New fiction books to read this week include After Paradise by Flannery O Conner award winning author Lori Ostlund, and the hilarious, satirical, meta The Murdstone Trilogy.
Always on the hunt for good books for young adults? Fans of Percy Jackson should take a look at Ungodly. Another good book to read this week is Juniors by best selling author Kaui Hart Hemmings, a captivating tale of love, friendship, and existing in the places in between.
New release romance books this week begin the flow of holiday romances! In the mood for cheer, pudding, and some action under the mistletoe? Take a gander at the new books to read below!
The best new mystery book cover this week is by far the debut novel The Killing Lessons by Saul Black. It's so bleak and foreboding... with just a hint of - is that blood? - running down the side.
Tell us a little bit about your new release, The Hairdresser of Harare.
The book is about Vimbai a young single mother trying to make a life for herself and her daughter during Zimbabwe's crazy, hyper-inflationary period. She is the best hairdresser in town who specialises in making women feel "white", until she is usurped by a new guy called Dumisani. The book follows their relationship as it grows and develops amidst the turmoil surrounding them.
What's the best advice you've ever received?
“Don’t think about what anyone else has to say. Just do you.”
Which books do you find yourself returning to again and again?
I seldom reread books, but there are two that I always come back to every couple of years. Dostoevsky’s Demons and The Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius. I discover something new and meaningful each time I return to them.
Say you're the host of a talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?
I would want to have someone antihuman, like Cecil John Rhodes, sit down with them and try to figure out how their minds work. The thing that makes them so radically different from the rest of us. My first question would probably be, “What the fuck?” and everything else will follow from that.
What makes your world go round? Why does it bring you joy?
Little things, small acts of kindness, Wangari Maathai’s little hummingbirds that change the world we live in in really deep, positive and meaningful ways. It brings me joy to know that we don’t have to be big and powerful to do good in this world we live in, that even though the grand negative forces that surround us can seem unstoppable, what we do in our own little, insignificant ways still adds a pixel of colour to the rainbow.
Who are your literary heroes?
I like daring innovative writers, so I have long list that could go on and on till the cows come… Sarah Ladipo-Manyika, Jon McGregor, Dostoevsky, Mridula Kushy, Jim Thompson, David Mitchell, Juan Ruflo, David Foster Wallace, Yvonne Vera, Paul Auster… My list changes frequently and is always expanding. There’s so much good work out there, one doesn’t know where to turn.
What's your favorite quote or scene from The Hairdresser of Harare?
I like chapter 22 because it is particularly explosive. It brings all the main protagonists together and really reveals something about their character and attitudes. At this point the book switches from its light comic gear into something a little more serious. After that they drift in and out of each other’s lives and what happens there has ramifications later on in the narrative.
Do you have a motto, quote or philosophy you live by?
Very loosely, the philosophy I live by demands that I’m free to change my mind about anything at any time. I always try to have that built in flexibility when it comes to my beliefs and tastes. I may not always succeed, but I always try to open myself up to new experiences and/or ideas. This comes out, I would hope, in my own work as I switch voices, styles and genres, always trying to find new ways of both feeling and expressing myself.
Tendai Huchu is the author of the new book The Hairdresser of Harare.
Fans of John Grisham books: get excited. John Grisham has two new releases this year. If you love books like The Firm and The Confession, preorder John Grisham's latest book Rogue Lawyer. The Fugitive, part of John Grisham's series for young readers, is already available for purchase! See below for our book list of John Grisham books for 2015.
The Fugutive is Book 5 in the Theodore Boone series for younger readers. It's an edge-of-your steat legal thriller, classic of John Grisham books. Readers age 8-12 will love The Fugitive.
Rogue Lawyer is John Grisham's mastery at work. It is a legal thriller slated for release in October (now available for preorder) that features a delightfully outrageous and colorful protagonist. Dive into street lawyer Sebastian Rudd's unconventional methods and follow his story of ethics and justice.
Joyce Carol Oates books are truly beloved. The award-winning author has several new books to read for 2015 (check out our list of Joyce Carol Oates' new books here). If you've read all of those (or want a book recommendation that's similar - but different), you're in the right place. We've put together a list of brand new books to read if you love Joyce Carol Oates books.
Well hello there! We have a new recommendation for your To Be Read list (#sorrynotsorry), and it's at the top of our #fridayreads pile this weekend. If you're literarily inclined, you may follow the Man Booker Prize. This past week Steve Toltz, former Man Booker Finalist, released a new book, Quicksand. The Guardian called it "swaggering" and we couldn't agree more. An intense, character driven tale, Quicksand tells the intertwining stories of Aldo and Liam, one criminal entrepreneur, one jaded cop, that have been friends since high school. Filled with charming, nihilistic, non sequitur musings, Quicksand will set your rusty cognitive cogs in motion. Love Dave Eggers and David Foster Wallace? Don't miss out on this darkly humorous and sublimely satirical new literary fiction book.
Our favorite of Aldo's musings?
"With medical science improving at roughly the same rate as our environmental situation worsens, the most likely scenario is that the world will become uninhabitable at the precise moment that the human race becomes immortal"
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Tell us a little bit about your new release, A Girl Undone.
I love what CC Hunter said about the series, “An ordinary girl become extraordinary.” A Girl Undone concludes the story of Avie whose dad sells her into marriage to a billionaire as part of a business deal. The two books are set in LA in a twisted version of now, but it’s ten years after hormones in beef killed four generations of American women, so teenage girls are very valuable and protected.
In A Girl Called Fearless, Avie goes on the run and discovers that she’s strong, she’s a survivor. But in A Girl Undone, Avie must bargain for her life and the lives of the two young men she cares about. She’s trying to do the best she can under impossible circumstances, but is devastated when she realizes she’s become the enemy.
I wanted to write about a real girl, not a superhero, and I’m so proud that Avie goes from sheltered and powerless to being a young woman who finds her voice, her will, and her inner strength.
Who was your childhood hero?
African-American runner Wilma Rudolph who overcame polio and went on to be an Olympian. She pushed herself to become one the fastest women in the world. Oddly, my daughter fell in love with Wilma, too, when she found the picture book, Wilma Unlimited in the library.
What’s the last book you read?
This wasn’t the last book I read, but I have to tell you about it, because I loved it so much: Because You’ll Never Meet Me by Leah Thomas. The chapters are letters between Ollie and Moritz. Ollie has a life-threatening allergy to electricity and Moritz has a pacemaker so they can never meet. It’s sci fi that reads like contemporary fiction. Totally unique.
Where is your happy place?
A ship called Explorer which I’ve taken to both the Arctic and Antarctica. Polar landscapes are stark and yet amazingly beautiful. In the summer, the sun never sets, but as the clouds shift they create dramatic color changes. And the wildlife? Imagine watching polar bears, or penguins, or killer whales in the wild.
Where did you write A Girl Undone? (your couch, a coffee shop, a bar... hey - we won't judge)
In a cozy chair the size of a love seat. I curl up with my Mac or stretch out, and watch hummingbirds in the jacaranda tree outside.
How do you like to spend a rainy day?
Rainy day? What’s that?
Just joking. We haven’t seen rain in So Cal in a really long time. But if it did rain, LA drivers would freak out, so I’d cocoon in a bath with a great book, and crack open the window so I could listen to the patter of the raindrops. Bliss!
What's your favorite song lyric?
I love this by Death Cab for Cutie. So romantic it just kills me.
If there’s no one beside you
when your soul embarks
I’ll follow you into the dark.
What's the best advice you've ever received?
Butt in chair.
It reminds writers that if you want to write a book, you have to actually sit down and do it. But I think the advice is pretty universal, because no matter what dream you want to make a reality, you need to work to make it happen.
What's your favorite line from A Girl Undone?
“We are monsters!” It’s a turning point, because Avie realizes how far she’s fallen, and she must decide who she really wants to be.
Do you have a motto, quote or philosophy you live by?