Posted by Book Mavens on 21st July 2011

Title: The Weird Sisters
Author: Eleanor Brown
Publisher: Amy Einhorn Books/G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 2011
Summary: Three sisters named after Shakespearean characters, Rose (Rosalind; As You Like It), Bean (Bianca; The Taming of the Shrew), and Cordy (Cordelia; King Lear) are the daughters of Professor James Andreas, a lover of Shakespeare who answers their questions and offers advice in Shakespearean quotations. You need not be familiar with Shakespeare to enjoy this witty, clever novel, but it would make it more amusing. The sisters return to the family home in Barnwell, Ohio, ostensibly to take care of their mother stricken with breast cancer, but ultimately to deal with their own personal issues. Cordy is pregnant, broke and has nowhere else to go, Bean has been fired from her job in New York for embezzlement, and Rose is afraid her family will not survive without her full attention and involvement. Although the subject matter is serious, the book does have elements of humor as each sister is unique, funny and lovable in her own way. It does help to know – which is not clear at first – that the narrator is the voice and point of view of all three sisters. I am hoping for a second novel by this new and accomplished writer.
Who will like this book? Those who enjoy good modern fiction as well as stories of family life
If you like this, try this: The Nobodies Album by Carolyn Parkhurst, Family Album by Penelope Lively, Rescue by Anita Shreve
Recommended by: Paula, Reference Dept.
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Tags: 2011 Releases, America, Cancer, Family, Shakespeare
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Posted by Merry Mao on 28th June 2011

Title: Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand
Author: Helen Simonson
Publisher: Random House, March 2010
Summary: The dignified and charming Major Pettigrew lives in the small English village of Edgecombe St. Mary. He is a widower with impeccable manners, a true gentleman who seems to have stepped out of a Jane Austen novel. Major Pettigrew develops a friendship with Mrs. Ali, an educated, cultured, and thoughtful Pakistani village shopkeeper. They bond over the loss of their spouses and as their friendship develops they commiserate over their difficult relatives.
Pettigrew’s son Roger thinks his father is stuffy and does not approve of his friendship with Mrs. Ali. The Major feels Roger has no time for him and that “children were no sooner gone from the nest and established in their own homes….than they began to infantilize their own parents and wish them dead, or at least in assisted living.” Mrs. Ali is being pressured by relatives to give up her store to her nephew, who when told Major Pettigrew was taking her to a dance “looked at the Major as if he were a strange bug discovered in the bathtub.”
Written with wit and humor, Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand is a charming, touching, endearing love story which will especially appeal to the reader who may enjoy an updated and light version of Jane Austen.
Recommended by: Paula, Reference Assistant
Summary: I fell in love with widower Major Ernest Pettigrew about six pages in! The story takes place in a quaint English village, where the Major’s brother’s sudden death and the propriety of a family heirloom spark an unexpected friendship with a local shopkeeper, Mrs. Jasmina Ali. His quiet world changes as he deals with his growing affection for Mrs. Ali (after all they share a love of literature), his yuppie, shallow son, and the various unattached ladies in the village vying for him. It is a charming and endearing love story. The Major’s wry, witty humor combined with his chivalrous old fashioned courtesy, yet sarcastic jabs about modern situations had me laughing out loud. There is a gentle humor and a quiet lovely rhythm with a romantic twist that will appeal to both sexes. I kept picturing Sir John Gielgud delivering the Major’s lines! Such a wonderful debut novel!
Recommended by: Cindy B., Children’s Department
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Tags: 2010 Releases, Debut Novel, England, Racism, Relationships, Widow
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Posted by Book Mavens on 3rd February 2011
Title: A Friend of the Family
Author: Lauren Grodstein
Publisher: Algonquin Books, November 2009
Summary: Dr. Peter Dizinoff seemingly has everything anyone could hope for. He has a successful practice, a beautiful, loving wife and an adopted son who he adores. Peter is devoted to his son Alec, now 20 years old, and has pinned all his hopes and dreams on his son’s future. Unfortunately, Alec drops out of college after just 3 semesters and moves into an apartment above his parents’ garage hoping to pursue his passion which is art.
The drama starts when Alec becomes infatuated with the older daughter of his father’s best friend. The problem is, when Laura Stern was a teenager, she was accused of murdering her newborn baby upon birth.
Peter Dizinoff becomes so distracted with his son’s relationship with Laura that his personal life, as well as his practice, begin to spin out of control.
This is a compelling story which shows how far a parent will go to protect his child. But…Dr. Peter Dizinoff suffers the consequences in the end.
Recommended by: Beverly, Circulation Coordinator
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Tags: 2009 Releases, Family, Murder, New Jersey
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Posted by Book Mavens on 16th December 2010

Title: Bill Warrington’s Last Chance
Author: James King
Publisher: Viking, August 2010
Summary: This well written and entertaining debut novel is from a local writer (Wilton). Bill, an elderly curmudgeon is in the beginning stages of Alzheimer’s and wants to force a reunion of his fractured family. April is his headstrong, rebellious teenage granddaughter and together they set off on a cross country trip. The bond between them grows as April becomes his caretaker as Bill slips further into mental fogginess. Their family rises above their dysfunction and band together to find them. Funny, warm and touching with flawed, but likeable characters.
If you like this, try this: I’d Know You Anywhere by Laura Lippman and How to be an American Housewife by Margaret Dilloway
Recommended by: Cindy B., Children’s Department
Tags: 2010 Releases, Adventure, Coming of Age, Family, Travel
Posted in Fiction, Popular | 1 Comment »
Posted by Book Mavens on 8th November 2010

Title: Father of the Rain
Author: Lily King
Publisher: Grove/Atlantic, July 2010
Summary: Daley Amory is eleven years old when her mother leaves her father. Caught in the middle between her social activist mother and her bigoted, alcoholic father, Daley struggles to find a balance in her life. As her father’s bitterness leads him to the bottle more and more, the emotional abuse he unleashes on Daley increases. As an adult, Daley rejects her father’s values (or lack thereof), and starts her life far from his anger and prejudice. When her father’s lifestyle catches up with him and he hits rock bottom, Daley’s brother leaves her with the burden of picking up the pieces.
The subject matter may be difficult for some, but this is a thoroughly engrossing and satisfying story. The writing in this novel is mesmerizing, and the characters are so well developed I frequently thought to myself ‘thank God I don’t know anyone like them”.
Recommended by: Sue, Circulation Coordinator
Tags: 2010 Releases, Abuse, Alcoholism, Coming of Age, Family
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Posted by Merry Mao on 2nd November 2010

Title: The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake
Author: Aimee Bender
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, June 2010
Summary: This is the type of book you can’t put down once you start it – it’s not because you’re loving it so much, it’s because it’s so complicated, odd, and twisted. The first line of the book “it happened for the first time on a Tuesday afternoon…” sets the stage for this engrossing novel. The author’s narrator is a young girl named Rose. On this particular Tuesday afternoon, when she is turning twelve, the favorite birthday cake her mother makes her suddenly doesn’t seem as good. Rose can taste, to her surprise, her mother’s emotions with every bite. She quickly learns that she can literally taste the emotions of whoever prepares her food, giving her unwanted insight into other people’s secret emotional lives. Rose’s brother and father also possess odd gifts and as we follow this family’s lives from Rose’s third grade year to adulthood we become watchers of a family in distress and the sadness it brings to them.
Recommended by: Nancy, Deputy Town Librarian
Tags: 2010 Releases, Coming of Age, Family, Food, Relationships
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Posted by Merry Mao on 12th October 2010

Title: The Thieves of Manhattan
Author: Adam Langer
Publisher: Spiegel & Grau (2010)
Summary: Ian Minot is a struggling writer working at the Morningside Coffee diner. Ian works alongside Joseph, a struggling actor, and Faye, an aspiring artist. Of the three, Ian has been the least successful in his career. His Romanian girlfriend Anya, however, is very close to getting her collection of short stories published while Ian continues to get rejection letters. One of the most memorable of these comes from the literary agent Geoff Olden who simply wrote “good luck placing this and all future submissions elsewhere”.
When Faye draws Ian’s attention to a customer they have nicknamed The Confident Man, Ian is appalled to see that he is reading a copy of the recently published memoir “Blade by Blade”. In Ian’s opinion, the book is a “bogus piece of crap”. As it turns out, The Confident Man feels the same way about it. The Confident Man is Jed Roth, a former editor at a very respectable publishing house. Jed left his position at Merrill Books when his decision not to publish “Blade by Blade” was overruled by the owner of Merrill Books. Jed has devised a plan to bring down Merrill Books and agent Geoff Olden and recruits Ian to play a crucial role in his scheme. Ian agrees but soon finds himself in over his head and unsure who to trust.
This is a fun story, full of humor and intrigue, which takes a few shots at the publishing industry along the way. The last few pages contain a glossary of selected terms used throughout the book, all based on literary figures.
Who will like this book? Anyone looking for a fun read, especially those who like intrigue. Anyone familiar with the publishing industry.
Recommended by: Sue, Circulation Coordinator
Tags: 2010 Releases, New York City, publishing, revenge
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Posted by Merry Mao on 16th September 2010

Title: Red Hook Road
Author: Ayelet Waldman
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing, July 2010
Summary: A young couple is killed on the way to their wedding reception in coastal Maine. Red Hook Road takes the reader on a journey with the surviving members of their families over four summers. Iris and Daniel Copaken are the parents of the bride and they are native New Yorkers who summer in Maine; they are “from away”. Jane Hewins, the groom’s mother, is their cleaning lady who was never happy with the union of the young couple. Emil Kimmelbrand, Iris’ father, is a famous violinist who discovers that Jane’s adopted Cambodian niece is a musical prodigy. There are many layers to this novel but rather than being complicated and confusing Waldman manages to build each story gradually and thoroughly. The relationships between husband and wife, mother and daughter, father and daughter, mother and son, brothers and sisters are all so believable that you can relate to their tensions, their frustrations, their joy and their pain.
Waldman is a skilled writer whose descriptions of Maine and its inhabitants are so real that she had this reader yearning to visit this fictional place. Although a story of loss and grief it is also a story of possibilities and hope. This book is a quick read that will stay with you long after you turn the last page.
Whi will like this book? Readers of Jodi Picoult, Chris Bohjalian, and Anna Quindlen.
Recommended by: Claudia, Technical Services Department
Tags: 2010 Releases, Family, Grief, Maine
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Posted by Merry Mao on 13th August 2010

Title: The Nobodies Album
Author: Carolyn Parkhurst
Publisher: Knopf, June 2010
Summary: Writer Octavia Frost and her son Milo had a game they used to play together when he was a young boy. He’d ask “have you ever heard the Beatles version of I’ve Been Working on the Railroad?” And she’d say, no, I didn’t know they’d ever recorded that. He’d respond “they didn’t, it’s on The Nobodies Album.” So “The Nobodies Album” is an album made up of songs that don’t exist. It also happens to be the working title of Octavia’s yet-to-be published book, which is made up entirely of the last chapters of all her previous novels, completely rewritten with the purpose of taking her characters in the exact opposite direction she’d originally taken them – a book made up of endings that don’t exist.
It seems that Octavia is a woman who’s trying to bring many things into existence, and trying to change lots of original endings. Octavia’s relationship with her son and her career as a writer are at the top of the list, and the two are woven together brilliantly in this novel. It is when Octavia’s on her way to deliver the manuscript of “The Nobodies Album” to her publisher that she sees her son’s name displayed in the news crawl in Times Square – Milo, a successful musician, has been accused of murdering his girlfriend. This is the beginning of her journey back to Milo – they haven’t spoken in four years. And it’s also the beginning of the reader’s journey through Octavia’s fiction. The novel is interspersed with the last chapters of her previous books, both the original and the revised endings. The family drama, the short story and the classic mystery all come together in Parkhurst’s incredibly creative, inventive and unforgettable book.
Recommended by: Mary, Branch Reference
Tags: 2010 Releases, Family, Motherhood, Psychology
Posted in Fiction, Popular | 1 Comment »
Posted by Merry Mao on 2nd August 2010

Title: These Children Who Come At You With Knives and Other Fairy Tales
Author: Jim Knipfel
Publisher: Simon & Schuster, June 2010
Summary: Fractured fairy tales have long been a popular genre in youth literature, and in this wicked, inspired collection, the grown-ups finally get their own twisted takes on ‘happily ever after.’ If you are expecting a modern-day Cinderella or Little Mermaid story, this is not the book for you.
Instead, you will meet a chicken who is too smart for her own good, a demented gnome bent on world domination, and a gossipy houseplant that would give Audrey II from Little Shop of Horrors a run for her (it’s?) money. And it’s not giving too much away by saying that none of the stories has the traditional fairy tale ending. This bold collection will make you laugh and squirm at the same time.
Who will like this book?: Fans of satire. Cynics. People who think to themselves, ‘if Cinderella’s slippers were really made of glass, wouldn’t she cut up her feet?’
If you like this, read this: Another great (albeit less brutal) take on fairy tales for grown-ups, the Fables graphic novel series by Bill Willingham.
Recommended by: Nicole, Teen Librarian
Tags: 2010 Releases, Humor, Short Stories
Posted in Comedy and Satire, Horror, Popular, Science Fiction & Fantasy | No Comments »