So, in no particular order, here they are:
- Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name by Vendela Vida (2007). I am drawn to books that take place in extreme climates, primarily cold ones. And this book by Vida was set primarily in Lapland in Northern Scandinavia. It is a novel about family, family secrets and self-discovery. Vida is a co-editor of Believer, the literary magazine, and this is a luminous book about finding yourself in a world of cold and darkness in the midst of a people, the Sami, on the brink of extinction.
- The Grave Tattoo by Val McDermid (2007). It is a rainy summer in the Lake Country in Britain and a modern day scholar, Jane Gresham, is intrigued by the discovery of a 200 year old body with unusual tattoos. Lake District legends have said that Fletcher Christian returned to England after the mutiny and his time on Pitcarin Island and Jane is determined to prove that the body is Christian's. This book is well written and may be enjoyed by people who love intermingled stories but it is also of interested to lovers of maritime history. One can see the influence of Caroline Alexander's masterful The Bounty (2003) in McDermid's book.
- The Bloomsday Dead by Adrian McKinty (2007). Set in Ireland and Northern Ireland on Bloomsday, June 16th. This is the final book of McKinty's so-called Dead Trilogy and Michael Forstythe is set the task of finding the daughter of his beloved, his Penelope, Bridget Callaghan. McKinty is an extraordinary writer mixing scenes of violence, keen observation of Ireland today and lyrical soul-searching as Michael questions his life and years in exile. Any allusions to Ulysses, both by Joyce and by Homer (the Odyssey) are of course, quite intentional.
- GhostWalk by Rebecca Stott (2007). Set in Cambridge both in the modern day and in the days of Isaac Newton, a writer, Lydia Brooke, has been contracted to finish the work of a scholar who drowned just before she finished her expected to be controversial biography of Isaac Newton. Stott uses murders in the 17th century and in her contemporary story to explore alchemy, neurology and animal rights activism. GhostWalk works as a mystery as well as a thought-provoking book about science, the commercialism of science and the conscience of scholars and scientists
- About Alice by Calvin Trillin (2006). Simply one of the most romantic books I have read. Alice, Trillin's wife died in 2001 at the age of 63 from the effects of radiation treatments. Trillin writes about their courtship and marriage in a style that is honest and loving and filled with longing. Simply lovely.
- The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Moshin Hamid (2007). This is Hamid's second novel and was short-listed for the Booker Prize in 2007. It is short, only 182 pages and told in the form of a monologue by Changez, a Muslim who left Pakistan to study at Princeton. There, he falls in love with a woman who is emotionally unavailable to him and joins a consulting firm. After 9/11, he goes back to Pakistan because he believes that he no longer fits in the United States and yet finds that he does not really fit in at home either. One of the characters tells Changez about the janissaries, Muslim boys who were taken from their homes as very young boys to fight for the Christians because only the very young could be enlisted to fight against their own people. Changez was too old to be a modern-day Janissary and so goes home to be with his people.
- Consumption by Kevin Patterson (2007). Set in the Arctic, this novel by Patterson, a medical doctor and the author of the travel book, The Water in Between, concerns a woman who is sent from her Inuit people south to recover from consumption. There she falls away from the ways of her people but is sent home where she must learn to readjust. Her doctor falls in love with her and this totally one-sided love (only on his side) affects his life. This is a subtle and lyrical book, with fascinating discussions on cross-cultural epidemiology bookmarking each of the chapters.
- Generation Loss by Elizabeth Hand (2007). I have never really enjoyed science fiction or fantasy but I was mesmerized by Waking the Moon an earlier Hand novel (1995). I don't remember much about the plot but the images and writing were stunning and so I looked forward to her newest book. Set largely on an island off the coast of Maine, Cass Neary, a post-punk photographer is set to interview Aphrodite Kamestos, a photographer whose work influenced Neary. Hand explores the artistic genius and madness in this stunning book. This is a dark book with fascinating discussions on the history of photography that also captures the claustrophobic character of life on an island.
- Eat the Document by Dana Spinotta (2006). This novel, Spinotta's second was a National Book Award finalist and New York Times Notable Book. It follows the lives of two former 60s radicals as they live underground and continue hiding in the present. It shifts between the decades and the characters and explores and illuminates their decisions in the past and present.
- Raven Black by Ann Cleeves (2007). This is the first book of an intended Shetland Trilogy. Set in the Shetland Islands part of Great Britain but also Viking in heritage, this novel introduces Jimmy Perez, lead detective, an outsider who has lived on the island for many years but because he was born there, he will never be considered a Shetlander. The murder takes place on New Year's Eve when the island is cold and dark. Cleeves manages to teach the reader about Shetland history while telling a wonderful story--I am looking forward to her next book also set on the island and featuring Perez.
1 comment:
Raven Black is actually the first book of a Shetland Quartet. The second, White Nights, is scheduled for publication in the UK in April 2008.
The Grave Tattoo takes place in the Lake District, which is the name you will find on all the maps.
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