• The Hub

    News, Notes, Talk

    Why your local indie bookstore might not have Hillbilly Elegy in stock this week (or ever).

    Drew Broussard

    July 25, 2024, 2:51pm

    Last week, shortly after the announcement that JD Vance would be joining the Republican ticket, I was working my bookstore gig at The Golden Notebook when a woman came in and asked me if we had any copies of Hillbilly Elegy. I took a glance at the inventory, told her we did not, and started to suggest that if she was looking for a book about the Rust Belt and its socio-political context in the 21st Century, I could recommend… This woman, older and tapping a black Amex on the counter, interrupted me to say that she didn’t want “some other book” and asked if we could order a copy of Vance’s book for her.

    I told her that we could, but she would have to pay for the order in advance. A local and a somewhat frequent customer, she expressed some shock at this: usually, The Golden Notebook allows people to order a book and pay for it upon pick-up. I explained that this was the store’s policy on hot-ticket books (to ensure that someone doesn’t go buy it elsewhere and leave us in the lurch) and although she had some attitude about it, she gave me her card and paid for the book and then scowled her way out of the store.

    The experience reminded me of a similar one in late 2021, around the release of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s The Real Anthony Fauci. I was relatively new to the store at the time and the store’s ownership sent out an all-staff email explaining the same policy: that we would not be stocking the book but that we would order it if customers specifically requested a copy, so long as they paid in advance. A few days later, I was working the register and told a customer that we didn’t have the book and wouldn’t be stocking it. The man started shouting about censorship, pulling down his mask and demanding that I take off my own so that he could see my face, and swearing that he’d never buy books from us again. He left without much further incident, but that was not the only such encounter that I or other staff members had during that book’s release season.

    When I talked to The Golden Notebook’s co-owner James Conrad, he put the political facet of the stock issue in clear terms: “A lot of the time with political books, people feel the need to demand a bookstore carry their particular political belief. The Fauci book turned into dozens of phone calls from people who have never set foot in our store demanding we order it and once asked to prepay, a lot of them refused. They just wanted to tell us what our own business should have on our shelves, despite the fact that a lot of them never supported our business in the past.”

    Indeed, indie bookstores have always faced complicated cross-currents when it comes to the question of what to stock. Some stores have the luxury of massive square footage and the resulting ability to stock just about any book that they’d like—but many stores with smaller footprints have to be choosy about what books go on their shelves. Most of the time, this goes unnoticed or at least unremarked upon: we’ve probably all walked into a bookstore looking for a particular title and been surprised-but-not-that-surprised not to find it on the shelves, particularly when the book in question is older or outside of the mainstream. Bookstores are not libraries, and there is no expectation (or at least there shouldn’t be) that they have every single book at any given moment.

    But one of the major reasons that indie bookstores have blossomed in recent years is because of their deep ties to local communities. Customers want to have a sense that their local indie says something about their community, in an expansive and inviting way. When I asked about whether she’d be stocking Hillbilly Elegy, Katie Brown, bookstore manager at Malaprop’s in Asheville, put it wonderfully:

    Several of us in the store grew up in Southern Appalachia (me personally, an hour west of Asheville in Haywood County with half my family rooted in Yancey County for multiple generations) and had experiences that, while not exactly like JD Vance’s, mirrored his in a lot of ways. And while I think his story represents his life and is true of some folks in the area, that mentality does not resonate with many of us still here. He forgot the most beautiful part of Appalachia: that we are a community who work together for the betterment of the whole, not to push it apart, and that that community is made up of more than poor white people. Bootstraps don’t apply here—if one succeeds, we all succeed. Vance has created both a myth and a monolith of Appalachia that is so singular while refusing to acknowledge just how diverse our area is. I think folks need to look beyond the Elegy to really understand what Appalachia is as a whole. Stocking Hillbilly Elegy isn’t a priority for us; we will of course special order it for anyone interested in one man’s story. But, I really want to encourage folks to look at other titles and lives that include what I feel like is Appalachia.

    I reached out to some other indies to take a quick temperature check on the industry’s plans for Vance’s book and most of the places I spoke to mentioned plans similar to The Golden Notebook and Malaprop’s: they won’t be stocking it, but they’ll take special orders. A few did mention that they are stocking the book “because of significant interest from our customers” while others pointed out that the book is currently back-ordered (HarperCollins told the AP that over 650,000 copies have sold in the last ten days across the print/e-book/audiobook spectrum and they are planning a massive re-print, which I’m sure won’t affect the distribution of other planned titles this season…) and that they’re being honest with customers about the resulting delays and trying to hand-sell some other (coughcoughbettercough) titles.

    “We have never had a single copy of Hillbilly Elegy in stock, as we curate our shelves extremely selectively, but are always glad to special-order books for our customers,” said novelist Lauren Groff, whose new Gainesville bookstore The Lynx has quickly established itself as a beacon of free expression in Ron DeSantis’s Florida. “We’re all-in for freedom to read and freedom of expression, and that even includes the work of JD Vance. I’d also like to add that when people express interest in Appalachia, we booksellers at The Lynx are usually excited to hand-sell them books by one of our favorite writers, Mesha Maren.

    That, right there, is really the crux of the work of indie bookstores: to vigorously defend free expression, support the right to read, and champion the writers we believe in. If we stand for the right to read, then we must stand for the right to read whatever you damn well please. If you want to read a particular book, an indie will get it for you even if we really think you should read something else or desperately disagree with the book’s existence—because that’s what we do.

    But we also want to shape the reading lives of our communities by listening to and respecting the full breadth of said communities, which is why I’m looking forward to hand-selling copies of Appalachian Reckoning and Elizabeth Catte’s What You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia. And when somebody thinks that they really need to read JD Vance, lo though I will be tempted to point them in the direction of Alissa Quart’s recent piece instead, I will smile and take their money and then work twice as hard to get better books into the hands of my readers.

    The Republicans’ Project 2025 is disastrous for books.

    James Folta

    July 25, 2024, 10:20am

    If you’ve been following political news, you’ve likely heard about Project 2025, the massive conservative “wish list for a Trump presidency.” The 900-page document is a blueprint for an authoritarian, Christian nationalist America, created by the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing think tank that has influenced many of America’s most regressive and conservative policies since the Nixon administration.

    Project 2025 is pitching a horrifying vision of America and American government. BBC’s succinct explainer breaks down the Project’s more eye-popping proposals, including “expanding the power of the president, dismantling the Department of Education, sweeping tax cuts, a ban on pornography, halting sales of the abortion pill, and more.”

    What does this document have to say about books? Maggie Tokuda-Hall, author and a co-founder of Authors Against Book Bans, shared some of the Project’s extreme proposals on Bluesky.

    We made some quick explainers on Project 2025's impact on bookbans for Authors Against Book Bans– please feel free to share with your own networks.

    Maggie Tokuda-Hall (@maggietokudahall.bsky.social) 2024-07-18T16:38:59.116Z

    Authors Against Book Bans single out a shocking line from early in Project 2025’s manifesto:

    “Pornography, manifested today in the omnipresent propagation of transgender ideology and sexualization of children…has no claim to First Amendment protection. Its purveyors are child predators and misogynistic exploiters of women.”

    And breaks down what this would mean in practice:

    “Translation: All LGBTQ+ content will be regarded as pornography. This is already the pernicious lie being used to ban books all over the nation. First Amendment rights will not apply, meaning we will no longer have freedom of speech to protect us.”

    When reached by Lit Hub for comment, Tokuda-Hall, on behalf of Authors Against Book Bans, expanded on the implications of these proposals, and how the agenda underlying them is already being rolled out:

    Project 2025 is the single most expansive, extreme attack on our freedom to read that we’ve seen with ambition for federal government implementation. It follows much of the playbook already established by the right wing extremists who seek book bans; it removes the publishers, teachers and librarians who are subject matter experts in child literacy from the equation, not only denigrating them as pedophiles and groomers but also calling for their imprisonment and registry as sex offenders. It flattens all queer art into the nebulous category of “pornography,” which at this point is well known code used to mask the flagrant transphobia and homophobia required to ban these books. And not only does it do that, it calls for all creators of that art to be imprisoned, aligning our work with the addictive and malignant social force of illicit drugs. As if all that were not bad enough, it also invokes the right wing boogey man of critical race theory, a brilliant lens for understanding law coined by Dr. Kimberlé Crenshaw, as a justification for pulling all federal funding from any institution that teaches American history in a way that extremists dislike, and will lead to the continued banning of BIPOC stories from all of our public institutions of learning. That How to Be An Antiracist is the kind of book so frequently banned under this line of argument should be both no surprise and also instructive.

    Authors Against Book Bans is committed to fighting against the forces that would rob us of our freedom to read. Project 2025 outlines an aggressive, unconscionable attack on that freedom. This is the land of the free. And we intend to read (and write) that way.

    It is also worth noting that if there are readers who believe this is a far off, distant possibility, we already have state level legislation that is setting the groundwork of precedence. Idaho passed HB 710 in Spring of 2024, which removed librarians from the process of vetting content for libraries and made all public libraries financially liable for any book any person (whether they held a library card or not, or were a resident or not) finds objectionable for children. As a result, the public library in Donnelly, ID became adults only on July 1st of this year. The public library in Twin Falls, ID put up a sign requiring parents to sign an affidavit every time their child wanted to enter the library. Because that legislation passed in Idaho, nearly identical legislation has been introduced in Ohio. In Huntington Beach, CA, the public library had to remove every single book from board books to young adult to be audited for “pornography.” There was no porn there. Librarians and publishers have been seeing to that for years. But that has not stopped extremists from peddling this painful and dangerous lie. Book bans do not protect children. They just rob Americans of the freedom to read.

    Readers, writers, and anyone who believes in freedom of expression or art, should be worried Project 2025’s incendiary plans for books.

    And if you’d like to get involved with Authors Against Book Bans, they have lots of information on their FAQ page.

    Cool merch for classic novels.

    James Folta

    July 24, 2024, 9:30am

    We’re living in the golden age of wacky book merch: Raven Leilani’s Luster nail polish, Sally Rooney’s on-trend Beautiful World bucket hats, and now Sable Yong’s Die Hot With A Vengeance perfume. Of course, this is nothing new — the ‘90s had a streak of collectible trading cards of writers — but it feels like these days, the lives of readers and writers increasingly revolves around swag.

    Here are some ideas for book merch for classic novels, in case any publishers are considering releases or if I ever get my dream job of “publishing marketer with a time machine.”

    Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
    Woolf lovers can upgrade their dinner parties with a set of Mrs.-Dalloway-themed cloth napkins, embroidered with the novel’s cover. Perfect for the next time you host an evening with friends that is rife with internal revelations about figures from your past, or for a dinner alone when you want to be reminded to recall your past every time you delicately dab at your mouth.

    The Power Broker by Robert Caro
    Fans of this towering work on urban planning and power can now travel in style in this limited edition 1955 Packard sedan, customized with decals that make it look like Robert Moses and Robert Caro are riding in the backseat. The car only takes extra-leaded gasoline.

    Moby Dick by Herman Melville
    Ever wondered what’s up with those middle chapters of Moby Dick that are filled with descriptions of different paintings of whales? With our series of promotional reprints, you can bore your friends with your own descriptions of these whale paintings, from the comfort of home.

    Now you can puzzle at the “sort of howdah on its back, and its distended tusked mouth into which the billows are rolling” in Horgath’s “Perseus Descending”, or laugh at “the prodigious blunder…made of representing the whale with perpendicular flukes” in the plate in “A Whaling Voyage to Spitzbergen in the ship Jonas in the Whale, Peter Peterson of Friesland, master.”

    It’s hours and hours of fun!

    The Odyssey by Homer
    Have you ever been on a cruise and thought, “I never want to go home, I wish this sailing adventure could last for ten years!” Well Carnival Cruises is here to make that dream come true with a once-in-a-lifetime tie-in with Homer’s epic poem about a very memorable trip.

    Odyssey: The Cruise is the first luxury voyage to combine the relaxation of cruises with the challenge of escape rooms: can you solve all of our puzzles and games? We won’t let you leave the cruise ship until you do!

    The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
    We partnered with Home Depot to launch a line of affordable, chic, and eye-catching wallpapers! Each of these bright yellow patterns is guaranteed to brighten your day — you’ll love them so much, you may never want to leave your house again!

    No, we haven’t finished reading this book yet, why do you ask?

    The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
    Never lose your way with Gatsby’s green nightlight, perfect for a child who is afraid of the dark, or an adult who needs something to stare at during endless nights of wondering where it all went awry…

    Dracula by Bram Stoker
    Dracula is a book that is remembered for one thing, and one thing alone: paprika chicken. That’s right, the spiced dish that Johnathan Harker is always writing home about can now be yours, with this promotional smoked paprika. “Dracula’s Stoked Paprika” will add flavor to any dish, from poultry, to veggies, to Renfield’s favorite dish: flies.

    What to read next based on your favorite reality show.

    Brittany Allen

    July 23, 2024, 2:15pm

    Emily Nussbaum’s latest book, Cue the Sun, chronicles the rise and fall of reality television. In chipper prose, the rigorously researched history explores how certain networks have managed to seize our collective attention span with a spate of “real” programming. From Survivor to The Bachelor and beyond, what is it about this narrative model that’s so hearty?

    Inspired by Nussbaum’s project, I’ve assembled a reading list that treats your guilty pleasure as a springboard. If you like those fake-reals, try these real-fakes.

    The Great British Bake Off

    For fans of fine cuisine and the penetrating gaze of Paul Hollywood, Maylis de Kerangal’s The Cook is a moveable feast. This slim, engaging novel follows Mauro, a young chef on a journey of sense-based self-discovery.

    It shouldn’t surprise you that this ode to the epicure is filled with tantalizing food descriptions. Here, a U-Bahn station kebab is not a quick snack, but “crunchy slices of meat, sweet grilled onions, crisp fries, soft bread, the smooth sauce soaking through all of it, and hot, hot, hot: the perfect fuel.” On the page and on the plate, we’re snacking.

    Also consider: Nora Ephron’s Heartburn, and Laura Esquivel’s Like Water for ChocolateThese two novels also enlist food as a love language. Bonus points for the recipes.

    Below Deck

    If your interest in this super-yacht is purely nautical, Ladee Hubbard’s The Rib King may seem an unusual recommendation. But this tightly plotted portrait of a wealthy white family and the black servants they exploit perfectly captures the upstairs/downstairs dynamic familiar to all passengers of a certain troubled ship. The novel is also built of fascinating characters. Like Mr. Sitwell,  a groundskeeper turned butler with a history-sized chip on his shoulder.

    Also consider: For more slow-boiling class and romantic tension, look no further than Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Remains of the Day. And for an ocean-forward entry, try Samantha Hunt’s odd jewel of a coming-of-age novel, The Seas

    Couples Therapy

    Most romantic novels lean on the marriage plot. Drama builds as two unlikely souls come together, then apart, then together forever, for real. Part of the appeal of a show like Couples Therapy is its rendering of the aftermath. Once you’ve jumped the broom or kissed under the mistletoe, what comes next?

    Danzy Senna’s New People is a refreshing, often unsettling look at a foundering partnership. Or more specifically? The woman on the cusp of foundering. Full of razor-sharp psychological insight and lacerating social observations, this crisp novel will incline you to look at your own house and desires with fresh eyes.

    Also consider: Tessa Hadley’s Free Love is another close look at a woman’s conflicting wants. And for a frank and unusually cheerful take on partnership, pick up Laurie Colwin’s Happy All The Time

    Love is Blind

    Oh, Love is Blind. Your unhinged premise and the fact that you functioned as cultural bonding glue in the early days of the pandemic mean I will always see you as a surreal and dream-like fiction. What an odd, odd idea for courtship. I mean, does this show really exist? Are those weird little people in the boxes even real?

    Peng Shepherd’s new novel, All This and More, is as thrillingly strange. Following a woman tapped to participate in a reality show that lets its contestants “revise their pasts and change their present lives,” this book dissects the perils and pleasures of romantic choice in high-octane, vivid prose. The world is deeply imagined. And as a choose-your-own-adventure novel with a branching plot, it’s got agency baked into the structure. (Like, allegedly, Love is Blind.)

    Also consider: For another unlikely union forged through (metaphorical) walls, consider Elizabeth McCracken’s The Giant’s House. Or on the more straightforward end of the relationship-survey spectrum, Norman Rush’s Mating.

    Project Runway

    As this show is about Work, here’s some nonfiction for you. Dana Thomas’ exhaustively reported, utterly engaging portrait of two era-defining designers is a must read for the fashionista in your life. Gods and Kings: The Rise and Fall of Alexander McQueen and John Galliano dramatizes an incredible creative partnership. But it pulls no punches about the price of making beautiful things.

    Also consider: Yasmin Zaher’s The CoinThis debut novel hinges on a Birkin bag heist, and also engages the dark side of fetishizing shiny things.

    Real Housewives

    The assorted housewives remind me of nothing so much as the Machiavellian power brokers peppering Wharton and James’ novels. (Also, may I point you this Sad Rich Girl taxonomy?) But if you love infighting among the leisure class, I suspect the Downton Abbey canon is already on your nightstand.

    For an off-the-beaten-path look at a Very dramatic, Very wealthy family, consider Jessica Mitford’s Hons and Rebels. This memoir explores the early years of the famous and infamous Mitford sisters, stars of mid-century London’s social scene.

    Also consider: All of Edith, really. But Glimpses of the Moon, which features sneaky protagonists pretending to wealth, may scratch your itch for bad behavior in beautiful places.

    Keanu Reeves and China Mieville co-wrote a novel! Noam Chomsky! 19 new books out today.

    Gabrielle Bellot

    July 23, 2024, 4:33am

    If you’ve been following the news, July has been quite a month. A lot has happened, some of it sudden and startling, and the idea of focusing, instead, on what I’d like to read next feels pretty good. With that in mind, I’d like to recommend some new books out today for your consideration. There are still some things that may startle, but—I hope—in a good way.

    For one, you’ll find a collaboration few saw coming: a novel by none other than the team of Keanu Reeves and China Miéville, which adapts the story of Reeves’ BRZRKR comics. It’s one of those collaborations that also, strangely, makes sense when you think about it. You’ll also find highly anticipated and innovative new fiction by established authors, including Sarah Manguso, Simon Rich, and Michael J. Seidlinger, as well as powerful debuts from writers like C. Michelle Lindley and Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, the latter of whose cover graces this post’s image.

    And, in nonfiction, you’ll find a conversation between Noam Chomsky and Vijay Prashad about Cuba; a new exploration of the life of Mary McLeod Bethune by Noliwe Rooks and edited Henry Louis Gates; a history of the influential early feminist group, the Bluestockings; a poignant study of how QAnon has ripped apart families; and more.

    There’s a lot to take in, some fun, some frightening, all worth checking out. May your to-be-read lists grow tall!

    *

    The Nude - Lindley, C. Michelle

    C. Michelle Lindley, The Nude
    (Atria Books)

    “As stunning, complex, and carefully crafted as the sculpture our art historian protagonist hopes to acquire, I was astounded and utterly enchanted by Lindley’s portrayal of a woman’s internal journey from object to subject….The lush, lyrical writing of The Nude depicts the gray areas of cultural appropriation, ethics, and sexuality so seamlessly, I had to remind myself to breathe while reading.”
    –Ling Ling Huang

    Liars - Manguso, Sarah

    Sarah Manguso, Liars
    (Hogarth Press)

    “A triumph and a revelation….Despite its title, this might be the most honest marriage novel I have ever read. Sarah Manguso’s writing is furious, elegant, bitter, tender, frightening, and deeply funny. I loved this book.”
    –Claire Dederer

    The Book of Elsewhere - Reeves, Keanu

    Keanu Reeves, China Miéville, The Book of Elsewhere
    (Del Rey)

    “A philosophical, violent thriller about an immortal soldier pondering the nature of his existence, The Book of Elsewhere has an elegance that might surprise you for a pulp thriller….[Miéville’s] presence as Reeves’ narrative collaborator…immediately makes it more interesting, even for those who aren’t already fans of the [BRZRKR] comic.”
    Polygon

    Feh: A Memoir - Auslander, Shalom

    Shalom Auslander, Feh
    (Riverhead)

    “Novelist Auslander (Mother for Dinner) delivers a poignant…study of the religious guilt he incurred while growing up in an ultra-Orthodox Jewish community in Rockland County, N.Y. Titled after the Yiddish word for disgust, the book hinges on Auslander’s attempts to shake the conviction, drilled into him from childhood, that human beings are ‘totally, irredeemably feh’….The result is an often-brutal, sometimes-rewarding journey out of the darkness.”
    Publishers Weekly

    A Passionate Mind in Relentless Pursuit: The Vision of Mary McLeod Bethune - Rooks, Noliwe

    Noliwe Rooks, Henry Louis Gates (editor), A Passionate Mind in Relentless Pursuit: The Vision of Mary McLeod Bethune
    (Penguin Press)

    “In the skillful hands of Noliwe Rooks, this remarkable life story of a crucial figure in American history becomes something more: a mesmerizing personal meditation on racial justice, political power, and the yearning for a home.”
    –Paul Tough

    On Cuba: Reflections on 70 Years of Revolution and Struggle - Chomsky, Noam

    Noam Chomsky, Vijay Prashad, On Cuba: Reflections on 70 Years of Revolution and Struggle
    (New Press)

    “A book-length essay on the history of Cuba-U.S. relations. On a visit to Havana, Prashad received a book from famed Cuban singer Silvio Rodriguez to deliver to Prashad’s friend and fellow scholar Chomsky. The gift sparked a conversation between Prashad and Chomsky, co-authors of The Withdrawal, which they transcribed and edited to create this book….A strong, left-leaning history of the U.S. government’s long-standing vendetta against Cuba.”
    Kirkus Reviews

    Catalina - Cornejo Villavicencio, Karla

    Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, Catalina
    (One World)

    The Undocumented Americans author Karla Cornejo Villavicencio’s first novel follows the titular character, a charming and cunning undocumented Ivy League student, as she prepares for post-grad life….With Catalina, Villavicencio draws from her own experience as an undocumented person and Harvard grad to give voice to a fierce, but vulnerable character.”
    Time

    The Lost Boy of Santa Chionia - Grames, Juliet

    Juliet Grames, The Lost Boy of Santa Chionia
    (Knopf)

    “Grames shines in this intriguing story of buried secrets in an isolated Southern Italian village….She excels at rendering the experiences of living as a stranger in a close-knit community…and she manages to keep the reader guessing as to the truth about who was murdered and why. This is a superior literary mystery.”
    Publishers Weekly

    Glory Days: Stories - Rich, Simon

    Simon Rich, Glory Days: Stories
    (Little Brown)

    “The travails of an aging Super Mario, the media battle between David and Goliath, and the workplace woes of the foul-mouthed Tooth Fairy are among humorist Rich’s latest concoctions….His follow-up to New Teeth is clever fun.”
    Kirkus Reviews

    The Bluestockings: A History of the First Women's Movement - Gibson, Susannah

    Susannah Gibson, The Bluestockings: A History of the First Women’s Movement
    (Norton)

    “Brilliant, earnest, quietly unconventional, the Bluestockings are the unsung pioneers of early British feminism. Their networks empowered women while their salons, stressing conversation and civility, opposed the misogynous, boozy male culture of the eighteenth century. Blending story, history, and delicious anecdote, Susannah Gibson’s book opens a sparkling window onto this extraordinary society of engaged, energetic, and very witty women.”
    –Janet Todd

    The Quiet Damage by Jesselyn Cook

    Jesselyn Cook, The Quiet Damage: Qanon and the Destruction of the American Family
    (Crown Publishing Group)

    “Captivating from the very first page, The Quiet Damage floored me. With empathetic storytelling and an exquisite eye for detail, Jesselyn Cook ushers readers into the darkest corners of the internet to document how disinformation is dismantling family bonds and disintegrating the social fabric. Gracefully written and thoroughly researched, this book is essential for this era.”
    –Toluse Olorunnipa

    Seeing Through: A Chronicle of Sex, Drugs, and Opera - Gordon, Ricky Ian

    Ricky Ian Gordon, Seeing Through: A Chronicle of Sex, Drugs, and Opera
    (FSG)

    “The immensely talented Ricky Ian Gordon has written a memoir that is at times hilarious, harrowing and most importantly insightful into the mind and process of a serious composer of classical and contemporary musical theater.”
    –James Lapine

    Nicked - Anderson, M. T.

    M. T. Anderson, Nicked
    (Pantheon)

    “A miracle worker, M. T. Anderson has exhumed the bones of holy legend and startled them to life. Nicked is a far-fetched caper based on the actual heist of the corpse of Saint Nicholas. At once blessedly comic and acerbic, Anderson’s confession of devotion to the unresolvable mysteries of faith and love had me laughing out loud and tearing up—nearly simultaneously.”
    –Gregory Maguire

    Another Person - Hwagil, Kang

    Kang Hwagil, Another Person (trans. Clare Richards)
    (Pushkin Press)

    “Dark Academia the way I like it…smart and full of suspense.”
    –Hanna Bervoets

    The Modern Fairies - Pollard, Clare

    Claire Pollard, The Modern Fairies
    (Avid Reader Press/Simon & Schuster)

    “An unconventional work of historical fiction to say the least, this tale of the voluble, voracious royal court of Louis XIV of France makes for an often sidesplitting, and always bawdy, read.”
    The Millions

    Guilty Creatures: Sex, God, and Murder in Tallahassee, Florida - Brottman, Mikita

    Mikita Brottman, Guilty Creatures: Sex, God, and Murder in Tallahassee, Florida
    (Atria / One Signal)

    “This story has it all—adultery, obsession, murder, revenge, betrayal—but Brottman doesn’t settle for the superficial. Rather than a whodunit, Guilty Creatures is a compelling psychological double portrait of what happens when two people are forever bound by a life-altering secret.”
    –Becky Cooper

    A Machine to Move Ocean and Earth: The Making of the Port of Los Angeles and America - Tejani, James

    James Tejani, A Machine to Move Ocean and Earth: The Making of the Port of Los Angeles and America
    (Norton)

    “Weaving the many threads of Indigenous, environmental, maritime, political, and economic history, James Tejani shows how a local story became one of national and global proportions. With shifting perspectives and deep dives, Tejani excavates the unlikely nineteenth-century rise of the Port of Los Angeles as a crucial, though relatively unknown, chapter in America’s ascent to world power. Well researched and finely crafted.”
    –Steven Hahn

    Fall of Civilizations: Stories of Greatness and Decline (Original) - Cooper, Paul

    Paul Cooper, Fall of Civilizations: Stories of Greatness and Decline
    (Hanover Square Press)

    “A broad study of civilizations in which ‘the social fabric disintegrated, cities were left empty and buildings fell into disuse and disrepair’….based on his successful podcast of the same name….Cooper offers few surprises in his treatments of ancient Sumeria, Assyria, Han China, and Rome, but even history buffs will glean plenty of interesting historical information as he moves forward through the Khmer, Maya, and Vijayanagara India.”
    Kirkus Reviews

    The Body Harvest - Seidlinger, Michael J.

    Michael J. Seidlinger, The Body Harvest
    (Clash Books)

    “Michael J. Seidlinger is a twisted wizard of transgressive craft, and The Body Harvest is his phlegmcore Fight Club. A tale of viral codependency that starts off like Terrence Malick’s Badlands with a biohazard spin before taking a Cronenbergian turn down David Lynch Lane. This book will leave you bedridden and babbling for your next Seidlinger fix.”
    –Brian McAuley

  • Become a Lit Hub Supporting Member: Because Books Matter

    For the past decade, Literary Hub has brought you the best of the book world for free—no paywall. But our future relies on you. In return for a donation, you’ll get an ad-free reading experience, exclusive editors’ picks, book giveaways, and our coveted Joan Didion Lit Hub tote bag. Most importantly, you’ll keep independent book coverage alive and thriving on the internet.

    x