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New York Times Bestseller List
Paperback Fiction
7/31/05

The New York Times Bestseller List changes weekly. This site updates it every few months. "First Chapter" and "Audio" indicate linkages from the NYT site. Many are also linked to the book review from the Times site. The last number indicates the number of weeks the book has been on the Bestseller List. The New York Times Book Forum also has a site for reader comments by topic and author, or go to the New York Times Book Review main page.

1

TRACE, by Patricia Cornwell. (Berkley, $7.99.) The inept man who replaced Dr. Kay Scarpetta as chief medical examiner of Virginia asks for her help in investigating the unexplained death of a 14-year-old. 

3

2

THE KITE RUNNER, by Khaled Hosseini. (Riverhead, $14.) A young Afghan-American returns to find out what happened to a friend under the Taliban. 

45

3

THE RULE OF FOUR, by Ian Caldwell and Dustin Thomason. (Dell, $7.99.) Two Princeton students trying to unravel the mysteries of a Renaissance text become ensnared in murderous intrigue. 

3

4

NIGHT TALES: NIGHT SHIFT, NIGHT SHADOW, by Nora Roberts. (Silhouette, $7.99.) Reprints two dark novels, "Night Shift" (1990) and "Night Shadow" (1991). 

3

BLACK ROSE, by Nora Roberts. (Jove, $7.99.) A widow who owns a nursery falls for a genealogist helping to investigate her ancestors, who include an interfering ghost. 

8

6

THE SUMMER I DARED, by Barbara Delinsky. (Pocket Books, $9.95.) A woman who survived a deadly boating accident off the coast of Maine begins to question her priorities as a wife and mother. 

3

7

HUNTING FEAR, by Kay Hooper. (Bantam, $7.50.) A psychic special agent must find a predatory kidnapper and murderer. 

3

8

TEN BIG ONES, by Janet Evanovich. (St. Martin's, $7.99.) A Trenton street gang puts out a hit on the bounty hunter Stephanie Plum. 

4

9

IT'S IN HIS KISS, by Julia Quinn. (Avon, $6.99.) In 19th-century England, a young woman helps a man translate an Italian diary his father left him. 

3

10

ANGELS & DEMONS, by Dan Brown. (Pocket Star, $7.99.) A Harvard scholar tries to save the Vatican from the machinations of an underground society. 

105

11

NIGHTS OF RAIN AND STARS, by Maeve Binchy. (Signet, $9.99.) Life on a small Greek island is changed forever after tragedy strikes. 

3

12

THE SECRET LIFE OF BEES, by Sue Monk Kidd. (Penguin, $14.) (Penguin, $14.) In South Carolina in 1964, a teenage girl tries to discover the secret to her mother's past. 

95

13

THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME, by Mark Haddon. (Vintage Contemporaries, $12.) A 15-year-old autistic savant sets out to solve the mystery of a neighbor's dead poodle. First Chapter 

54

14

LITTLE EARTHQUAKES, by Jennifer Weiner. (Washington Square, $14.) In Philadelphia, four new mothers cope with life, love and marriage.

1

15

DOUBLE HOMICIDE, by Faye and Jonathan Kellerman. (Warner, $7.99.) Two tales of murder, one set in Santa Fe, the other in Boston. 

1

16

*ARE YOU AFRAID OF THE DARK? by Sidney Sheldon. (Warner, $7.99.) Two women are caught in a web of mysterious deaths and disappearances. 

6

Rankings reflect sales, for the week 2 weeks prior, at almost 4,000 bookstores plus wholesalers serving 50,000 other retailers (gift shops, department stores, newsstands, supermarkets), statistically weighted to represent all such outlets nationwide. An asterisk (*) indicates that a book's sales are barely distinguishable from those of the book above. A dagger (+)indicates that some bookstores report receiving bulk orders.


New York Times Bestseller List
Paperback Non-Fiction
7/31/05

The New York Times Bestseller List changes weekly. This site updates it every few months.  "First Chapter" and "Audio" indicate linkages from the NYT site. Many are also linked to the book review from the Times site. The last number indicates the number of weeks the book has been on the Bestseller List. The New York Times Book Forum also has a site for reader comments by topic and author, or go to the New York Times Book Review main page.

1

THE TIPPING POINT, by Malcolm Gladwell. (Back Bay/Little, Brown, $14.95.) A journalist's study of social epidemics, otherwise known as fads. First Chapter 

49

2

DRESS YOUR FAMILY IN CORDUROY AND DENIM, by David Sedaris. (Back Bay/Little, Brown, $14.95.) The humorist's latest collection of essays. First Chapter 

7

3

GUNS, GERMS, AND STEEL, by Jared Diamond. (Norton, $16.95.) An argument that Western dominance is due to geographical advantages. 

150

4

TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE, by Mitch Albom. (Broadway, $11.95.) The author tells of his weekly visits to his old college mentor, who was near death's door. First Chapter 

136

5

THE DEVIL IN THE WHITE CITY, by Erik Larson. (Vintage, $14.95.) The tale of a great architect (Daniel Hudson Burnham) and a serial killer (H. H. Holmes), who were linked by the Chicago World's Fair of 1893. First Chapter 

75

6

READING LOLITA IN TEHRAN, by Azar Nafisi. (Random House, $13.95.) A memoir of a teacher's life in Iran, centered on a reading group she organized for seven of her former students (all women). 

81

7

A SHORT HISTORY OF NEARLY EVERYTHING, by Bill Bryson. (Broadway, $15.95.) From the Big Bang to the 21st century: a guided tour of the sciences. First Chapter

40

8

PLEDGED, by Alexandra Robbins. (Hyperion, $13.95.) A journalist reports on the year she spent undercover in a sorority. 

2

9

ME TALK PRETTY ONE DAY, by David Sedaris. (Back Bay/Little, Brown, $14.95.) A collection of autobiographical comic essays by the author of "Naked." First Chapter 

102

10

DREAMS FROM MY FATHER, by Barack Obama. (Three Rivers, $13.95.) The Democratic senator from Illinois reflects on life as the son of a black African father and white American mother. 

45

11

*MY LIFE, by Bill Clinton. (Vintage, $17.95; $7.99.) The autobiography of the 42nd president; both the complete account and its first half, "The Early Years," are available. First Chapter

7

12

IT'S NOT ABOUT THE BIKE, by Lance Armstrong with Sally Jenkins. (Berkley, $14.) A memoir by the 

75

13

THE BOOKSELLER OF KABUL, by Asne Seierstad. (Back Bay/Little, Brown, $12.95.) A Norwegian journalist examines the treatment of Afghan women. Excerpt 

34

14

*WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH KANSAS? by Thomas Frank. (Owl/Holt, $14.) An examination of how conservatives "won the heart of America." 

12

15

UNDER THE BANNER OF HEAVEN, by Jon Krakauer. (Anchor, $14.95.) The implications of the murder of a woman by two religious fundamentalists. 

51


Rankings reflect sales, for the week 2 weeks prior, at almost 4,000 bookstores plus wholesalers serving 50,000 other retailers (gift shops, department stores, newsstands, supermarkets), statistically weighted to represent all such outlets nationwide. An asterisk (*) indicates that a book's sales are barely distinguishable from those of the book above. A dagger (+)indicates that some bookstores report receiving bulk orders.


New York Times Holiday List
Recent - 1996

EDITORS' CHOICE:  The best book selections from recent years. (Arranged alphabetically by title) (~Dec 7)

2006

ABSURDISTAN
By Gary Shteyngart. Random House, $24.95.
Shteyngart's scruffy, exuberant second novel, equal parts Gogol and Borat, is immodest on every level - it's long, crude, manic and has cheap vodka on its breath. It also happens to be smart, funny and, in the end, extraordinarily rich and moving. "Absurdistan" introduces Misha Vainberg, the rap-music-obsessed, grossly overweight son of the 1,238th richest man in Russia. After attending college in the United States, he is now stuck in St. Petersburg, scrambling for an American visa that may never arrive. Caught between worlds, and mired in his own prejudices and thwarted desires, Vainberg just may be an antihero for our times.

THE COLLECTED STORIES OF AMY HEMPEL
Scribner, $27.50.
A quietly powerful presence in American fiction during the past two decades, Hempel has demonstrated unusual discipline in assembling her urbane, pointillistic and wickedly funny short stories. Since the publication of her first collection, "Reasons to Live," in 1985, only three more slim volumes have appeared - a total of some 15,000 sentences, and nearly every one of them has a crisp, distinctive bite. These collected stories show the true scale of Hempel's achievement. Her compact fictions, populated by smart, neurotic, somewhat damaged narrators, speak grandly to the longings and insecurities in all of us, and in a voice that is bracingly direct and sneakily profound.

THE EMPEROR'S CHILDREN
By Claire Messud. Alfred A. Knopf, $25.
This superbly intelligent, keenly observed comedy of manners, set amid the glitter of cultural Manhattan in 2001, also looks unsparingly, though sympathetically, at a privileged class unwittingly poised, in its insularity, for the catastrophe of 9/11. Messud gracefully intertwines the stories of three friends, attractive, entitled 30-ish Brown graduates "torn between Big Ideas and a party" but falling behind in the contest for public rewards and losing the struggle for personal contentment. The vibrant supporting cast includes a deliciously drawn literary seducer ("without question, a great man") and two ambitious interlopers, teeming with malign energy, whose arrival on the scene propels the action forward.

THE LAY OF THE LAND
By Richard Ford. Alfred A. Knopf, $26.95.
The third installment, following "The Sportswriter" (1986) and "Independence Day" (1995), in the serial epic of Frank Bascombe - flawed husband, fuddled dad, writer turned real estate agent and voluble first-person narrator. Once again the action revolves around a holiday. This time it's Thanksgiving 2000: the Florida recount grinds toward its predictable outcome, and Bascombe, now 55, battles prostate cancer and copes with a strange turn in his second marriage. The story, which unfolds over three days, is filled with incidents, some of them violent, but as ever the drama is rooted in the interior world of its authentically life-size hero, as he logs long hours on the highways and back roads of New Jersey, taking expansive stock of middle-age defeats and registering the erosions of a brilliantly evoked landscape of suburbs, strip malls and ocean towns.

SPECIAL TOPICS IN CALAMITY PHYSICS
By Marisha Pessl. Viking, $25.95.
The antic ghost of Nabokov hovers over this buoyantly literate first novel, a murder mystery narrated by a teenager enamored of her own precocity but also in thrall to her father, an enigmatic itinerant professor, and to the charismatic female teacher whose death is announced on the first page. Each of the 36 chapters is titled for a classic (by authors ranging from Shakespeare to Carlo Emilio Gadda), and the plot snakes ingeniously toward a revelation capped by a clever "final exam." All this is beguiling, but the most solid pleasures of this book originate in the freshness of Pessl's voice and in the purity of her storytelling gift.

NONFICTION

FALLING THROUGH THE EARTH
A Memoir.

By Danielle Trussoni. Henry Holt & Company, $23.
This intense, at times searing memoir revisits the author's rough-and-tumble Wisconsin girlhood, spent on the wrong side of the tracks in the company of her father, a Vietnam vet who began his tour as "a cocksure country boy" but returned "wild and haunted," unfit for family life and driven to extremes of philandering, alcoholism and violence. Trussoni mixes these memories with spellbinding versions of the war stories her father reluctantly dredged up and with reflections on her own journey to Vietnam, undertaken in an attempt to recapture, and come to terms with, her father's experiences as a "tunnel rat" who volunteered for the harrowing duty of scouring underground labyrinths in search of an elusive and deadly enemy.

THE LOOMING TOWER
Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11.

By Lawrence Wright. Alfred A. Knopf, $27.95.
In the fullest account yet of the events that led to the fateful day, Wright unmasks the secret world of Osama bin Laden and his collaborators and also chronicles the efforts of a handful of American intelligence officers alert to the approaching danger but frustrated, time and again, in their efforts to stop it. Wright, a staff writer for The New Yorker, builds his heart-stopping narrative through the patient and meticulous accumulation of details and through vivid portraits of Al Qaeda's leaders. Most memorably, he tells the story of John O'Neill, the tormented F.B.I. agent who worked frantically to prevent the impending terrorist attack, only to die in the World Trade Center.

MAYFLOWER
A Story of Courage, Community, and War.

By Nathaniel Philbrick. Viking, $29.95.
This absorbing history of the Plymouth Colony is a model of revisionism. Philbrick impressively recreates the pilgrims' dismal 1620 voyage, bringing to life passengers and crew, and then relates the events of the settlement and its first contacts with the native inhabitants of Massachusetts. Most striking are the parallels he subtly draws with the present, particularly in his account of how Plymouth's leaders, including Miles Standish, rejected diplomatic overtures toward the Indians, successful though they'd been, and instead pursued a "dehumanizing" policy of violent aggression that led to the needless bloodshed of King Philip's War.

THE OMNIVORE'S DILEMMA
A Natural History of Four Meals.

By Michael Pollan. The Penguin Press, $26.95.
"When you can eat just about anything nature has to offer, deciding what you should eat will inevitably stir anxiety," Pollan writes in this supple and probing book. He gracefully navigates within these anxieties as he traces the origins of four meals - from a fast-food dinner to a "hunter-gatherer" feast - and makes us see, with remarkable clarity, exactly how what we eat affects both our bodies and the planet. Pollan is the perfect tour guide: his prose is incisive and alive, and pointed without being tendentious. In an uncommonly good year for American food writing, this is a book that stands out.

THE PLACES IN BETWEEN
By Rory Stewart. Harvest/Harcourt, Paper, $14.
"You are the first tourist in Afghanistan," Stewart, a young Scotsman, was warned by an Afghan official before commencing the journey recounted in this splendid book. "It is mid-winter - there are three meters of snow on the high passes, there are wolves, and this is a war. You will die, I can guarantee." Stewart, thankfully, did not die, and his report on his adventures - walking across Afghanistan in January of 2002, shortly after the fall of the Taliban - belongs with the masterpieces of the travel genre. Stewart may be foolhardy, but on the page he is a terrific companion: smart, compassionate and human. His book cracks open a fascinating, blasted world miles away from the newspaper headlines.

2005

author KAFKA ON THE SHORE
By Haruki Murakami.
Alfred A. Knopf, $25.95.
This graceful and dreamily cerebral novel, translated from the Japanese by Philip Gabriel, tells two stories - that of a boy fleeing an Oedipal prophecy, and that of a witless old man who can talk to cats - and is the work of a powerfully confident writer.
Review
First Chapter
Featured Author

author ON BEAUTY
By Zadie Smith.
Penguin Press, $25.95.
In her vibrant new book, a cultural-politics novel set in a place like Harvard, the author of ''White Teeth'' brings everything to the table: a crisp intellect, a lovely wit and enormous sympathy for the men, women and children who populate her story.
Review

author PREP
By Curtis Sittenfeld.
Random House, $21.95. Paper, $13.95.
This calm and memorably incisive first novel, about a scholarship girl who heads east to attend an elite prep school, casts an unshakable spell and has plenty to say about class, sex and character.
Review
First Chapter

author SATURDAY
By Ian McEwan.
Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, $26.
As bracing and as carefully constructed as anything McEwan has written, this astringent novel traces a day in the life of an English neurosurgeon who comes face to face with senseless violence.
Review
First Chapter
Featured Author

author VERONICA
By Mary Gaitskill.
Pantheon Books, $23.
This mesmerizingly dark novel from the author of ''Bad Behavior'' and ''Two Girls, Fat and Thin'' is narrated by a former Paris model who is now sick and poor; her ruminations on beauty and cruelty have clarity and an uncanny bite.
Review

Nonfiction

author THE ASSASSINS' GATE
America in Iraq

By George Packer.
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $26.
A comprehensive look at the largest foreign policy gamble in a generation, by a New Yorker reporter who traces the full arc of the war, from the pre-invasion debate through the action on the ground.
Review
First Chapter
George Packer Answers Readers' Questions

author DE KOONING
An American Master

By Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan.
Alfred A. Knopf, $35.
A sweeping biography, impressively researched and absorbingly written, of the charismatic immigrant who stood at the vortex of mid-20th-century American art.
Review
Slide Show

author THE LOST PAINTING
By Jonathan Harr.
Random House, $24.95.
This gripping narrative, populated by a beguiling cast of scholars, historians, art restorers and aging nobles, records the search for Caravaggio's ''Taking of Christ,'' painted in 1602 and rediscovered in 1990.
Review
First Chapter

author POSTWAR
A History of Europe Since 1945
By Tony Judt.
The Penguin Press, $39.95.
Judt's massive, learned, brilliantly detailed account of Europe's recovery from the wreckage of World War II presents a whole continent in panorama even as it sets off detonations of insight on almost every page.
Review

author THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING
By Joan Didion.
Alfred A. Knopf, $23.95.
A prose master's harrowing yet exhilarating memoir of a year riven by sudden death (her husband's) and mortal illness (their only child's).
Review
A Profile of Joan Didion
Audio: An Interview
Featured Author
An Essay Adapted From 'The Year of Magical Thinking'

 

2004

10 Best Books of the Year-2004 summaries.  Additional books on the NYT Notable Books of 2004

Non-Fiction:

FICTION

  1. Gilead
    By MARILYNNE ROBINSON
    This grave, lucid, luminously spiritual novel about fathers and sons reaches back to the abolitionist movement and into the 1950's.
    Excerpt

  2. The Master
    By COLM TOIBIN
    A novel about Henry James, his life and art -- beautifully written, deeply pondered, startlingly un-Jamesian.
    Audio: Colm Toibin Discusses the Historical Novel
    Transcript: Colm Toibin on Henry James
    Excerpt

  3. The Plot Against America
    By PHILIP ROTH
    An ingenious ''anti-historical'' novel set during World War II. Charles Lindbergh is elected president on an isolationist platform, and a Jewish family in Newark suffers the consequences.
    Featured Author: Philip Roth
    Excerpt
    Philip Roth on the Story Behind 'The Plot Against America'
    Join the Reading Group Discussion of 'The Plot Against America'

  4. Runaway
    By ALICE MUNRO
    Her 11th collection of short stories about people, often women living in rural Ontario, whose vivid, unremarkable lives are rendered with almost Tolstoyan resonance.
    Featured Author: Alice Munro
    Excerpt

  5. Snow
    By ORHAN PAMUK
    The forces of secular and Islamic Turkey collide in this prescient, complexly orchestrated novel, begun before 9/11 and completed shortly thereafter.
    An Interview With Orhan Pamuk
    Excerpt

  6. War Trash
    By HA JIN
    delusion to clarity as a Chinese P.O.W. in Korea.
    Audio: An Interview With Ha Jin
    Text: An Interview With Ha Jin

NONFICTION

  1. Alexander Hamilton
    By RON CHERNOW
    An exemplary biography -- broad in scope, finely detailed -- of the founder who gave America capitalism and nationalism.
    Excerpt

  2. Chronicles: Volume One
    By BOB DYLAN
    A memoir -- idiosyncratic and revelatory -- by the peerless singer-songwriter who journeyed from the heartland to conquer the Greenwich Village music scene of the 1960's.

  3. Washington's Crossing
    By DAVID HACKETT FISCHER
    An impressively researched narrative about the Revolutionary War that highlights the Battle of Trenton.

  4. Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare
    By STEPHEN GREENBLATT
    Scholarship, speculation and close reading combine in a lively study that gives shape to the life and context to the work.

 

2003

Holiday List-2003 summaries.  Additional books on the NYT Notable Books of 2003

Non-Fiction:

  1. THE BOUNTY: The True Story of the Mutiny on the Bounty. By Caroline Alexander

  2. KHRUSHCHEV: The Man and His Era. By William Taubman 

  3. LIVING TO TELL THE TALE. By Gabriel García Márquez

  4. RANDOM FAMILY: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx, By Adrian Nicole LeBlanc

  5. SAMUEL PEPYS: The Unequalled Self. By Claire Tomalin.

Fiction:

  1. BRICK LANE. By Monica Ali

  2. DROP CITY. By T. Coraghessan Boyle 

  3. THE FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE. By Jonathan Lethem

  4. THE KNOWN WORLD. By Edward P. Jones

2002

Non-Fiction:

  1. ANTHONY BLUNT: His Lives. By Miranda Carter

  2. BAD BLOOD. By Lorna Sage 

  3. PARIS 1919: Six Months That Changed the World. By Margaret MacMillan

  4. SEEING IN THE DARK: How Backyard Stargazers Are Probing Deep Space and Guarding Earth From Interplanetary Peril. By Timothy Ferris

Fiction:

  1. ATONEMENT. By Ian McEwan

  2. MIDDLESEX. By Jeffrey Eugenides 

  3. ROSCOE. By William Kennedy

2001

Non-Fiction:

  1. Borrowed Finery By Paula Fox 

  2. John Adams By David McCullough 

  3. The Metaphysical Club By Louis Menand 

  4. Uncle Tungsten By Oliver Sacks 

Fiction:

  1. Austerlitz By W. G. Sebald 

  2. The Corrections By Jonathan Franzen 

  3. John Henry Days By Colson Whitehead 

  4. True History of the Kelly Gang By Peter Carey 

  5. Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage By Alice Munro

2000

Non-Fiction:

  1. Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters  By Matt Ridley
  2. A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius  By Dave Eggers
  3. One Palestine, Complete: Jews and Arabs Under the British Mandate  By Tom Segev
  4. Rimbaud  By Graham Robb
  5. Way Out There in the Blue: Reagan, Star Wars and the End of the Cold War  By Frances FitzGerald

Fiction:

  1. Being Dead  By Jim Crace
  2. Beowulf: A New Verse Translation  By Seamus Heaney
  3. Gertrude and Claudius  By John Updike
  4. The Human Stain  By Philip Roth
  5. White Teeth  By Zadie Smith

1999

Non-Fiction:

  1. An Affair of State: The Investigation, Impeachment, and Trial of President Clinton  By Richard A. Posner
  2. Coleridge: Darker Reflections, 1804-1834  By Richard Holmes
  3. The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness  By Antonio R. Damasio
  4. The First World War  By John Keegan
  5. Morgan: American Financier  By Jean Strouse
  6. Reading the Holocaust  By Inga Clendinnen
  7. Secrets of the Flesh: A Life of Colette  By Judith Thurman

Fiction:

  1. Close Range: Wyoming Stories.  By Annie Proulx
  2. Disgrace.  By J. M. Coetzee
  3. Headlong  By Michael Frayn
  4. A Star Called Henry: Volume 1 Of ''The Last Roundup.''  By Roddy Doyle

1998

Non-Fiction:

  1. Life: A Natural History of the First Four Billion Years of Life on Earth  By Richard Fortey
  2. Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr.  By Ron Chernow
  3. To End a War  By Richard Holbrooke
  4. The Unknown Matisse: A Life of Henri Matisse: The Early Years, 1869-1908.  By Hilary Spurling
  5. Victor Hugo  By Graham Robb
  6. We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families: Stories From Rwanda  By Philip Gourevitch

Fiction:

  1. Birds of America: Stories  By Lorrie Moore
  2. Cloudsplitter  By Russell Banks
  3. The Love of a Good Woman  By Alice Munro
  4. The Poisonwood Bible  By Barbara Kingsolver
  5. Preston Falls  By David Gates

1997

Non-Fiction:

  1. American Scripture  By Pauline Maier
  2. Huxley  By Adrian Desmond
  3. Into Thin Air  By Jon Krakauer
  4. Virginia Woolf  By Hermione Lee
  5. The Whole Shebang  By Timothy Ferris

Fiction:

  1. American Pastoral  By Philip Roth
  2. The Blue Flower  By Penelope Fitzgerald
  3. Mason & Dixon  By Thomas Pynchon
  4. The Puttermesser Papers  By Cynthia Ozick
  5. Toward the End of Time  By John Updike
  6. Underworld  By Don DeLillo

1996

Non-Fiction:

  1. Angela's Ashes A Memoir. By Frank McCourt. Scribner.

  2. Bad Land An American Romance. By Jonathan Raban. Pantheon.

  3. The Life of Nelson A. Rockefeller Worlds to Conquer, 1908-1958. By Cary Reich. Doubleday.

  4. The Song of the Dodo Island Biogeography in an Age of Extinctions. By David Quammen. Scribner.

Fiction:

  1. After Rain By William Trevor. Viking.
  2. The Collected Stories of Mavis Gallant Random House.
  3. The Moor's Last Sigh By Salman Rushdie. Pantheon.

 


Publisher's Weekly
The Year in Books

Fiction
2003

Publisher's Weekly debuted an annual list of notable books in 2001.   The Year in Books 2003 covers over 150 books in nine categories, including noteworthy trends in books and publishing.  (mid-Nov.)

Literary fiction saw stellar titles by big names from the old guard—Peter Carey, Toni Morrison, Louise Erdrich and others—as well as standouts from newer stars like Jonathan Lethem, Chuck Palahniuk and Ken Kalfus, among others. But newcomers shone, too: Monica Ali's Brick Lane (Scribner) was nominated for the Man Booker and the Guardian First Book awards; Mark Haddon's The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time (Doubleday) was a quirky winner; and John Haskell's I Am Not Jackson Pollack (Farrar, Straus & Giroux) was a brilliant story collection not nearly enough people read. Two important translations of classics made news, of Proust's Swann's Way (Viking) and Don Quixote (Ecco).

The Five People You Meet in Heaven Mitch Albom (Hyperion)  Simply told, sentimental and profoundly true, this contemporary American fable explores the afterlife of an amusement park maintenance man.

Ten Little Indians Sherman Alexie (Grove)  Further exploring what it means to be an Indian culturally, politically and personally, Alexie produces another slam-dunk collection, his storytelling exuberant and supremely confident.

Brick Lane Monica Ali (Scribner)  A young Bangladeshi bride navigates the scrappy, multicultural maze of East End London in this penetrating debut.

Oryx and Crake Margaret Atwood (Doubleday)  Atwood goes back to the future in this dystopian novel, brilliantly imagining the consequences of runaway social inequality, genetic technology and catastrophic climate change.

Shipwreck Louis Begley (Knopf)  The moral disintegration of an author consumed by lust is the narrative frame of Begley's novel, which also reflects incisively on the nature of the creative process.

Any Human Heart: The Intimate Journals of Logan Mountstuart William Boyd (Knopf)  Boyd's flawed yet immensely appealing protagonist is one of his most distinctive creations, and this novel—rich, sophisticated, often hilarious and disarming—is a landmark in the writer's career.

Drop City T.C. Boyle (Viking)  This may be the definitive novel of the hippie era. In chronicling the travails of a commune, Boyle leavens his cynical insight with genuine sweetness and brings back the Age of Aquarius in all its squalor and innocence.

The Da Vinci Code Dan Brown (Doubleday)  The bestselling fiction title of 2003 is also one of the most intriguing, an exciting thriller that deals with ideas in a way that speaks to millions of readers.

Bangkok 8 John Burdett (Knopf)  Part mystery, part thriller and part exploration of Thai attitudes toward sex, this accomplished first novel delivers both entertainment and depth.

My Life As a Fake Peter Carey (Knopf)  Double Booker winner Carey produces another tour de force—a mix of literary detective story and murderous nightmare with a positively Graham Greene–ish relish in the seamy side of the tropics.

Persuader Lee Child (Delacorte)  Jack Reacher is one of the most memorable heroes in contemporary thrillerdom, and his brainy, brutal narration makes this series entry—set on an isolated, heavily guarded Maine estate—a sizzling entertainment.

American Woman Susan Choi (HarperCollins)  Choi gives great, grainy psychological depth and texture to her fictionalized account of the Patty Hearst kidnapping, brilliantly capturing the claustrophobic nature of underground political life in the 1970s.

Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes, trans. by Edith Grossman (Ecco)  Grossman's translation is admirably readable and consistent. Against the odds, she gives us an honest, robust and freshly revelatory Quixote for our times.

The Master Butchers Singing Club Louise Erdrich (HarperCollins)  A German butcher emigrates to North Dakota and becomes entangled with a female performer in a traveling vaudeville act in this lush, sweeping novel, as rich and resonant as any Erdrich has written.

Isle of Palms Dorothea Benton Frank (Berkley)  This hardcover debut by the author of the popular Lowcountry novels is nonstop Dixie fun (honey, you think you've got a dysfunctional family).

Hell at the Breech Tom Franklin (Morrow)  This powerful, riveting novel by Edgar Award–winning Franklin is based on a real-life feud in the 1890s between poor, mostly white Alabama sharecroppers and the land-owing gentry.

The King of Torts John Grisham (Doubleday)  Grisham continues to push the boundaries of the legal thriller, producing his most unusual entry yet—a powerful, gripping morality story whose hero and villain are identical.

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time Mark Haddon (Doubleday)  Haddon's unusual, ironic debut was a surprise hit here and abroad with its story of an autistic 15-year-old narrator who sets out to solve the mystery of the death of a neighbor's poodle.

I Am Not Jackson Pollock John Haskell (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)  Fact or fiction, art or life? Haskell's stories reveal artists and celebrities in beautifully imagined moments of vulnerability in an unsettling and unforgettable debut collection.

The Great Fire Shirley Hazzard (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)  Set in post-WWII Japan, this first novel from Hazzard in two decades is a magnificent achievement, written in burnished prose and exploring themes of loss and dislocation.

The Unprofessionals Julie Hecht (Random)  At once provocative and insular, Hecht's debut novel—the chronicle of an unusual friendship—invites readers back inside the head of the protagonist of her cultishly popular short story collection Do the Windows Open?

The Mammoth Cheese Sheri Holman (Atlantic Monthly)  Set in the jittery, postboom present, this inventive, offbeat novel weaves a deft consideration of America history and political ideals into an exuberantly eccentric tale of smalltown Virginia life.

What I Loved Siri Hustvedt (Holt)  The ardent exchange of ideas underlies all manner of passionate action in Hustvedt's breakout third novel, a dark tale of two intertwined New York families.

The Known World Edward P. Jones (Amistad)  In this powerful, prodigiously imagined debut novel, Jones explores an oft-neglected chapter of American history, the world of blacks who owned blacks in the antebellum South.

The Commissariat of Enlightenment Ken Kalfus (Ecco)  Kalfus's signature mix of carefully researched history, subtle social commentary and leaping, imaginative storytelling is on display in this debut novel set in Russia around the turn of the 19th century.

The Dark Tower V: Wolves of the Calla Stephen King (Donald M. Grant/Scribner)  The quest continues to save all worlds from Chaos and the Crimson King in this exciting fifth installment in the Dark Tower series; the enormity of King's ever-expanding universe continues to inspire awe.

Odd Thomas Dean Koontz (Bantam)  A fry cook in a small California town talks to ghosts in this electrifying thriller. Koontz is working at his pinnacle, grappling with the nature of evil, the grip of fate and the power of love.

Shutter Island Dennis Lehane (Morrow)  As stunning as Mystic River, this suspense novel set in a prison/hospital for the criminally insane features spot-on dialogue, mysteries within mysteries and a shocking, aesthetically perfect ending.

The Fortress of Solitude Jonathan Lethem (Doubleday)  Scary, funny and seriously surreal, this novel about a white boy growing up in a black Brooklyn neighborhood in the 1970s confirms Lethem's status as the poet of Brooklyn and of motherless boys.

War Torn John Marks (Riverhead)  In this wrenching, romantic second novel, an American journalist working in Berlin plunges into a Balkan free-fire zone to rescue the Bosnian woman he loves.

Liars and Saints Maile Meloy (Scribner)  Meloy's eagerly awaited first novel lives up to expectations with its dazzling account of a Catholic family's life over five decades.

Love Toni Morrison (Knopf)  Morrison's gorgeous, stately eighth novel revolves around a legendary hotel owner and the women in his family over whom he holds sway.

A Few Short Notes on Tropical Butterflies: Stories John Murray (HarperCollins)  In one of the most vibrant and enthusiastically received story debuts this year, Murray pushes his characters—doctors, scientists and others drawn to precise order and logic—to political and geographic extremes in search of a sense of purpose.

The Voyage of the Destiny Robert Nye (Arcade)  In his wry, inimitable style, Nye delves into the mind, heart and soul of Sir Walter Raleigh as the Elizabethan adventurer embarks on his final voyage.

Diary Chuck Palahniuk (Doubleday)  Palahniuk eschews his blighted urban settings for a resort island, but his baroque flights of imagination are instantly recognizable and his meditations on the artistic process make this one of his most memorable works.

Conclave Roberto Pazzi, trans. by Oonagh Stransky (Steerforth Italia)  As clever as Calvino's work and funnier, this sophisticated novel by Italian poet and novelist Pazzi tells how a gathering of cardinals at Vatican City is disrupted by a rodent infestation of biblical proportions.

Soul Circus George Pelecanos (Little, Brown)  Pelecanos continues to build his fan base, and his 11th novel is one of his best yet, with characters to remember, dialogue that rocks, a kinetic tableau of the D.C. underworld and, most of all, a conscience.

Swann's Way: A New Translation Marcel Proust, trans. by Lydia Davis (Viking)  More literal and less elaborate than previous translations, this sharp new rendition of the first volume of Proust's classic In Search of Lost Time is a triumph.

Waxwings Jonathan Raban (Pantheon)  A Hungarian-born British expatriate settled in dot-com–frenzied Seattle is the protagonist of this wry, inspired paean to an immigrant nation by travel writer and novelist Raban.

Remember When Nora Roberts and J.D. Robb (Putnam)  Roberts and her most popular pseudonym team up to offer a sparkling tale of sensuality and suspense set between present-day Maryland and New York City in the year 2059.

Mortals Norman Rush (Knopf)  The frustrations of this sprawling, long-awaited second novel—its protagonist a Milton scholar and undercover CIA agent in Botswana—are outweighed by its intimate melding of political reality and domestic tragicomedy.

A Ship Made of Paper Scott Spencer (Ecco)  Spencer has made his reputation as a master of the love story, and this tale about the intersection of two couples in a Hudson Valley village is one of his best.

lost boy lost girl Peter Straub (Random)  Straub's 16th novel, his shortest in decades, reaffirms the author's standing as the most literate and, with his occasional coauthor Stephen King, most persuasive of contemporary novelists of the dark fantastic.

Orchard Larry Watson (Random)Watson surpasses himself in this sixth novel, an uncompromising, perfectly calibrated double portrait of two couples—an orchard keeper and an artist and their respective wives—in rural Wisconsin in the 1950s.

The Song of the Kings Barry Unsworth (Doubleday/Talese)  Myth is given sharp contemporary resonance in this audacious, subversive novel set in 1260 B.C., with Odysseus playing the role of a villainous leader who cynically manipulates his cohorts.

Fanny Edmund White (Ecco)  White triumphantly returns to form with this witty historical teaser, a novel wrapped inside a "memoir" of utopian feminist Fanny Wright by Mrs. Frances Trollope, caustic observer of 19th-century America.

Winner of the National Book Award Jincy Willett (St. Martin's/Dunne)  Willett's novel—a brilliant black comedy starring twins with antithetical dispositions—was in the works for years, and finally saw print after a push from David Sedaris.

Non-Fiction
2003

On the political front, it's been a year of hardball between the right and the left, the anti-Clintonites and the anti-Bushites, Iraq warriors and doves. So just who is slandering whom in readers' eyes? Ann Coulter accuses the left of Treason (Crown Forum), Al Franken says she's telling Lies (Dutton), and they both hit the bestseller lists (but will they sell a million copies, like Hillary's Living History [Simon & Schuster]?). Sidney Blumenthal defended his former boss in The Clinton Wars (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), and David Frum defended his in The Right Man (Random). At year's end, the country's reading seems to be slightly left. And the battle promises to continue into the presidential election year.

A related hot-button issue was foreign policy—the war in Iraq, America's role in the world, the rights and wrongs of American empire. The fray was led off by Robert Kagan's controversial Of Paradise and Power (Knopf); Fareed Zakaria's The Future of Freedom (Norton) was a surprise bestseller. The war on terror was advocated by thinkers of varying stripes, from leftist Paul Berman (Terror and Liberalism, Norton) to the more conservative Jean Bethke Elshtain (Just War Against Terror, Basic).

The bicentennial of the Louisiana Purchase in 2003 brought a slew of books about that watershed event and the consequent expedition of Lewis and Clark. Listed below among our best books is Jon Kukla's A Wilderness So Immense; another noteworthy account is Charles Cerami's Jefferson's Great Gamble (Sourcebooks).

 A plethora of titles attempting to take stock of the Iraq War appeared almost as soon as fighting tailed off, the most grounded being Murray and Scales's The Iraq War (Harvard Univ.), which takes a military historical perspective. A number of philosophical texts treated the underpinnings of war with mixed success, as in Willard Gaylin's Hatred: The Psychological Descent into Violence (Public Affairs), the most astonishing being William T. Vollmann's massive hybrid work, Rising Up and Rising Down (McSweeney's).

With the war, the subjects of journalism and reporting moved to the forefront of many readers' awareness. A fair number of memoirs by foreign correspondents—and not necessarily by journalists in the Middle East—made their way into bookstores. Among the standouts were Janine di Giovanni's Madness Visible (Knopf), Lynne Duke's Mandela, Mobuto and Me: A Newswoman's African Journey (Doubleday), Saira Shah's The Storyteller's Daughter (Knopf) and Thomas Goltz's Chechnya Diary: A War Correspondent's Story of Surviving the War in Chechnya (St. Martin's).

Russia and Chechnya were in the news and within the pages of such books as Khassan Baiev's The Oath (Walker), Andrew Meier's Black Earth (Norton) and T.J. Binyon's biography of Russia's great bard, Pushkin (Knopf).

Presciently, given the hoopla over the California gubernatorial recall vote, two esteemed writers penned worthy books on the state of the state: A Dangerous Place: California's Unsettling Fate by Marc Reisner (Pantheon) and Where I Was From by Joan Didion (Knopf).

Two major centenaries this year—the World Series and the first flight of Kitty Hawk—produced a number of titles in those categories. For the anniversary of Orville and Wilbur Wright's first flight, several coffee-table books hit the shelves, although strong narratives such as James Tobin's To Conquer the Air (Free Press) stood out. Of the many books on the World Series (including several wonderful illustrated books), there were a few standouts, including Autumn Glory (Hill & Wang/FSG) by Louis P. Masur. Elsewhere in sports, there were many sightings of equestrian titles inspired by and on the subject of Seabiscuit; football fans got an inside look at the NFL in Bloody Sundays (Morrow) by Mike Freeman, and at the Tampa Buccaneers' winning season in Jon Gruden's Do You Love Football?! (HarperCollins).

In music studies, pop ruled (though Chopin's Funeral by Benita Eisler [Knopf] stood out, as did Rebecca Rischin's For the End of Time from Cornell Univ.), with books on Eminem, the Beatles and the Rolling Stones—but it was Sammy Davis Jr. who took the spotlight this year with two biographies. In film, Katharine Hepburn's death generated a flurry of books on the gifted actor. In addition to A. Scott Berg's blockbuster Kate Remembered (Putnam), there were volumes offering quotes (Harper Entertainment's Katharine Hepburn Once Said...: Great Lines to Live By by Susan Crimp) and photos (Life magazine's Katharine Hepburn Commemorative, published by Time Inc.). Among movie star bios, Olympia Dukakis penned a memoir (Ask Me Again Tomorrow, HarperCollins), and Patrick McGilligan deftly profiled Hitchcock in Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light (Regan Books).

In travel, the number of literary takes on geographic locales swelled. Colson Whitehead offered The Colossus of New York: A City in Thirteen Parts (Doubleday); Chuck Palahniuk shared Fugitives and Refugees: A Walk in Portland, Oregon (Crown) and Kathryn Harrison presented The Road to Santiago (National Geographic).

Gulag: A History Anne Applebaum (Doubleday)  This remarkable volume, the first fully documented history of the gulag, describes how a regulated, centralized system of prison labor gradually arose out of the chaos of the Russian Revolution.

The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America's Response Peter Balakian (HarperCollins)  An essential, chilling account of the 20th century's first genocide—by Turks of 1.5 million Armenians—a virtual template for the horrors that followed.

The Constants of Nature: From Alpha to Omega—The Numbers That Encode the Deepest Secrets of the Universe John D. Barrow (Pantheon)  Cambridge physicist Barrow traces scientists' evolving understanding of natural constants, like the speed of light, in this erudite and enthralling work of popular science.

Generations of Captivity: A History of African-American Slaves Ira Berlin (Harvard Univ.)  While preserving the terrible complexity and diversity of North American slavery, Berlin offers a compact scholarly account of the transformation of a society with slaves into a slave society.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt Conrad Black (Public Affairs)  Sweeping and persuasive, barbed yet balanced, this is the best life of the 32nd president in one volume, or at any length.

The Los Angeles Diaries: A Memoir James Brown (Morrow)  Novelist Brown mines the explosive territory of his own harshly complicated life in this gut-wrenching memoir. Juxtaposed with the shimmery unreality of Hollywood, these essays bitterly explore real life, an existence careening between great promise and utter devastation.

The Emperor of Scent: A Story of Perfume, Obsession, and the Last Mystery of the Senses Chandler Burr (Random)  Burr turns science into a literary and sensory delight in this buoyant portrait of a scientific original, Luca Turin.

Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: Why the Greeks Matter Tom Cahill (Doubleday/Talese)  An elegant introduction to the ancient Greeks—the same kind of majestic historical survey Cahill has previously offered on the Irish and the Jews.

One Vast Winter Count: The Native American West Before Lewis and Clark Colin G. Calloway (Univ. of Nebraska)  The scope of this overview of Native American societies—from the Appalachians to the Pacific, in a time frame from prehistory to the 18th century—is staggering, but Calloway (First Peoples) masters it, demonstrating remarkable command of a broad spectrum of historical, ethnographic and archeological sources.

The Great Lakes of Africa: Two Thousand Years of History Jean-Pierre Chrétien, trans. by Scott Strauss (Zone)  Beyond the context of an ongoing human tragedy—at least 3.3 million dead in civil and regional wars—this comprehensive history of a part of Africa (Rwanda, Burundi, the eastern Congo, Uganda and western Tanzania) fills an enormous gap in the historical record with elegance and dispassionate firmness.

An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917–1963 Robert Dallek (Little, Brown)  A tour de force that breaks new ground; the benchmark JFK bio of this generation.

Looking for Spinoza: Joy, Sorrow, and the Feeling Brain Antonio Damasio (Harcourt)  Deftly combining recent advances in neuroscience with charged meditations on foundational 17th-century philosopher Baruch Spinoza, eminent scientist Damasio checks in with his third and fullest report on the nature of feelings.

Where I Was From Joan Didion (Knopf)  California comes under Didion's captivating, merciless microscope in her controversial look at the greed and wasteful extravagance lurking beneath the state's eternal sunshine.

Madness Visible: A Memoir of War Janine di Giovanni (Knopf)  In this devastating memoir of the Balkans, di Giovanni presents a harrowing, firsthand account of a region's spiral into madness.

Waiting for Snow in Havana: Confessions of a Cuban Boy Carlos Eire (Free Press)  A vibrant, imaginatively wrought memoir of an idyllic 1950s boyhood in Havana and of being wrenched away post-Batista and shipped to the U.S.

The Life You Save May Be Your Own: An American Pilgrimage Paul Elie (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)  Four 20th-century writers whose work was steeped in their shared Catholic faith come together in this masterful interplay of biography and literary criticism.

Guston in Time: Remembering Philip Guston Ross Feld (Counterpoint)  In a moving memorial to a deep and supportive friendship, poet and critic Feld keeps a keen focus on Guston's work, especially the paintings of his last years; the results, informed by his intimacy with the artist, are near-definitive models of passionate clarity and explication.

City Room Arthur Gelb (Putnam/Marian Wood)  Gelb began as a copyboy at the New York Times in 1944 and retired as managing editor in 1990; his enthralling memoir shares a wealth of terrific stories.

City in the Sky: The Rise and Fall of the World Trade Center James Glanz and Eric Lipton (Times)  New York Times reporters Glanz (science) and Lipton (metropolitan news) deliver an intensively researched, meticulously documented and thoroughly absorbing account of how the World Trade Center developed from an embryonic 1939 World's Fair building to "a city in the sky, the likes of which the planet had never seen."

The Zanzibar Chest: A Story of Life, Love, and Death in Foreign Lands Adan Hartley (Atlantic Monthly)  A sweeping, poetic homage to Africa and a searing account of the troubles of a continent still emerging from colonialism.

In Black and White: The Life of Sammy Davis Jr. Wil Haygood (Knopf)  In this moving, exhaustive life of one of America's greatest entertainers, Haygood casts Sammy Davis Jr. as a man shifting between identities, between the worlds of black people and white people.

Doubt: A History: The Great Doubters and Their Legacy of Innovation from Socrates and Jesus to Thomas Jefferson and Emily Dickinson Jennifer Hecht (HarperCollins)  Elegant prose (Hecht is a poet) beautifully dramatizes the struggle between belief and denial, perfectly calibrating historical currents and individual wrestlings with the angel to weigh the history of uncertainty.

Mountains Beyond Mountains Tracy Kidder (Random)  In this excellent work, Pulitzer Prize–winner Kidder immerses himself in and beautifully explores the rich drama that exists in the life of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Massachusetts native who has been working in Haiti since 1982.

Against Love: A Polemic Laura Kipnis (Pantheon)  A ragingly witty yet contemplative look at the discontents of domestic and erotic relationships combines portions of the slashing sexual contrarianism of Mailer, the scathing antidomestic wit of early Roseanne Barr and the coolly analytical aesthetics of early Sontag.

A Wilderness So Immense: The Louisiana Purchase and the Destiny of America Jon Kukla (Knopf)  Rarely does a work of history combine grace of writing with such broad authority—this is the book to read for the bicentennial of the Louisiana Purchase.

The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair That Changed America Erik Larson (Crown)  This book features everything popular history should: breathtaking narrative combined with a novelistic yet wholly factual approach, as Larson writes about an emerging metropolis, Chicago, and the ghastly killings it harbored.

Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx Adrian Nicole LeBlanc (Scribner)  Politicians rail about welfare queens, crack babies and deadbeat dads, but what do they know about the real struggle it takes to survive being poor? LeBlanc spent some 10 years researching and interviewing one extended family from the Bronx to Troy, N.Y., in and out of public housing, emergency rooms, prisons and courtrooms.

Poker Face: A Girlhood Among Gamblers Katy Lederer (Crown)  Centered on dead-on perceptions of the swirling needs, poses and cruelties of her family, Lederer's debut memoir is less Positively Fifth Street than an alienated New England version of The Liar's Club and ends up with some of the best of both.

Digressions on Some Poems by Frank O'Hara: A Memoir Joe LeSueur (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)  LeSueur shared four New York apartments (and dozens of famous friends) with the poet Frank O'Hara during the last 10 years of the poet's life. Sometimes chatty, sometimes incisive and sometimes not so sweet, this book links facts about the life to the poems they best explain, and is wildly entertaining in the process.

Who Killed Daniel Pearl? Bernard-Henri Lévy, trans. from the French by James X. Mitchell (Melville House)  With bold, daring journalism, French writer and philosopher Lévy traces Daniel Pearl's steps and surmises who murdered the journalist and why.

The Crisis of Islam: Holy War and Unholy Terror Bernard Lewis (Modern Library)  The bestselling author of What Went Wrong? cogently investigates the roots of Muslim extremism in this taut and timely expansion of his award-winning New Yorker article.

Bull!: A History of the Boom, 1982–1999: What Drove the Breakneck Market—and What Every Investor Needs to Know About Financial Cycles Maggie Mahar (Harper Business)  Financial journalist Mahar offers a thorough and accessible history of the explosive 1982–1999 bull market that is illuminating as well as sobering from the current bear market perspective.

Walking a Literary Labyrinth: A Spirituality of Reading Nancy M. Malone (Riverhead)  An Ursuline nun with an omnivorous reading habit considers how her passion for books has affected the rest of her life in this erudite and beautifully written memoir.

They Marched into Sunlight: War and Peace, Vietnam and America, October 1967 David Maraniss (Simon &Schuster)  Two intertwined narratives offer a fierce, vivid diptych of America, at home and abroad, bisected by a tragic war.

Queer Street: The Rise and Fall of an American Culture 1947–1985 James McCourt (Norton)  Swollen to bursting with essays on film, lists of essential gay bars, invented characters breaking into Compton-Burnett chitchat and much more, this book dazzles readers straight and gay with erudition, and possibly lists every important event that happened in gay Manhattan over a 40-year period.

A Fierce Discontent: The Rise and Fall of the Progressive Movement in America, 1870–1920 Michael McGerr (Free Press)  This remarkable account explores the true dimensions of an explosive era, vividly weaving together an array of vignettes and themes.

Wild Bill: The Legend and Life of William O. Douglas Bruce Allen Murphy (Random)  Murphy's biography of the late Supreme Court justice William O. Douglas is as much a history of American politics in the mid–20th century as it is a portrayal of the man himself.

Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books Azar Nafisi (Random)  Literature professor Nafisi writes about teaching Lolita, The Great Gatsby and 1984 in her native Iran. Her book transcends categorization as memoir, literary criticism or social history, though it is superb as all three.

The Boy and the Dog Are Sleeping Nasdijj (Ballantine)  Could the story be simpler? Man adopts dying child, child dies, man grieves. And yet, in the hands of Navajo author Nasdijj, this experience is a window into the larger question of what's really important in life.

The Colonel: The Extraordinary Story of Colonel Tom Parker and Elvis Presley Alanna Nash (Simon & Schuster)  Using the cunning of a detective and the straightforward prose of a journalist, Nash, to the delight of Elvis lovers everywhere, answers some lingering questions while posing a few new ones about the man who made the King and then stole his crown.

What the Numbers Say: A Field Guide to Mastering Our Numerical World Derrick Niederman and David Boyum (Broadway)  A mathematician and a public policy analyst show that quantitative competence is mostly a matter of simple habits in this light-handed and equation-free primer to probability, statistics and other useful calculations.

And the Dead Shall Rise: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank Steve Oney (Pantheon)  Both dramatically compelling and historically exacting, with new and unsettling material, this is the definitive account of a touchstone of American intolerance.

Letters to a Young Therapist: Stories of Hope and Healing Mary Pipher (Basic)  Even the most cynical psych snob will find this series of seasonally themed letters—to a fictional graduate student and describing psychotherapy from the inside out—refreshing, informative and insightful.

Monster of God: The Man-Eating Predator in the Jungles of History and the Mind David Quammen (Norton)  With equal parts lucid travel narrative and scholarly rumination, Quammen describes the fascinating past, tenuous present and bleak future of four supremely adapted predators who are finding themselves increasingly out of place in the modern world.

Branded: The Buying and Selling of Teenagers Alissa Quart (Perseus)  This book has spawned literally thousands of copycat articles on marketing to (and by) teenagers. Quart is brilliant on the world in which teens, "obsessed with brand names[,] feel they have a lack that only superbranding will cover over."

The Cruelest Miles: The Heroic Story of Dogs and Men in a Race Against an Epidemic Gay Salisbury and Laney Salisbury (Norton)  The Salisburys document a 674-mile dogsled journey to combat a diphtheria epidemic in upstate Alaska in 1922, with tales of total isolation, endless night, bizarre acoustics, unreliably frozen rivers and 60-below temperatures.

True Notebooks Mark Salzman (Knopf)  In this provoking and beautifully composed account, Salzman, a volunteer creative writing teacher at a Los Angeles County detention facility for "high-risk" juvenile offenders, concludes that "a little good has got to be better than no good at all."

Lucia Joyce: To Dance in the Wake Carol Loeb Schloss (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)  A groundbreaking study of James Joyce's volatile daughter, whom he believed was a genius in her own right and who was a possible model for Anna Livia Plurabelle.

Schott's Original Miscellany Ben Schott (Bloomsbury)  Charmingly designed to resemble an old-fashioned farmer's almanac, Schott's diminutive volume of trivia contains a delightfully eclectic collection of facts, diagrams, quotations and symbols.

A Voice at the Borders of Silence William Segal (Overlook)  This rich, lavishly illustrated memoir of a life well lived, including rare and absorbing firsthand accounts of encounters with G.I. Gurdjieff, D.T. Suzuki and work in Japanese Zen monasteries just after WWII, is an important and inspiring contribution to the history of Buddhism and of spiritual search in America.

The Last Good Season: Brooklyn, the Dodgers, and Their Final Pennant Race Together Michael Shapiro (Doubleday)  Equal parts sports, history, politics and sociology, Shapiro's book is reminiscent of the works of Caro, Halberstam and Kahn, and belongs in every sports fan's library.

Frankie's Place: A Love Story Jim Sterba (Grove)  Rarely does a subtitle describe a book so well as this one encapsulates journalist Sterba's experiences at the Maine cabin of his sweetheart, Pulitzer Prize winner Frances "Frankie" Fitzgerald.

Cook: The Extraordinary Voyages of Captain James Cook Nicholas Thomas (Walker)  Rich, vivid and deeply provocative, Thomas's work combines premiere adventure story with thorough history and intensive sociology.

Rising Up and Rising Down William T. Vollmann (McSweeney's)  Nothing less than "a critique of terrorist, defensive, military and police activity," along with an attempt to construct a moral calculus for the human use of violence, the seven volumes of this work are designed to get ordinary people thinking about the role violence, even at a distance, plays in their lives.

Triangle: The Fire That Changed America David Von Drehle (Atlantic Monthly)  Von Drehle's engrossing account, which emphasizes the humanity of the victims in the 1911 shirtwaist factory fire, brings one of the pivotal and most shocking episodes of American labor history to life.

The Franco-Prussian War: The German Conquest of France in 1870–1871 Geoffrey Wawro (Cambridge Univ.)  The brief, seldom-discussed but crucial Franco-Prussian war gets its due in Wawro's gripping narrative history and analytic tour de force.

All the Stops: The Glorious Pipe Organ and Its American Masters Craig R. Whitney (Public Affairs)  In this lively history of the pipe organ in America, Whitney, an amateur organist, weaves a tale of opposing ideas and colorful personalities.

An Imperfect God: George Washington, His Slaves, and the Creation of America Henry Wiencek (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)  An important and original study of the deep moral struggle that led Washington to the radical decision to free his slaves.

Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded: August 27, 1883 Simon Winchester (HarperCollins)  An erudite, fascinating account by one of the foremost purveyors of contemporary nonfiction, this book chronicles the underlying causes, utter devastation and lasting effects of the cataclysmic 1883 eruption of the volcano island Krakatoa in what is now Indonesia.


Fiction
2002

Publisher's Weekly debuted an annual list of notable books in 2001.   The Year in Books 2002 covers over 150 books in nine categories, including noteworthy trends in books and publishing.  

This was an extraordinary year for first novels. Alice Sebold became the most talked about, and bestselling, author of the year with her debut novel, The Lovely Bones (Little, Brown). Earlier, Jonathan Safran Foer's Everything Is Illuminated (Houghton Mifflin) caught much media shine. Other notable first novels included Ann Packer's The Dive from Clausen's Pier (Knopf) and Stephen L. Carter's The Emperor of Ocean Park (Knopf). On the lighter side, The Nanny Diaries (St. Martin's), by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus, won accolades and sales for its frisky fictionalizing of the authors' experiences as nannies among the Manhattan upper crust.

Sebold limited the #1 runs of Tom Clancy's Red Rabbit (Putnam) and Stephen King's From a Buick 8 (Scribner), two novels of many by veteran big name authors this year. Three powerhouse novelists made long-awaited returns, Jean Auel with The Shelters of Stone (Crown), Donna Tartt with The Little Friend (Knopf) and Michael Crichton with Prey (HarperCollins). Other notable authors included Jeffrey Eugenides with Middlesex (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), Fannie Flagg with Standing in the Rainbow (Random), Ian McEwan with Atonement (Doubleday) and Michel Faber with The Crimson Petal and the White (Harcourt). Some authors offered multiple books: King also produced a short-story collection, Everything's Eventual (Scribner); Mary Higgins Clark released two new books, including the thriller Daddy's Little Girl and an autobiography, Kitchen Privileges (both S&S); and the indefatigable James Patterson delivered three novels, 2nd Chance, The Beach House and Four Blind Mice (all Little, Brown), as did Danielle Steel (Sunset in St. Tropez; The Cottage; Answered Prayers; all Delacorte).

Books by lesser-known authors or from smaller publishers didn't flood bestseller lists but they did crowd the field for prizes. The Booker Prize judges led the way by singling out smaller, more intimate novels for their shortlist. The Nobel Prize went to Imre Kertész, a Hungarian published by Northwestern University Press. And the National Book Award nominees for fiction overlooked bestsellers, other than Adam Haslett's You Are Not a Stranger Here (Doubleday), in favor of commercially modest titles.

"Literary" Writers
2001

Publisher's Weekly debuted an annual list of notable books in 2001.   The Year in Books 2001 covers over 150 books in nine categories, including noteworthy trends in books and publishing.  The excerpt below was described under the category of "literary" writers.  Following the analysis, each book is briefly described.

"Literary" writers mostly settled for one book each, but that didn't mean their aims were modest. Perhaps nothing defined ambition like Jonathan Franzen's breakthrough novel, The Corrections ( Farrar, Straus & Giroux), which got nearly as much press for the author's big mouth as for his big talent. A trio of smaller books (in the literal sense--only one topped 200 pages) by Don DeLillo (The Body Artist; Scribner), Philip Roth (The Dying Animal; Houghton Mifflin) and Salman Rushdie (Fury; Random) sparked sometimes acrimonious critical debate. Major prizes lifted V.S. Naipaul (Half a Life; Knopf) and Peter Carey (True History of the Kelly Gang; Knopf) above the fray. First-time novelists Trezza Azzopardi (The Hiding Place; Atlantic), Manil Suri (The Death of Vishnu; Norton) and Brady Udall (The Miracle Life of Edgar Mint; Norton) were widely acclaimed, but this was really a year for old-timers, including, in the U.S., Richard Russo (Empire Falls; Knopf), Louise Erdrich (The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse; HarperCollins) and Anne Tyler (Back When We Were Grownups; Knopf) and, from abroad, Mario Vargas Llosa (The Feast of the Goat; Farrar, Straus & Giroux), Orhan Pamuk (My Name Is Red; Knopf) and W.G. Sebald (Austerlitz; Random). Short story collections were particularly strong in 2001, with outstanding offerings from Saul Bellow (Collected Stories; Viking), Alice Munro (Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage; Knopf), Lydia Davis (Samuel Johnson Is Indignant; McSweeney's), Ann Beattie (Perfect Recall; Scribner), Dan Chaon (Among the Missing; Ballantine) and newcomer Don Lee (Yellow; Norton).


Oprah's Book Club

After a one year hiatus, Oprah's Book Club is adding 4 titles a year from the classics.  Click on any recommendation below  for extensive links to information about the book, author, interview and related subjects.  Also listed on the site are famous bookshelves from O, the Oprah magazine and books featured on the Oprah show. (Jan, Apr, July, Oct)

The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck  10/04
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy  7/04
The Heart is  Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers  4/04
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez,  1/04
Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton, 10/03   
East of Eden by John Steinbeck   Announced June 19, 2003     [First of the classics.]

Sula
by Toni Morrison   Announced April 5, 2002     [Last of the regular selections.]
Fall on Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald   Announced January 24, 2002 
A Fine Balance  by Rohinton Mistry    Announced November 30, 2001
The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen,   Announced September 24, 2001
Cane River by Lalita Tademy,   Announced June 20, 2001
Stolen Lives: Twenty Years in a Desert Jail by Malika Oufkir,    May 16, 2001
Icy Sparks by Gwyn Hyman Rubio,   Announced March 8, 2001
We Were The Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates,   Announced January 24, 2001
House of Sand and Fog by Andre Dubus III ,   Announced November 16, 2000
Drowning Ruth by Christina Schwarz,   September 27, 2000
Open House by Elizabeth Berg,   August 23, 2000
The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver,   June 23, 2000
While I Was Gone by Sue Miller,   May 26, 2000
The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, April 27, 2000
Back Roads by Tawni O'Dell, March 28, 2000
Daughter of Fortune, by Isabel Allende, February 17, 2000
Gap Creek, by Robert Morgan, January 18, 2000
A Map of the World, by Jane Hamilton, December 3, 1999
Vinegar Hill, by A. Manette Ansay, November 10, 1999
River, Cross My Heart, by Breena Clarke, October 14, 1999
Tara Road by Maeve Binchy, September 9, 1999
Mother of Pearl by Melinda Haynes , June 15, 1999
White Oleander by Janet Fitch , May 6, 1999
The Pilot's Wife by Anita Shreve , March 31, 1999
The Reader by Bernhard Schlink , February 26, 1999
Jewel by Bret Lott , January 19, 1999
Where the Heart Is by Billie Letts , December 7, 1998
Midwives by Chris Bohjalian , October 20, 1998
What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day by Pearl Cleage , September 25, 1998
I Know This Much Is True by Wally Lamb , June 18, 1998
Breath, Eyes, Memory by Edwidge Danticat , May 22, 1998
Black and Blue by Anna Quindlen , April 9, 1998
Here on Earth by Alice Hoffman , March 6, 1998
Paradise by Toni Morrison , January 16, 1998
The Meanest Thing To Say by Bill Cosby , December 8, 1997
The Treasure Hunt by Bill Cosby , December 8, 1997
The Best Way To Play by Bill Cosby , December 8, 1997
Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons , October 27, 1997
A Virtuous Woman by Kaye Gibbons , October 27, 1997
A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest J. Gaines , September 22, 1997
Songs In Ordinary Time by Mary McGarry Morris , June 18, 1997
The Heart of a Woman by Maya Angelou , May 9, 1997
The Rapture of Canaan by Sheri Reynolds , April 8, 1997
Stones from the River by Ursula Hegi , February 28, 1997
She's Come Undone by Wally Lamb , January 22, 1997
The Deep End of the Ocean by Jacquelyn Mitchard , September 17,1996
Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison , October 18, 1996
The Book of Ruth by Jane Hamilton , November 18,1996


New York Pubic Library
25 Books to Remember
- 1995 - 2003

Books to Remember is an annual list of 25 titles chosen for their distinct and lasting contribution to literature and/or general knowledge for adult readers.  Selection criteria include literary excellence, information value and importance, sincerity and honesty of presentation, skill in presentation, and importance in historical context.  Click for other categories of recommended reading from NYPL librarians.  Also view 25 to remember from: 2005 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001, 2000, 1999, 1998, 1997, 1996, 1995, 1969.   (April 1)

2005

American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer

American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer
Bird, Kai, Sherwin, Martin J. | Alfred A. Knopf, © 2005 | B Oppenheimer B
The complex life of the pioneering physicist is fully explored in this rich combination of biography and 20th Century scientific and political history.
Reserve This Title

The Assassins’ Gate: America in Iraq

The Assassins’ Gate: America in Iraq
Packer, George | Farrar, Straus and Giroux, © 2005 | 956.7044 P
An award-winning American journalist skillfully presents a balanced, vital, and highly readable chronicle of the ongoing Iraq War and the people affected by its consequences.
Reserve This Title

Beasts of No Nation: A Novel

Beasts of No Nation: A Novel
Iweala, Uzodinma | HarperCollins, © 2005 | FIC I
This heartbreaking debut novel set in West Africa tells the story a young boy who is recruited by guerilla soldiers after his father’s brutal death.
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Beyond Glory: Joe Louis vs. Max Schmeling, and a World on the Brink

Beyond Glory: Joe Louis vs. Max Schmeling, and a World on the Brink
Margolick, David | Alfred A. Knopf, © 2005 | 796.8309 M
The dramatic story of two boxers provides a context for understanding the political, cultural and social tensions leading up to World War II.
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Bound for Canaan: The Underground Railroad and the War for the Soul of America

Bound for Canaan: The Underground Railroad and the War for the Soul of America
Bordewich, Fergus M. | Amistad, © 2005 | 973.7115 B
Bordewich’s thoroughly researched history of the Underground Railroad compellingly examines the abolitionist movement and the nation’s shifting sentiment about slavery
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BREAD AND ROSES: MILLS, MIGRANTS, AND THE STRUGGLE FOR THE AMERICAN DREAM

Bread and Roses: Mills, Migrants, and the Struggle for the American Dream
Watson, Bruce | Viking, © 2005 | 331.8928 W
Watson vividly reconstructs the story of 1912 textile strike in Lawrence, Massachusetts, a watershed moment in American labor history.
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Carnivorous Nights: On the Trail of the Tasmanian Tiger

Carnivorous Nights: On the Trail of the Tasmanian Tiger
Mittlebach, Margaret, Crewdson, Michael | Villard Books, © 2005 | 508.496 M
This wonderful romp follows two naturalists and an artist in search of a carnivorous marsupial presumed to be extinct. Illustrated by Alexis Rockman.
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Controlled Burn: Stories Of Prison, Crime, And Men

Controlled Burn: Stories Of Prison, Crime, And Men
Wolven, Scott | Scribner, © 2005 | FIC W
Gritty, terse and unexpectedly moving, these stories track the lives of boxers, convicts, drifters and other hard-luck cases.
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Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
Foer, Jonathan Safran | Houghton Mifflin, © 2005 | FIC F
In this humorous, heartbreaking odyssey, Oskar Schell, the nine-year-old son of a man killed in the September 11 attacks, scours New York City to unravel the mystery of a key his father left behind.
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In the Province of Saints: A Novel

In the Province of Saints: A Novel
O'Malley, Thomas | Little, Brown, © 2005 | FIC O
Michael’s impoverished childhood is shaped by family woes and a troubled community and nation in this compelling coming-of-age story set in rural Ireland.
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Jack and Other New Poems

Jack and Other New Poems
Kumin, Maxine | W.W. Norton, © 2005 | 811 Kumin
The fauna of her New Hampshire farm, political history and the lessons of aging are among the subjects explored in these direct, expressive poems.
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Japanland: A Year in Search of Wa

Japanland: A Year in Search of Wa
Muller, Karin | Rodale, © 2005 | 306.0952 M
A documentary filmmaker seeking inner harmony recounts her high-spirited adventures in Japan.
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Luck Is Luck: Poems

Luck Is Luck: Poems
Perillo, Lucia | Random House, © 2005 | 811 Perillo
Clever constructions of 1950s culture and trenchant takes on feminism and mortality characterize this tough, witty collection of verse.
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The March: A Novel

The March: A Novel
Doctorow, E.L. | Random House, © 2005 | FIC D
General Sherman’s legendary march through Georgia and the Carolinas is retraced in this panoramic historical tale of slavery, war and freedom.
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Never Let Me Go

Never Let Me Go
Ishiguro, Kazuo | Alfred A. Knopf, © 2005 | FIC I
In this elegantly crafted novel, an idyllic British boarding school is the dramatic setting for an alternate reality marked by childhood secrets and betrayals.
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On Beauty

On Beauty
Smith, Zadie | Penguin Press, © 2005 | FIC S
An homage to Howards End, Smith’s engaging novel offers probing insights into changing family dynamics, individuality, race and class.
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Please Don't Come Back from the Moon

Please Don't Come Back from the Moon
Bakopoulos, Dean | Harcourt, © 2005 | FIC B
In this haunting first novel, a blue-collar suburb of Detroit is shaken by the gradual and mysterious disappearance of its family men.
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Rules for Old Men Waiting: A Novel

Rules for Old Men Waiting: A Novel
Pouncey, Peter | Random House, © 2005 | FIC P
A retired historian sets out to write a World War I novel and finds his own life and losses bound up in the fiction he creates.
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Small Island

Small Island
Levy, Andrea | Picador, © 2005 | FIC L
The lives of a Jamaican immigrant couple and their British landlords collide in unexpected and intimate ways as London rebuilds itself from the devastation of World War II.
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A Sudden Country: A Novel

A Sudden Country: A Novel
Fisher, Karen | Random House, © 2005 | FIC F
In this unforgettable debut tale of the 1840s Oregon migration, a Scottish frontiersman’s life changes when he meets a pioneer woman who helps him confront his sorrow.
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The Tattoo Artist

The Tattoo Artist
Ciment, Jill | Pantheon Books, © 2005 | FIC C
This provocative novel tells the story of an acclaimed New York artist who spends 30 years practicing her sacred craft on a remote South Pacific Island.
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Vindication: A Life of Mary Wollstonecraft

Vindication: A Life of Mary Wollstonecraft
Gordon, Lyndall | HarperCollins, © 2005 | B Wollstonecr G
Distinguished biographer Gordon vividly portrays the life and genius of the uncompromising, unconventional and prescient 18th Century feminist.
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THE WAR WORKS HARD

The War Works Hard
Mikha’il, Dunya | New Directions, © 2005 | 892.71 Mikha’il
This intimate, subversive and farsighted collection by an Iraqi poet chronicles the effects of tyranny and war on the psyche. Translated from the Arabic by Elizabeth Winslow.
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Windows on the World: A Novel

Windows on the World: A Novel
Beigbeder, Frédéric | Miramax Books, © 2004 | FIC B
This gripping fictional account of September 11, 2001 juxtaposes the story of a family gathering on the morning of the terrorist attacks with a writer’s reflection of the event one year later. Translated from the French by Frank Wynne.
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The Year of Magical Thinking

The Year of Magical Thinking
Didion, Joan | Alfred A. Knopf, © 2005 | B Didion
Generously written with candor and grace, Didion’s potent memoir records her effort to cope with her husband’s sudden death and her daughter’s illness and to understand grief.
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2004

American Desert
Everett, Percival | Hyperion, © 2004 | Fic E
A second chance at life is given to a man who does not deserve it in this comedic novel of loneliness, despair and redemption.

American Smooth: Poems
Dove, Rita | W.W. Norton, © 2004 | 811 Dove
This elegant collection examines a wide range of American experience, from music and ballroom dancing to jury duty.

Another Bullshit Night in Suck City: A Memoir
Flynne, Nick | W.W. Norton, © 2004 | B Flynn
An edgy and inventive memoir about the poet's early life without his estranged father and their unlikely reunion at a Boston homeless shelter.

At the Tomb of the Inflatable Pig: Travels Through Paraguay
Gimlette, John | Knopf, © 2004 | 989.2 G
Out of the chaos of the world's most unlikely tourist destination emerges a bleak and beautiful travelogue.

A Bit on the Side: Stories
Trevor, William | Viking, © 2004 | Fic T
Richly developed stories set in Ireland and England, whose characters grapple with various forms of love and regret.

Blackbird House
Hoffman, Alice | Doubleday, © 2004 | Fic H
Tales redolent of legend, land and sea trace the dwellers of a Cape Cod farmhouse from colonial through contempory times.

Blood Done Sign My Name: A True Story
Tyson, Timothy | Crown, © 2004 | 975.6535 T
A powerful examination of southern race relations, based on Tyson's investigation of a 1970's lynching in his hometown of Oxford, N.C.

Breaking the Tongue
Loh, Vyvyane | W.W. Norton, © 2004 | Fic L
A moving story of language and class set against the Japanese invasion of Singapore during WWII.

Dancing with Cuba: A Memoir of the Revolution
Guillermoprieto, Alma | Pantheon, © 2004 | 972.9106 G
Art meets revolution in this engaging account of Guillermoprieto's political awakening while teaching dance in post revolution cuba.

de Kooning: An American Master
Stevens, Mark, Swan, Annalyn | Knopf, © 2004 | B de Kooning S
The luminous and all-encompassing first biography of the prolific artist.

The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History
Barry, John | Viking, © 2004 | 614.518 B
Bodies were piled in the streets in 1918. A comprehensive exploration of the medical, social and political aspects of this tragic epidemic.

The Island at the Center of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony that Shaped America
Shorto, Russell | Doubleday, © 2004 | 974.7102 S
From newly translated records comes a rich and colorful chronicle of the multi-faceted Dutch colony from which New York City, the first global village, was forged.

Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
Clarke, Susanna | Bloomsbury, © 2004 | Fic C
A historic battle unfolds between England's most competent and well-educated gentleman magicians.

Love in the Driest Season: A Family Memoir
Tucker, Neely | Crown, © 2004 | 362.734 T
A foreign correspondent and his wife navigate a byzantine society plagued by ethnic conflict and the AIDS epidemic to adopt an abandoned baby girl from Zimbabwe.

Natasha and Other Stories
Bezmozgis, David | Farrar, Straus & Giroux, © 2004 | Fic B
Offbeat, sympathetic and humorous stories portray a Russian Jewish family's adjustment to life in Toronto, Canada.

On the Wing: To the Edge of the Earth with the Peregrine Falcon
Tennant, Alan | Knopf, © 2004 | 598.96 T
Tennant takes us on an exhilarating and edifying quest to track the transcontinental journey of the peregrine falcon.

The Plot Against America
Roth, Philip | Houghton Mifflin, © 2004 | Fic R
"History is a very sudden thing," writes Roth. The varied responses of ordinary people are portrayed in this fictional account of fascism in America.

Rats: Observations on the History and Habitat of the City's Most Unwanted Inhabitants
Sullivan, Robert | Bloomsbury, © 2004 | 599.3521 S
An eye-opening account of the complex and unappreciated world of our rodent rivals.

The Second Life of Samuel Tyne
Edugyan, Esi | Amistad, © 2004 | Fic E
Sinister twins and a father's struggle to fulfill his dreams pervade this haunting story of a Ghanaian family's arrival in a new town.

The Sex Lives of Cannibals: Adrift in the Equatorial Pacific
Troost, J. Maarten | Broadway Books, © 2004 | 306.0996 T
Mistakenly envisioning a tropical paradise, Troost moves to the Pacific Island of Kiribati and ultimately produces this hilarious tale of life along the equator.

The Shadow of the Wind
Ruiz Zafon, Carlos; translated by Lucia Graves | Penguin, © 2004 | Fic R
A young booklover in Barcelona finds murder, metaphysics and madness among the secrets of a forgotten novel in this engrossing epic from Spain.

So Quietly the Earth
Lee, David | Copper Canyon Press, © 2004 | 811 Lee
Landscape meditations on the American Southwest; these poems begin with walking tours at dawn and explore earth, fire, water and air.

Soul City
Toure | Little, Brown & Co., © 2004 | Fic T
The ingenious portrayal of a utopian African-American city, brimming with pop-culture and social satire.

Swimming to Antarctica: Tales of a Long Distance Swimmer
Cox, Lynne | Knopf, © 2004 | B Cox
An inspiring chronicle of the swimmer's perilous crossings and her extraordinary relationship with the water.

The Tyrant's Novel
Keneally, Thomas | Doubleday, © 2004 | Fic K
Offered a position by Great Uncle as the official poet and scribe of their Middle Eastern country, Alan Sheriff is given an impossible task.

 

2003

Black Earth: A Journey Through Russia After the Fall,  Andrew Meier, (W.W. Norton); 

The Bounty: The True Story of Mutiny on the Bounty, Caroline Alexander (Viking),

The Commissariat of Enlightenment
,
Ken Kalfus,  (Ecco); 

Triangle: The Fire That Changed America
David Von Drehle, (Atlantic Monthly Press).

Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, by Mary Roach (W.W. Norton), a humorous yet compassionate look at the postmortem uses of bodies donated to science; 

The Dante Club: A Novel,
by Matthew Pearl (Random House), set in in 19th-century Boston, a tale of literary geniuses who solve grisly murders committed by a serial killer who tortures his victims in ways that seem to be taken straight out of the pages of Dante’s Inferno; 

The Emperor of Scent: A Story of Perfume, Obsession, and the Last Mystery of the Senses,
by Chandler Burr (Random House), the story of one man’s unrelenting quest to unravel one of the last great mysteries of the human body: our sense of smell.

Khruschev: The Man and His Era, by William Taubman (W.W. Norton), the definitive biography of the man who inspired terror and fear, and made duck-and-cover drills a part of our everyday life; 

The Voice at 3:00 A.M.: Selected Late and New Poems
(Harcourt) which include two decades of lyrical wit and delightfully sardonic observations from award-winning poet Charles Simic. 

Goya,
by Robert Hughes (Alfred A. Knopf) is a richly illustrated, intensely human portrait of the great artist. 

A Few Short Notes on Tropical Butterflies,
by John Murray (Harper Collins) is a collection of short stories that skillfully weave science and medicine with love and obsession, and are set in exotic locations; 

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time,
by Mark Haddon (Doubleday), a story in which a remarkably portrayed autistic boy, accused of killing his neighbor’s dog, investigates and uncovers more than he set out to.

2002

ART LOVER: A BIOGRAPHY OF PEGGY GUGGENHEIM 
Anton Gill | HarperCollins | B Guggenheim G 
A revealing portrait of the lively and legendary art patron.

THE CLUB OF ANGELS 
Luis Fernando Verissimo | New Directions | Fic V 
A wildly satirical novel about the monthly gathering of a group of gourmands.

COGITO, ERGO SUM: THE LIFE OF RENE DESCARTES 
Richard Watson | David R. Godine | B Descartes W 
This contemplative biography challenges myths about the mathematician and philosopher.

THE CRIMSON PETAL AND THE WHITE
 
Michel Faber | Harcourt | Fic F 
Prostitution looms large in this intoxicating novel set in Victorian London.

THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON, APT. 3W 
Gabriel Brownstein | W.W. Norton | Fic B 
Charming, offbeat stories featuring the eccentric tenants of an apartment building on Manhattan's Upper West Side.

THE DIVE FROM CLAUSEN'S PIER
Ann Packer | Alfred A. Knopf | Fic P 
A riveting novel that examines one woman's struggles with loyalty, betrayal and love.

THE DREAM OF SCIPIO 
Iain Pears | Riverhead Books | Fic P 
The impassioned lives of three scholars are linked in this remarkable historical novel.

ENEMY WOMEN 
Paulette Jiles | William Morrow | Fic J 
The brutal, yet lyrical story of an 18-year-old falsely accused of being a Confederate spy.

HART CRANE: A LIFE 
Clive Fisher | Yale University Press | B Crane F 
A comprehensive look at the brilliant and tragic life of the celebrated American poet.

THE IMPRESSIONIST 
Hari Kunzru | Dutton | Fic K 
A lush tale of an embattled young man in colonial India, who goes to extraordinary lengths to survive.

INSECT DREAMS: THE HALF LIFE OF GREGOR SAMSA 
Marc Estrin | BlueHen Books | Fic E 
This astonishing debut novel provides a kaleidoscopic view of the 20th century via Kafka's cockroach.

INTO THE BUZZSAW: LEADING JOURNALISTS EXPOSE THE MYTH OF A FREE PRESS 
Edited by Kristina Borjesson; foreword by Gore Vidal | Prometheus Books | 323.445 I
Provocative essays that underscore the dangerous trends in American journalism.

JESSE JAMES: LAST REBEL OF THE CIVIL WAR 
T.J. Stiles | Alfred A. Knopf | B James S 
A compelling biography of the notorious outlaw placed in the context of Southern Reconstruction.

THE LITTLE FRIEND 
Donna Tartt | Alfred A. Knopf | Fic T 
A young amateur sleuth is determined to solve the mystery of her brother's murder.

MIDDLESEX 
Jeffrey Eugenides | Farrar, Straus and Giroux | Fic E 
A hermaphrodite tells a "Homeric" version of an immigrant family's struggles.

NATASHA'S DANCE: A CULTURAL HISTORY OF RUSSIA 
Orlando Figes | Metropolitan Books | 947 F 
A fascinating examination of how arts, music and literature influenced Russia's national consciousness.

NOBLE OBSESSION: CHARLES GOODYEAR, THOMAS HANCOCK, AND THE RACE TO UNLOCK THE GREATEST INDUSTRIAL SECRET OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 
Charles Slack | Hyperion | 678.2092 S 
The captivating hard luck story of the man who revolutionized the rubber industry.

THE PIRATE HUNTER: THE TRUE STORY OF CAPTAIN KIDD 
Richard Zacks | Hyperion Books | B Kidd Z 
An entertaining, richly narrated account of the notorious buccaneer's life.

PRAGUE: A NOVEL
Arthur Phillips | Random House | Fic P 
A sparkling debut novel wherein five American expats converge in Budapest in search of fortune and romance.

THE REAL MCCOY: A NOVEL 
Darin Strauss | Dutton | Fic S 
The impressive story of "Kid" McCoy, a boxer, swindler and bigamist.

REFLECTIONS AND SHADOWS 
Saul Steinberg with Aldo Buzzi | Random House | B Steinberg 
Saul Steinberg once held a mirror to America; now the artist reflects on his own life and world.

A SIMPLE HABANA MELODY (FROM WHEN THE WORLD WAS GOOD) 
Oscar Hijuelos | HarperCollins | Fic H 
A sensual bittersweet story of a Cuban's composer life and loves.

THIS BLINDING ABSENCE OF LIGHT: A NOVEL Tahar Ben Jelloun | New Press | Fic B A disquieting fictional account of how a political prisoner in Morocco survived internment in a desert tomb.

THE WHORE'S CHILD AND OTHER STORIES 
Richard Russo | Alfred A. Knopf | Fic R 
Harrowing and compelling short fiction about troubled family relationships.

WITHOUT AN ALPHABET, WITHOUT A FACE: SELECTED POEMS OF SAADI YOUSSEF 
Saadi Youssef | Graywolf Press | 892.71 Yusuf 
Lyrical, engaging poetry rooted in urban landscape and the politics of place.

 


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