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).
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