceive the difference to be among contemporary fiction, realistic fiction, and historical fiction in YA. My thoughts on this continue to simmer, and I still land pretty much where I did back then: there’s a difference among the three, and that difference, while maybe pedantic, does have some meaning in the world of YA, where the teen age is so defined and limited. Since that post, we’ve seen a wave of realistic YA hitting shelves that are set in the 1990s, owing in part to nostalgia on the part of the authors, but also in part due to the fact that, whether we like it or not, the 90s are popular with today’s teenagers.

I remember vividly when Austin Powers came out, and the 1970s were so popular. I was a teenager then, and I pulled out the boot cut/bell bottom jeans, wore jewelry reminiscent of the hippie era, wished beyond all wishes I could have that long, center parted hair that I saw gracing magazine covers that mimicked those styles of the 70s. Everything old becomes cool again, is what I was told at the time by adults who remembered being teenagers during the 70s and cringing at the return of such trends.

And this is, of course, where I find myself thinking about how I am now the adult cringing at the return of 90s style. It only feels natural that the books for young readers would reflect this trend.

But even more than the 90s trending, so much of what these YA books set in the 90s do is explore the intersections of history and bring to light the challenges that existed for those who live in the margins. Certainly there is fun here, but there’s also a real look at racial injustice, bigotry toward those of different sexualities, and more.

Let’s take a look at some of the recent and forthcoming YA books set in the 90s. This won’t be comprehensive, and descriptions are from Goodreads. I’d love to hear about any others you might know about hitting shelves this year or that came out in the past year or so. What have been your favorites?

As someone who tends to avoid YA books set in the 90s because of what it brings up for me, I’m willing to give some of the strongest ones a try.

Radical recent YA books set in the 90s. These young adult books from 2019 and 2020 are set in the 1990s.  book lists | YA books | YA books set in the 90s | YA books set in the 1990s | #YALit

Recent and Upcoming YA Books Set In The 90s

Baby and Solo by Lisabeth Posthuma (2021)

Seventeen-year-old Joel Teague is in the unique position of having completed seven years of treatment for a mental illness he may have never had. Now he’s got a new prescription from his therapist—a part-time job, which he finds at ROYO Video, a video rental store. He’s lugging around two humongous secrets (“The Bad Thing That Happened” and “What Was Wrong With Me,” as he refers to them) until he encounters, in his closed-off co-worker “Baby,” a remarkable and terrifying opportunity. To open up. To be there for her, and to be there. To choose vulnerability.

It’s a difficult choice. A childhood trauma has left him both more and less erratic than everyone around him (including his perpetually concerned parents and ROYO Video’s motley crew of femme fatales, enigmas and bratty-younger-brothers). And he’s obsessively chasing an elusive “normal life,” while navigating the pitfalls of exactly that.

BABY & SOLO explores urgent issues (LGBTQ+ identity, mental illness, female autonomy) by examining a less-enlightened time (the year 1996), to summon belly laughs and weepy spells almost simultaneously, and to trust its audience with a character and story as complex as the world around us. Joel’s voice is both hilarious and heart-bursting—and completely absorbs the reader as you hope he’ll find what he needs.

The Black Kids by Christina Hammonds Reed (September 1)

Los Angeles, 1992

Ashley Bennett and her friends are living the charmed life. It’s the end of senior year and they’re spending more time at the beach than in the classroom. They can already feel the sunny days and endless possibilities of summer.

Everything changes one afternoon in April, when four LAPD officers are acquitted after beating a black man named Rodney King half to death. Suddenly, Ashley’s not just one of the girls. She’s one of the black kids.

As violent protests engulf LA and the city burns, Ashley tries to continue on as if life were normal. Even as her self-destructive sister gets dangerously involved in the riots. Even as the model black family façade her wealthy and prominent parents have built starts to crumble. Even as her best friends help spread a rumor that could completely derail the future of her classmate and fellow black kid, LaShawn Johnson.

With her world splintering around her, Ashley, along with the rest of LA, is left to question who is the us? And who is the them?

 

Let Me Hear a Rhyme by Tiffany D. Jackson (Available Now)

Biggie Smalls was right. Things done changed. But that doesn’t mean that Quadir and Jarrell are okay letting their best friend Steph’s tracks lie forgotten in his bedroom after he’s killed—not when his beats could turn any Bed-Stuy corner into a celebration, not after years of having each other’s backs.

Enlisting the help of Steph’s younger sister, Jasmine, Quadir and Jarrell come up with a plan to promote Steph’s music under a new rap name: The Architect. Soon, everyone in Brooklyn is dancing to Steph’s voice. But then his mixtape catches the attention of a hotheaded music rep and—with just hours on the clock—the trio must race to prove Steph’s talent from beyond the grave.

Now, as the pressure—and danger—of keeping their secret grows, Quadir, Jarrell, and Jasmine are forced to confront the truth about what happened to Steph. Only each has something to hide. And with everything riding on Steph’s fame, together they need to decide what they stand for before they lose everything they’ve worked so hard to hold on to—including each other.

 

The Mall by Megan McCafferty (June 9)

The year is 1991. Scrunchies, mixtapes and 90210 are, like, totally fresh. Cassie Worthy is psyched to spend the summer after graduation working at the Parkway Center Mall. In six weeks, she and her boyfriend head off to college in NYC to fulfill The Plan: higher education and happily ever after.

But you know what they say about the best laid plans…

Set entirely in a classic “monument to consumerism,” the novel follows Cassie as she finds friendship, love, and ultimately herself, in the most unexpected of places. Megan McCafferty, beloved New York Times bestselling author of the Jessica Darling series, takes readers on an epic trip back in time to The Mall.

 

 

 

Rebel Girls by Elizabeth Keenan (Available Now)

It’s 1992, and there’s a rumor spreading in Baton Rouge…

When it comes to being social, Athena Graves is far more comfortable creating a mixtape playlist than she is talking to cute boys—or anyone, for that matter. Plus her staunchly feminist views and love of punk rock aren’t exactly mainstream at St. Ann’s, her conservative Catholic high school.

Then a malicious rumor starts spreading through the halls…a rumor that her popular, pretty, pro-life sister had an abortion over the summer. A rumor that has the power to not only hurt Helen, but possibly see her expelled.

Despite their wildly contrasting views, Athena, Helen and their friends must find a way to convince the student body and the administration that it doesn’t matter what Helen did or didn’t do…even if their riot grrrl protests result in the expulsion of their entire rebel girl gang.

 

 

Those Who Prey by Jennifer Moffett (November 10)

College life isn’t what Emily expected.

She expected to spend freshman year strolling through the ivy-covered campus with new friends, finally feeling like she belonged. Instead, she walks the campus alone, still not having found her place or her people so far away from home.

But then the Kingdom finds her.

The Kingdom, an exclusive on-campus group, offers everything Emily expected of college and more: acceptance, friends, a potential boyfriend, and a chance to spend the summer in Italy on a mission trip. But the trip is not what she thought it would be. Emily and the others are stripped of their passports and money. They’re cut off from their families back home. The Kingdom’s practices become increasingly manipulative and dangerous.

And someone ends up dead.

At times unsettling and always riveting, Those Who Prey looks at the allure of cult life, while questioning just how far we’re willing to go to find where we belong.

 

We Were Promised Spotlights by Lindsay Sproul (March 24)

The Miseducation of Cameron Post meets Everything Leads to You in this queer young adult novel. 

Taylor Garland’s good looks have earned her the admiration of everyone in her small town. She’s homecoming queen, the life of every party, and she’s on every boy’s most-wanted list.

People think Taylor is living the dream, and assume she’ll stay in town and have kids with the homecoming king–maybe even be a dental hygienist if she’s super ambitious. But Taylor is actually desperate to leave home, and she hates the smell of dentists’ offices. Also? She’s completely in love with her best friend, Susan.

Senior year is almost over, and everything seems perfect. Now Taylor just has to figure out how to throw it all away.

Lindsay Sproul’s debut is full of compelling introspection and painfully honest commentary on what it’s like to be harnessed to a destiny you never wanted.

 

Who Put This Song On? by Morgan Parker (Available Now)

Trapped in sunny, stifling, small-town suburbia, seventeen-year-old Morgan knows why she’s in therapy. She can’t count the number of times she’s been the only non-white person at the sleepover, been teased for her “weird” outfits, and been told she’s not “really” black. Also, she’s spent most of her summer crying in bed. So there’s that, too.

Lately, it feels like the whole world is listening to the same terrible track on repeat—and it’s telling them how to feel, who to vote for, what to believe. Morgan wonders, when can she turn this song off and begin living for herself?

Life may be a never-ending hamster wheel of agony, but Morgan finds her crew of fellow outcasts, blasts music like there’s no tomorrow, discovers what being black means to her, and finally puts her mental health first. She decides that, no matter what, she will always be intense, ridiculous, passionate, and sometimes hilarious. After all, darkness doesn’t have to be a bad thing. Darkness is just real.

Filed Under: book lists, ya, ya fiction, Young Adult, young adult fiction

Public Library Association Conference 2020

March 4, 2020 |

I had the opportunity to attend the Public Library Association annual conference for the first time last week. PLA is a division of the American Library Association that is dedicated to public libraries in particular (excluding school, academic, and special), so the conference was a bonanza of programming that was all mostly relevant to me and my work. I attended programs on decolonizing the catalog, self-care and avoiding burnout, #eBooksForAll, the Indie Author Program, making public libraries friendly for trans staff and kids, and more. Plus, PLA brought us a superstar slate of headline speakers, including Stacey Abrams and Haben Girma, who were both so informative and interesting and charming and provided takeaways I could apply immediately to my work.

Photo of Stacey Abrams

Stacey Abrams graciously posed for us at the beginning of her talk so we could all get the perfect shot for Insta. My phone’s camera is bad, so forgive the blurriness.

The conference was in Nashville, which meant I had hot chicken and barbecue and also tried out a place called Biscuit Love, which maybe had the best biscuit I’ve ever eaten. Our group of librarians also stumbled onto a bar trivia game and played on a whim; we got second place.

photo of Prince's Hot Chicken food truck

At Prince’s Hot Chicken, the options for spice level were mild, medium, hot, x-hot, xx-hot, and xxx-hot. I opted for the hot, which was maybe a smidge too mild for me. It didn’t quite make my eyes water or my nose run, as a good spicy meal should. Next time!

The exhibit hall was markedly different from the more general library conferences I’ve attended in the past, in a way I wasn’t expecting: there was a much bigger push for adult titles. I’m pretty used to going to a library conference and seeing children’s titles take up at least half of the  publisher booth real estate and what seems like more than half of the ARC giveaways. Not so at PLA: there were piles and piles of adult titles, and middle grade and YA were much rarer. This provided me with a fun opportunity to learn more about the buzzy adult titles being published in the next few months, which is not as relevant to my work but definitely added to my tbr list (and of course the staff were happy to talk about their children’s titles with me, as always). Here are a few of the titles that I’m excited to read or purchase for the library.

 

elatsoe book coverElatsoe by Darcie Little Badger, illustrated by Rovina Cai

Imagine an America very similar to our own. It’s got homework, best friends, and pistachio ice cream.

There are some differences. This America been shaped dramatically by the magic, monsters, knowledge, and legends of its peoples, those Indigenous and those not. Some of these forces are charmingly everyday, like the ability to make an orb of light appear or travel across the world through rings of fungi. But other forces are less charming and should never see the light of day.

Elatsoe lives in this slightly stranger America. She can raise the ghosts of dead animals, a skill passed down through generations of her Lipan Apache family. Her beloved cousin has just been murdered, in a town that wants no prying eyes. But she is going to do more than pry. The picture-perfect facade of Willowbee masks gruesome secrets, and she will rely on her wits, skills, and friends to tear off the mask and protect her family.

My thoughts: This is on the launch list of Levine Querido, the new independent publisher started by Arthur A. Levine, who had his own imprint at Scholastic for 23 years. This is an #ownvoices book in more than one way: Darcie Little Badger is an enrolled member of the Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas, and like her protagonist Elatsoe, is asexual. The story and its setting are immediately intriguing, and I’m drawn too by Rovina Cai’s illustrations, unusual in a novel for teens. This is one of at least three children’s books by and about indigenous people on Levine Querido’s launch list; the others are a memoir by Eric Gansworth called Apple and a collection of sacred stories from the Americas by María García Esperón called The Sea-Ringed World. This last one was originally published in Spanish in Mexico and translated into English by David Bowles.

 

Fortress book coverThe Fortress by S. A. Jones

Jonathon Bridge has a corner office in a top-tier law firm, tailored suits and an impeccable pedigree. He has a fascinating wife, Adalia, a child on the way, and a string of pretty young interns as lovers on the side. He’s a man who’s going places. His world is our world: the same chaos and sprawl, haves and have-nots, men and women, skyscrapers and billboards. But it also exists alongside a vast, self-sustaining city-state called The Fortress where the indigenous inhabitants–the Vaik, a society run and populated exclusively by women–live in isolation.

When Adalia discovers his indiscretions and the ugly sexual violence pervading his firm, she agrees to continue their fractured marriage only on the condition that Jonathan voluntarily offers himself to The Fortress as a supplicant and stay there for a year. Jonathon’s arrival at The Fortress begins with a recitation of the conditions of his stay: He is forbidden to ask questions, to raise his hand in anger, and to refuse sex.

Jonathon is utterly unprepared for what will happen to him over the course of the year–not only to his body, but to his mind and his heart. This absorbing, confronting and moving novel asks questions about consent, power, love and fulfilment. It asks what it takes for a man to change, and whether change is possible without a radical reversal of the conditions that seem normal.

My thoughts: Workman has a new speculative fiction imprint for adults called Erewhon, and this title is the most intriguing one for me on their inaugural list. It was first published in Australia in 2018. I’m interested to see how it handles its pretty radical concept.

 

enigma game book coverThe Enigma Game by Elizabeth Wein

1940. Facing a seemingly endless war, fifteen-year-old Louisa Adair wants to fight back, make a difference, do something-anything to escape the Blitz and the ghosts of her parents, who were killed by enemy action. But when she accepts a position caring for an elderly German woman in the small village of Windyedge, Scotland, it hardly seems like a meaningful contribution. Still, the war feels closer than ever in Windyedge, where Ellen McEwen, a volunteer driver with the Royal Air Force, and Jamie Beaufort-Stuart, a flight leader for the 648 Squadron, are facing a barrage of unbreakable code and enemy attacks they can’t anticipate.

Their paths converge when a German pilot lands in Windyedge under mysterious circumstances and plants a key that leads Louisa to an unparalleled discovery: an Enigma machine that translates German code. Louisa, Ellen, and Jamie must work together to unravel a puzzle that could turn the tide of the war, but doing so will put them directly in the cross-hairs of the enemy.

Featuring beloved characters from Code Name Verity and The Pearl Thief, as well as a remarkable new voice, this brilliant, breathlessly plotted novel by award-winning author Elizabeth Wein is a must-read.

My thoughts: Like many, I loved Code Name Verity, and I’m super excited for a new book by Elizabeth Wein, especially one focused on the Enigma machines.

 

end of october book coverThe End of October by Lawrence Wright

At an internment camp in Indonesia, forty-seven people are pronounced dead with acute hemorrhagic fever. When Henry Parsons–microbiologist, epidemiologist–travels there on behalf of the World Health Organization to investigate, what he finds will soon have staggering repercussions across the globe: an infected man is on his way to join the millions of worshippers in the annual Hajj to Mecca.

Now, Henry joins forces with a Saudi prince and doctor in an attempt to quarantine the entire host of pilgrims in the holy city… A Russian émigré, a woman who has risen to deputy director of U.S. Homeland Security, scrambles to mount a response to what may be an act of biowarfare… already-fraying global relations begin to snap, one by one, in the face of a pandemic… Henry’s wife Jill and their children face diminishing odds of survival in Atlanta… and the disease slashes across the United States, dismantling institutions–scientific, religious, governmental–and decimating the population.

As packed with suspense as it is with the fascinating history of viral diseases, Lawrence Wright has given us a full-tilt, electrifying, one-of-a-kind thriller.

My thoughts: I’ve read and loved two of Wright’s best-selling nonfiction titles (The Looming Tower and Going Clear). They’re among my first recommendations for someone looking for high-interest, immersive nonfiction. I’m excited to see how he handles fiction, particularly on what has become such a relevant and hot-button topic recently.

Filed Under: book lists, conference

Adult Books Go To The Birds

March 2, 2020 |

I’ve talked about how I spend a lot of time looking through publisher catalogs each season, and while for the most part I focus on YA books, I can’t help but notice certain themes emerge in book cover trends in other categories. It doesn’t hurt that I do try to read a few adult novels for All The Books, too (and that a good chunk of my reading habits involved adult nonfiction). One of the recent trends I’ve seen in adult fiction is the use of animals on book covers.

Certainly, there have always been animals on adult book covers. But there’s definitely been an uptick, and I kind of love it. There’s a wide variety of animals represented, including those that appear to be alive and those which appear to be taxidermied. Perhaps I’ll do a roundup of all those animals in a post, but I wanted to focus more specifically on the bird in this roundup.

Birds are a hugely popular motif in fiction. We’ve seen it again and again in YA, both thematically and in their appearance on book covers. We’re fascinated with these creatures, whether they’re teeny tiny hummingbirds or the lumbering giant emus and ostriches. When it comes to birds on adult book covers, they’ve always been there. But there’s definitely an upswing in them for 2020, and they showcase such a wide variety of species, both recognizable and not.

This is far from a comprehensive look at bird covers for 2020 adult fiction books, especially as not everything publishing in the fall has had cover reveals. But it is a really neat glimpse at a theme. I love these covers and thinking about what it is they might represent of the story itself. I know last year’s surge of rabbit-themed book covers (Bunny by Mona Awad and Rabbits for Food by Binnie Kirshenbaum, among others) helped draw me in to books that I adored which I might have otherwise overlooked. I have little doubt the bird theme will do the same for me this year. It was, in fact, a bird themed cover that was my favorite book cover last year.

Descriptions for these books come from Goodreads, since I have yet to read any of them. If you have, I’d love to hear which one I should start with.

 

Apeirogon by Colum McCann

Colum McCann’s most ambitious work to date, Apeirogon–named for a shape with a countably infinite number of sides–is a tour de force concerning friendship, love, loss, and belonging.

Bassam Aramin is Palestinian. Rami Elhanan is Israeli. They inhabit a world of conflict that colors every aspect of their daily lives, from the roads they are allowed to drive on, to the schools their daughters, Abir and Smadar, each attend, to the checkpoints, both physical and emotional, they must negotiate.

Their worlds shift irreparably after ten-year-old Abir is killed by a rubber bullet and thirteen-year-old Smadar becomes the victim of suicide bombers. When Bassam and Rami learn of each other’s stories, they recognize the loss that connects them and they attempt to use their grief as a weapon for peace.

McCann crafts Apeirogon out of a universe of fictional and nonfictional material. He crosses centuries and continents, stitching together time, art, history, nature, and politics in a tale both heartbreaking and hopeful. Musical, cinematic, muscular, delicate, and soaring, Apeirogon is a novel for our time.

 

 

Accidentals by Susan M. Gaines (March 10)

When Gabriel’s immigrant mother returns to her native Uruguay, he takes a break from his uninspiring job to accompany her. Immersed in his squabbling family, birdwatching in the wetlands on their abandoned ranch, and falling in love with a local biologist, he makes discoveries that force him to contend with the environmental cataclysm of his turn-of-millennium present—even as he confronts the Cold War era ideologies and political violence that have shaped his family’s past.

 

 

The Animals at Lockwood Manor by Jane Healey (March 10)

In August 1939, thirty-year-old Hetty Cartwright arrives at Lockwood Manor to oversee a natural history museum collection, whose contents have been taken out of London for safekeeping. She is unprepared for the scale of protecting her charges from party guests, wild animals, the elements, the tyrannical Major Lockwood and Luftwaffe bombs. Most of all, she is unprepared for the beautiful and haunted Lucy Lockwood.

For Lucy, who has spent much of her life cloistered at Lockwood suffering from bad nerves, the arrival of the museum brings with it new freedoms. But it also resurfaces memories of her late mother, and nightmares in which Lucy roams Lockwood hunting for something she has lost.

When the animals appear to move of their own accord, and exhibits go missing, they begin to wonder what exactly it is that they might need protection from. And as the disasters mount up, it is not only Hetty’s future employment that is in danger, but her own sanity too. There’s something, or someone, in the house. Someone stalking her through its darkened corridors . . .

 

 

Beheld by TaraShea Nesbit (March 17)

From the bestselling author of The Wives of Los Alamos comes the riveting story of a stranger’s arrival in the fledgling colony of Plymouth, Massachusetts―and a crime that shakes the divided community to its core.

Ten years after the Mayflower pilgrims arrived on rocky, unfamiliar soil, Plymouth is not the land its residents had imagined. Seemingly established on a dream of religious freedom, in reality the town is led by fervent puritans who prohibit the residents from living, trading, and worshipping as they choose. By the time an unfamiliar ship, bearing new colonists, appears on the horizon one summer morning, Anglican outsiders have had enough.

With gripping, immersive details and exquisite prose, TaraShea Nesbit reframes the story of the pilgrims in the previously unheard voices of two women of very different status and means. She evokes a vivid, ominous Plymouth, populated by famous and unknown characters alike, each with conflicting desires and questionable behavior.

Suspenseful and beautifully wrought, Beheld is about a murder and a trial, and the motivations―personal and political―that cause people to act in unsavory ways. It is also an intimate portrait of love, motherhood, and friendship that asks: Whose stories get told over time, who gets believed―and subsequently, who gets punished?

 

Broken People by Sam Lansky (June 9)

“He fixes everything that’s wrong with you in three days.”

This is what hooks Sam when he first overhears it at a fancy dinner party in the Hollywood hills: the story of a globe-trotting shaman who claims to perform “open-soul surgery” on emotionally damaged people. For neurotic, depressed Sam, new to Los Angeles after his life in New York imploded, the possibility of total transformation is utterly tantalizing. He’s desperate for something to believe in, and the shaman—who promises ancient rituals, plant medicine and encounters with the divine—seems convincing, enough for Sam to sign up for a weekend under his care.

But are the great spirits the shaman says he’s summoning real at all? Or are the ghosts in Sam’s memory more powerful than any magic?

At turns tender and acid, funny and wise, Broken People is a journey into the nature of truth and fiction—a story of discovering hope amid cynicism, intimacy within chaos and peace in our own skin.

 

 

Dear Ann by Bobbie Ann Mason (September 8)

Ann Workman is smart but naïve, a misfit who’s traveled from rural Kentucky to graduate school in the transformative years of the late 1960s. While Anne fervently seeks higher learning, she wants what all girls yearn for—a boyfriend. But not any boy. She wants the “Real Thing,” to be in love with someone who loves her equally.

Then Jimmy appears as if by magic. Although he comes from a very different place, upper-middle class suburban Chicago, he is a misfit too, a rebel who rejects his upbringing and questions everything. Ann and Jimmy bond through music and literature and their own quirkiness, diving headfirst into what seems to be a perfect relationship. But with the Vietnam War looming and the country in turmoil, their future is uncertain.

Many years later, Ann recalls this time of innocence—and her own obsession with Jimmy—as she faces another life crisis. Seeking escape from her problems, she tries to imagine where she might be if she had chosen differently all those years ago. What if she had gone to Stanford University, as her mentor had urged, instead of a small school on the East Coast? Would she have been caught up in the Summer of Love and its subsequent dark turns? Or would her own good sense have saved her from disaster?

Beautifully written and expertly told, Dear Ann is the wrenching story of one woman’s life and the choices she has made. Bobbie Ann Mason captures at once the excitement of youth and the nostalgia of age, and how consideration of the road not taken—the interplay of memory and imagination—can illuminate, and perhaps overtake, our present.

 

Deceit and Other Possibilities by Vanessa Hua (March 10)

In this powerful debut collection, Vanessa Hua gives voice to immigrant families navigating a new America. Tied to their ancestral and adopted homelands in ways unimaginable in generations past, these memorable characters straddle both worlds but belong to none.

From a Hong Kong movie idol fleeing a sex scandal, to an obedient daughter turned Stanford imposter, to a Chinatown elder summoned to his village, to a Korean-American pastor with a secret agenda, the characters in these ten stories vividly illustrate the conflict between self and society, tradition and change. In “What We Have is What We Need,” winner of The Atlantic student fiction prize, a boy from Mexico reunites with his parents in San Francisco. When he suspects his mother has found love elsewhere, he fights to keep his family together.

With insight and wit, she writes about what wounds us and what we must survive. Her searing stories explore the clash of cultures and the complex, always shifting allegiances that we carry in ourselves, our family, and our community. DECEIT AND OTHER POSSIBILITIES marks the emergence of a remarkable new writer.

 

 

 

The Intoxicating Mr. Lavelle by Neil Blackmore (June 11)

‘Your brother takes me for a barbarian, Mr Bowen. But I assure you, I’m quite well trained.’ 

When Benjamin and Edgar Bowen embark on a Grand Tour of Europe, they are ready to meet People of Quality. They have trunks full of powdered silver wigs and matching suits, a hunger to experience the architectural wonders of Ancient Rome and an ability to quote Voltaire (at length). They will make connections and establish themselves in high society, just as their mother has planned.

But it soon becomes apparent that their outfits are not quite the right shade of grey, their smiles are too ready, their appreciation of the arts ridiculous. Class, they learn, is not something that can be studied.

Benjamin’s true education begins when he meets Horace Lavelle. Beautiful, charismatic, seductive, Lavelle delights in skewering the pretensions and prejudices of their milieu. He consumes Benjamin’s every thought.

Love can transform a person. Can it save them?

 

 

 

Love After Love by Ingrid Persaud (April 14)

An electrifying novel of love in its messiest forms–a complicated marriage, an unconventional family, and the shocking secrets that unite them–from an award-winning Trinidadian author.

After Betty Ramdin’s abusive husband dies, she invites a colleague, Mr. Chetan, to move in with her and her son, Solo, as their lodger. Over time, these three form an unconventional family, loving each other deeply and depending upon one another. Then, one fateful night, Solo overhears Betty confiding in Mr. Chetan and learns a secret that plunges him into torment. His despair ultimately sends him running to live a lonely life in New York City, devastating Betty in the process. Yet both Solo and Betty are buoyed by the continuing love and friendship of Mr. Chetan–until his own burdensome secret is uncovered with heartbreaking repercussions.

In vibrant, addictive Trinidadian prose, Love After Love questions who and how we love, the obligations of family, and the consequences of choices made in desperation.

 

Made of Stars by Mark H. Fitzpatrick

Made of Stars is an epic poem in prose, a modern ode to the traditions of Homer and Dante, Spenser and Milton. At its core is an ancient tale of love and loss, dark nights and redemption, and, as with those that came before, it is also an attempt to evolve—to dance on furthest edge of all we might experience.

 

Meadowlark by Melanie Abrams (April 7)

A haunting novel about the lasting effects of childhood trauma and the resulting choices we make for our children.

After growing up in an austere spiritual compound, two teenagers, Simrin and Arjun, escape and go their separate ways. Years later, Simrin receives an email from Arjun. As they reconnect, Simrin learns that he has become the charismatic leader of Meadowlark, a commune in the Nevada desert that allows children to discover their “gifts.”

In spite of their fractured relationship, Simrin, a photojournalist, agrees to visit Meadowlark to document its story. She arrives at the commune with her five-year-old daughter in tow and soon realizes there is something disturbing about Arjun’s beliefs concerning children and their unusual abilities. When she discovers that the commune is in the midst of a criminal investigation, her unease grows deeper still.

As tensions with police heighten, Arjun’s wife begins to make plans of her own, fearing the exposure the investigation might bring for her and her children. Both mothers find themselves caught in a desperate situation, and as the conflict escalates, everyone involved must make painful—and potentially tragic—choices that could change their worlds forever.

Gripping and beautifully crafted, Meadowlark explores the power and danger of being extraordinary and what it means to see and be seen.

 

 

Parakeet by Marie-Helene Bertino (June 2)

Acclaimed author of 2 A.M. at the Cat’s Pajamas Marie-Helene Bertino’s Parakeet is a darkly funny and warm-hearted novel about a young woman whose dead grandmother (in the form of a parakeet) warns her not to marry and sends her out to find an estranged loved one.

The week of her wedding, The Bride is visited by a bird she recognizes as her dead grandmother because of the cornflower blue line beneath her eyes, her dubious expression, and the way she asks: What is the Internet? 

Her grandmother is a parakeet. She says not to get married. She says: Go and find your brother.

In the days that follow, The Bride’s march to the altar becomes a wild and increasingly fragmented, unstable journey that bends toward the surreal and forces her to confront matters long buried.

A novel that does justice to the hectic confusion of becoming a woman today, Parakeet asks and begins to answer the essential questions. How do our memories make, cage, and free us? How do we honor our experiences and still become our strongest, truest selves? Who are we responsible for, what do we owe them, and how do we allow them to change?

Urgent, strange, warm-hearted, and sly, Parakeet is ribboned with joy, fear, and an inextricable thread of real love. It is a startling, unforgettable, life-embracing exploration of self and connection.

 

 

Real Life by Brandon Taylor

A novel of startling intimacy, violence, and mercy among friends in a Midwestern university town, from an electric new voice. 

Almost everything about Wallace is at odds with the Midwestern university town where he is working uneasily toward a biochem degree. An introverted young man from Alabama, black and queer, he has left behind his family without escaping the long shadows of his childhood. For reasons of self-preservation, Wallace has enforced a wary distance even within his own circle of friends—some dating each other, some dating women, some feigning straightness. But over the course of a late-summer weekend, a series of confrontations with colleagues, and an unexpected encounter with an ostensibly straight, white classmate, conspire to fracture his defenses while exposing long-hidden currents of hostility and desire within their community.

Real Life is a novel of profound and lacerating power, a story that asks if it’s ever really possible to overcome our private wounds, and at what cost.

 

 

Red Dress in Black and White by Elliot Ackerman (May 26)

From the widely acclaimed author of Waiting for Eden: a stirring, timely new novel that unfolds over the course of a single day in Istanbul: the story of an American woman attempting to leave behind her life in Turkey–to leave without her husband.

Catherine has been married for many years to Murat, an influential Turkish real estate developer, and they have a young son together, William. But when she decides to leave her marriage and return home to the United States with William and her photographer lover, Murat determines to take a stand. He enlists the help of an American diplomat to prevent his wife and child from leaving the country–but, by inviting this scrutiny into their private lives, Murat becomes only further enmeshed in a web of deception and corruption. As the hidden architecture of these relationships is gradually exposed, we learn the true nature of a cast of struggling artists, wealthy businessmen, expats, spies, a child pulled in different directions by his parents, and, ultimately, a society in crisis. Riveting and unforgettably perceptive, Red Dress in Black and White is a novel of personal and political intrigue that casts light into the shadowy corners of a nation on the brink.

 

 

 

Starling Days by Rowan Hisayo Buchanan (April 7)

Mina is staring over the edge of the George Washington Bridge when a patrol car drives up. She tries to convince the officers she’s not about to jump but they don’t believe her. Her husband, Oscar is called to pick her up.

Oscar hopes that leaving New York for a few months will give Mina the space to heal. They travel to London, to an apartment wall-papered with indigo-eyed birds, to Oscar’s oldest friends, to a canal and blooming flower market. Mina, a classicist, searches for solutions to her failing mental health using mythological women. But she finds a beam of light in a living woman. Friendship and attraction blossom until Oscar and Mina’s complicated love is tested.

 

 

The Illness Lesson by Clare Beams

A mysterious flock of red birds has descended over Birch Hill. Recently reinvented, it is now home to an elite and progressive school designed to shape the minds of young women. But Eliza Bell – the most inscrutable and defiant of the students – has been overwhelmed by an inexplicable illness.

One by one, the other girls begin to experience the same peculiar symptoms: rashes, fits, headaches, verbal tics, night wanderings. Soon Caroline – the only woman teaching – begins to suffer too. She tries desperately to hide her symptoms but, with the birds behaving strangely and the girls’ condition worsening, the powers-that-be turn to a sinister physician with grave and dubious methods.

Caroline alone can speak on behalf of the students, but only if she summons the confidence to question everything she’s ever learnt. Does she have the strength to confront the all-male, all-knowing authorities of her world and protect the young women in her care?

Distinctive, haunting, irresistible, The Illness Lesson is an intensely vivid debut about women’s minds and bodies, and the time-honoured tradition of doubting both.

 

 

Theft by Luke Brown

Bohemia is history. Paul has awoken to the fact that he will always be better known for reviewing haircuts than for his literary journalism. He is about to be kicked out of his cheap flat in east London and his sister has gone missing after an argument about what to do with the house where they grew up. Now that their mother is dead this is the last link they have to the declining town on the north-west coast where they grew up.

Enter Emily Nardini, a cult author, who – after granting Paul a rare interview – receives him into her surprisingly grand home. Paul is immediately intrigued: by Emily and her fictions, by her vexingly famous and successful partner Andrew (too old for her by half), and later by Andrew’s daughter Sophie, a journalist whose sexed-up vision of the revolution has gone viral. Increasingly obsessed, relationships under strain, Paul travels up and down, north and south, torn between the town he thought he had escaped and the city that threatens to chew him up.

With heart, bite and humour, Luke Brown leads the reader beyond easy partisanship and into much trickier terrain. Straddling the fissures within a man and his country, riven by envy, wealth, ownership, entitlement, and loss, Theft is an exhilarating howl of a novel.

 

Filed Under: Adult, aesthetics, book covers

This Week at Book Riot

February 28, 2020 |

 

Over on Book Riot this week…

  • Tennessee has introduced a “parental oversight” bill taking power away from librarians in their public library system. Here’s what it is about and what you can do.

 

  • 125 literary Jeopardy answers to put your bookish knowledge to the test.

 

  • 10 fun book subscription boxes for adults.

 

There won’t be a roundup next week, as I’m out of town for yoga training, but I’ll be back the following with a ton of great things to share.

Filed Under: book riot

What I’ve Raved About On All The Books

February 24, 2020 |

Did you know I’m a cohost on Book Riot’s “All The Books” podcast once a month? This is a neat and super challenging part of my job, as I read a ton of books for consideration. Some weeks I have an abundance of titles I’m ready to scream about, while other times, I have a hard time finding four that really speak to me. Those are the weeks I tend to remove myself from the reading equation and consider who it is the book is for and try to connect with it in that capacity.

I’m preparing to record March’s edition this week and thought it’d be fun to share the first eight books I’ve talked about this year. I try to be conscious of highlighting both fiction and nonfiction, both in YA and in adult and middle grade. Since I don’t tend to write reviews here much, this feels like a way to give some reviews without, well, having to write up a ton of reviews.

There’s a little bit of something for every kind of reader here. All of the books are available now.

January Picks

You’re Not Listening: What You’re Missing And Why It Matters by Kate Murphy

There are shelves and shelves of books about communicating, how to give a speech, how to negotiate, how to be effective in relating to others verbally. But so few take on what Murphy does in this book: listening. 

When’s the last time you really felt listened to? What made you have that feeling? Chances are it wasn’t someone interjecting their own experiences or sharing an anecdote that may or may not be related to what you shared. Rather, what made you feel listened to was what the listener brought to their engagement: curiosity. This, Murphy says, is what makes someone a great listener. They don’t one up or interject. They don’t parrot or offer hollow sentiments back. Rather, they engage with curiosity, asking questions that encourage the speaker to dig deeper. 

Every page of this book was fascinating and engaging, and it made me think a lot about the role of listening in everyday communication. It also made me think a lot about online communication and really cracked open what makes some social media tools like Twitter great for broadcasting, but ineffective for real conversation. Listening cannot happen because people can too easily forget that listening involves engagement, rather than inputting their own ideas or thoughts without quiet, even prolonged, thought. 

I found one of the sections about conversations with strangers surprising. I’d dread listening to a seatmate talk on a commute, but the study cited and explained here that people who really practiced listening to their seatmates rated their commutes better than those who had silence. The right kind of listening, and the right kind of curiosity, can take a potentially dreadful situation and make it something to look forward to. People are interesting, and it’s through listening that we get to discover that fact. 

As someone who does life coaching, I find that people seek it out is for coaching, of course, but also because the coach is trained in how to really listen. Conversations are about inquiry and curiosity, as opposed to offering a solution to whatever it is someone brings to the session. The ways forward are forged in co-creating solutions, and that co-creation comes from active listening and inquiry, and how often do we ever get the chance to truly be heard in such a way? It’s rare. 

Data can be helpful in many arenas. It can be combed and culled online. But it’s no substitute for real listening, as data isn’t vulnerable. And it’s vulnerability that connects us to one another, and real vulnerability is about allowing the space to listen, to thoughtfully inquire, and to allow quiet and space and pauses in conversation.

Highly, highly recommended. I don’t hold on to many books I get for review, but this one is going in my professional collection because I know it’s one I’ll want to reference and lend out.  

Black Girl Unlimited by Echo Brown

This fabulist novel is going to be a powerful read for many, while it’ll be a bit confounding for others. This is why it’s quite magic. The audience will find it and connect deeply.

Echo is growing up on the East Side of Cleveland with her mother, who is addicted to drugs and who is the victim of sexual assault, along with two bothers, one of whom lands in juvenile detention for a period of time. But she’s exceptionally resilient, and part of that is because she’s really a wizard. She can turn every day situations around using the power of her mind. She can choose to tap into the darkness and black veil that surrounds everyone or she can turn toward their lightness. Echo strikes up a friendship with Elena, a white-passing, queer hijabi, and together, they use their wizarding powers to help Echo’s brothers see their own potential. 

But then something tragic happens to Echo and she sees herself in her own mother’s shoes. She’s detached from reality, from her world, and she doesn’t know if she has the power to go on. Until she remembers the power she has within her and discovers a passion for words, for poetry, and for wanting to rise from her situation and live her best dream life. 

Told in a non-linear fashion, this is a book about literal Black girl magic. It’s about race and poverty, about intergenerational trauma, and about the ways Black women have always been systemically oppressed. Echo herself is dark skinned and experiences not only racism, but also colorism; this becomes a huge challenge for her when she’s given the opportunity to thrive in a new living situation, where she sees what looks like a healthy, functioning interracial relationship. 

Brown’s debut novel is about Black pain, but it’s also about Black magic, Black resilience, and Black lives that can thrive, even when the world around them wants them not to. It’s a challenging read for all that we see Echo and her family go through, as well as how Brown chooses to tell the tale in disparate timelines and in vignettes. The payoff, though, both for Echo and for the reader, is more than worth it. 

We Wish You Luck by Caroline Zancan

Told through a collective voice, this is a slow-burn story that is a telling of a story of revenge. It’s the first residency for a class of MFA writing students at a small college in Vermont (think: Bennington). Everyone is feeling one another out, making choices about who they’d be connecting with over the course of these residencies. But there’s one new teacher, an ingenue, who immediately commands everyone’s attention. 

As the story goes, Simone — this new teacher — tore apart one of the new students’ writing to the point he was crying. That he felt he could do no good. It was a brutal critique that eventually led to Jimmy doing something drastic. . . that brought about his fellow MFA peers to seek revenge upon Simone and unravel the truth of her “genius.”

This book takes a while to get to what’s going on, but Zancan’s writing is immersive, atmospheric, and easy to stick with. Interestingly, this is the second MFA-set book I’ve read this year, and it, too, is a clever take down of the systems and privilege within such programs. It’s a take down of the academicification of creative writing and a sharp critique about the ideals of good, worthy story telling. 

Stick with this one and you’ll be rewarded with a revenge that is clever and downright enjoyable.

 

Saving Savannah by Tonya Bolden

The increase in the number of YA historical novels featuring teens of color at the center, and more specifically, girls of color at the center, is making me so happy to see. Bolden, who is a long-time writer for young people, brings readers to 1919 Washington DC in this story about an upper class black girl who wants nothing more than to make something interesting of her life.

Savannah knows she’s privileged in her wealth. But she’s worried she’ll never do something important or powerful in her life. Her brother has moved to New York City and has a photography shop, and she’s bored by her long-time friend and neighbor Yolande. When the housekeeper’s daughter steps in to clean the Riddle’s home, Savannah forms a quick bond with her, and it’s through her she finds her way to a school on the other side of town that helps less-privileged girls gain a solid education. Here she volunteers, but more, it’s here she meets someone who introduces her to the concepts of radicalism, socialism, and anarchy. 

It’s 1919 and while the Great War is over, and the Spanish Influenza is waning, race riots are heating up. Savannah, now pushing herself outside her comfortable area in DC, finds herself seeing and being too-close-for-comfort to experiences that put her life and future on the line. After one particularly close call, she expects to be reemed out by her mother and father. And it’s here when Savannah learns about the incredible young life her mother had and how, even though it doesn’t look like it, Savannah’s mother longed for — and found — a purpose and meaning to her life. This ultimately helps Savannah understand what it is she wants to do herself.

The third-person narration is refreshing in YA, and the exploration of such a specific historical moment through the eyes of a privileged Black girl is one that kept me hooked. Savannah is keenly aware of the politics going on around her, including the Anthony Amendment and the protest happening by Alice Paul and other white feminists to secure suffrage. Savannah is keen to the fact it’s for white women and that that couldn’t be what her deeper purpose is in terms of doing something important with her life. 

The author’s note in this one is a must-read, as it really offers a picture of this historical moment in a perspective I’ve not seen before. Too often, we only hear about the stories relating to poor and hurting Black people. This story, as well as those stories from which Bolden was inspired, are a reminder of how deep and wide the Black experience was throughout all historical periods. 

 

 

February Picks

Yes No Maybe So by Becky Albertalli and Aisha Saeed

Jamie’s cousin is running for a local election seat and he’s been roped into helping with the campaign. Canvassing and going door to door is the last thing in the world he wants to do. Maya, whose parents are in the midst of a “trial separation,” meaning that their normal ways of practicing Ramadan and celebrating Eid are out the window, feels unmoored and abandoned by her best friend — she’s preparing to go to college and doesn’t seem to be around for Maya any longer. When she bumps into Jamie, who she hadn’t seen since they were kids, he convinces her to join him canvassing so they can catch up. Maya isn’t stoked, but she’s game — besides, it’ll get her mind off things and, when she tells her mother what she’s doing, she’s presented an offer she doesn’t want to refuse: if she participates in helping with this election all summer, her mom will help her get her own car. 

It’s far from smooth sailing and Jamie and Maya go door-to-door, especially in more conservative areas of their district. An Islamophobic House Bill, paired with a local anti-Semitic campaign, puts the two of them in a unique position, not just of fear and hurt, but of the potential to encourage big change with their work canvassing and much, much more. Together, they agree to work hard to get Jamie’s cousin elected to office, to take down the discriminatory House Bill, and shed light on who is leaving their hate around town. 

This is a romantic comedy packed with big, real issues at heart. Jamie and Maya are both tentative about who they are individually, who they are collectively, and who they are in the grander scheme of the political realities of their world. Maya is Muslim, and Jamie is Jewish, and we see how their faith plays into their every day lives and how many ways they can make mistakes with one another in terms of honoring those beliefs. But they learn — and they learn which rules and practices are worth breaking in the name of their beliefs…and their feelings for one another.

At times this book is laugh-out-loud funny, and both Maya and Jamie have a fondness for spending time at Target that’s extremely #relatable content. They’re both passionate and hard-working, despite how many challenges are going on in their personal, private lives. It’s not going to necessarily end the way that they want things to with the campaign, but that’s not to say that change doesn’t happen…or that their relationship will suffer because of it. 

Full of heart, thoughtful explorations of current political realities, and well-rounded and compelling characters, this book is a delight to read. Saeed and Albertalli’s styles mesh well, and the perspectives they bring to their characters is authentic and meaningful. One of my favorite characters is Jamie’s grandmother, who is an Instagram fanatic and sensation. She’s a total delight through and through, and I love how she’s given her own plot line and chance to be a hero in the story, too. 

This fast-paced book is a winner. 

 

The Falcon Thief: A True Tale of Adventure, Treachery, and The Hunt For The Perfect Bird by Joshua Hammer

Talk about a breathlessly-paced adventure story that is 100% true. This is the kind of bloodless true crime I find utterly fascinating and engaging, and this book would be a perfect one to pass along to fans of The Feather Thief.

In May 2010, Jeffrey Lendrum was arrested in the UK at an airport after a security guard in one of the lounges thought something suspicious was going on. Lendrum had left his partner in the lounge while he went into the bathroom for twenty minutes. The guard went in after and noticed nothing had been touched while he was in there — no shower, no running water. But there was a suspicious looking egg in the garbage can. Before long, it was discovered Lendrum had numerous eggs secured to his body, along with numerous eggs in his luggage. These were the eggs of falcons, each of which — were they to make it alive to his destination in Dubai — would net him a lot of money from political leaders in the region who practiced the art and sport of falconry. 

From here, the book follows the rise of falconry in the middle east and how it ties into their history, as well as how it is Lendrum got caught up in the theft of some of the world’s most rare raptor eggs and how he traversed some of the most dangerous places in order to steal the eggs and make a profit. It’s a fascinating and infuriating story, not only because of how it plays into disturbing nature and causing further harm to hurting species, but also because of how Lendrum’s passion for nature went so off-course from his boyhood days in South Africa. 

Books that marry true crime and history like this scratch such an itch for me. This one, besides its obvious exploration of theft of eggs, has some moments of animal harm, but it’s one I think those who are sensitive to that might be able to stomach without too much problem. Hammer offers a fair assessment of why Lendrum would partake in such illegal acts, while balancing the history and legacy of falconry in the middle east. It’s not an apology nor excuse for his behavior; rather, it’s context and conjecture for the whys, particularly where Hammer was unable to get the information first-hand. 

I blew through this one and will forever look at birds in a new way. 

 

Turtle Under Ice by Juleah del Rosario

Ariana has disappeared. Her sister Row is first to discover this, but she can’t find any clues as to where she might be. Told in two voices in verse, this is a heart-felt story about grief and the ways it can manifest and emerge so differently for everyone.

When Row and Ariana’s stepmother loses her 12-week pregnancy, Ariana spirals into grief as the wounds of losing her mother six years prior — and being the person with her as she died. Row, too, finds sadness welling up inside her again, but she takes it out by turning deep into her love of soccer. For her, whenever she’s on the field, her mother is right there with her. 

With the help of her friend Kennedy, Row begins to look for her sister, and it’s here we see the wells of her sadness emerge, particularly as Kennedy gets overbearing in relation to why it was she didn’t know Row’s stepmother had been pregnant. 

Ariana’s voice is present in this story, though it’s told primarily through flashbacks. She’s hopped on a bus, and we know there’s a piece of artwork in her lap. A few stops in, a former best friend gets on the bus, and she begins to share the story of the dissolution of their once-close connection. Ariana wanted to be so mired in her grief she couldn’t understand that other people, including this friend named Alex, deal with their personal losses in different means. 

Row finds Ariana, and the end of the book is a beautiful reflection of friendship, sisterhood, and the ways that loss and sadness can tie and unite people, as much as hurt and divide them. Rosario nails grief so perfectly, offering up the ways we can be cruel and isolating toward others, as much as the ways we can seek the comfort of a loved one through the things we cherish. For Ariana, it turns out, art is therapeutic in a way that she never anticipated until Row shares how much pouring herself into soccer has meant her mother is with her always. 

The verse is well written and the story is tightly told over a period of less than a single day. But within that day, we see a large expanse of life for both Row and Ariana. Both are girls of color who are part Filipino, and their ethnicity is something that furthers the power of exploring grief here — it’s not something palatable, clean, easy, and consumable like the white media and “research” suggests it should be.

This one hit me in some tender places, as I deal with a big loss in my own life. I felt both girls’ pains deeply and saw their methods of working through it as part of my own, too. This is a quick read, but it is in no way a slight one.  

The Rise and Fall of Charles Lindbergh by Candace Fleming

My knowledge of Lindbergh is pretty limited, other than knowing he had something to do with flight and that there was the Lindbergh Baby situation. I went into this book, though, wanting to know more about those, but more than that, I wanted to see how Fleming took his story and made it relevant today. Because this is a book less about Lindbergh’s story ad more about how he became such a celebrity in the American eye and had influence on a number of political situations in the 30s and 40s. 

Fleming gives insight into Lindbergh’s privileged childhood on the Mississippi River, where he had a politician for a father and an extremely doting mother. His mother was so dotig, in fact, when Charles decided to attend college at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, she went went him so they could live together. He didn’t last at the school long, as tended to be his way with formal education. He was fascinated with flight and realized he wanted to learn to do it. So he attended a flight school and eventually took on a mail route between St. Louis and Chicago. It was here he realized a new dream: be the first trans-continental flight, going from New York to Paris. When he’s successful, he becomes more and more well-known, to the point where he and his family need to relocate in order to achieve any semblance of privacy. He, of course, loved it even if he pretended otherwise, but it was this fame that led to his one-year-old son being kidnapped and murdered. 

Lindbergh and his wife Ann were both making names for themselves when they moved to the UK, and it was here when Lindbergh became fascinated with the Nazi regime in Germany. Turns out, he was a eugenist, and the Nazi’s showmanship of Berlin, the way their country “looked” to him, was what he believed an ideal world looked like. Nevermind that he’d been fooled by the Nazis. Being a eugenist, he already believed in white supremacy, and this only helped fuel his racism and bigotry harder. Lindbergh returned to the US and found himself able to rally supporters for his “America First” beliefs — sound familiar? — and take on a role in America’s entrance into World War II in an unexpected way. 

Fleming’s book is fair, offering the good Lindbergh offered, as well as the reality of the dark side of his character. He’s neither lauded nor chided. He’s presented as he was, and the story is utterly compelling. My one little quibble is that at the end of the book, details about some other scandals in his life are rushed. It’s likely the information isn’t easily available, but I wanted to know way more about the three (!) secret families Lindbergh managed to have and keep secret from his wife Ann and their children. I’d have loved, too, a little more about where he stands today in the public eye, though I thought the way Fleming made his story parallel today’s celebrity politicians savvy and spot-on. 

This is excellent YA nonfiction. It offers a fair and full look at a complicated individual without offering sympathy or excuses for his less-glamorous beliefs or behaviors. The photos in this book only make it that much stronger, too.

 

Filed Under: book riot, Reviews, ya fiction, young adult fiction, young adult non-fiction

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