17 new books to read outside in the sunshine.

Literature
Katie Yee

March 23, 2021, 7:50am

Rejoice! Spring has sprung! Tulips are popping up to say hello! I even saw an ice cream truck the other day. Plus, if you layer up and stay strictly in the sun, you might feel a semblance of warmth. Dare I say: it might start to feel like things are maybe going to be ok. Other things to make you feel closer to ok: books. Specifically these brand-new books hitting shelves today.

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Wayne Koestenbaum_The Cheerful Scapegoat

Wayne Koestenbaum, The Cheerful Scapegoat
(Semiotext(e))

“These charmingly insouciant short stories by the noted critic, poet and essayist exhibit the same surreal whimsy that distinguishes his work in other formats.”
–The New York Times Book Review

there's no such thing as an easy job_kikuko tsumura

Kikuko Tsumura, There’s No Such Thing as an Easy Job
(Bloomsbury)

“Tsumura deftly handles work habits and relationships, stereotypes and expectations for success, all of which are set against a repetitious, unending search for what is valuable and valued.”
–Japan Times

Nicola DeRobertis-Theye, The Vietri Project

Nicola DeRobertis-Theye, The Vietri Project
(Harper)

“An accomplished literary debut, notable for its delicate prose and sharply delineated characters … a captivating tale.”
–Kirkus

Gina Nutt, Night Rooms

Gina Nutt, Night Rooms
(Two Dollar Radio)

“[A] startling collection of 18 essays ruminating on life experiences, cultural tropes and horror films, examining questions of gender, fear and grief.”
–Shelf Awareness

Andrew J. Graff, Raft of Stars
(Ecco)

“Nature is not mere backdrop here, but a rushing, thrummingly alive presence.”
–The Boston Globe

Andrea Lee_Red Island House

Andrea Lee, Red Island House
(Scribner)

“Lee approaches the broadly political and the minutely intimate with equally fine prose.”
–The Star Tribune

Call It Horses by Jessie Van Eerden

Jessie van Eerden, Call It Horses
(Dzanc)

“The reader experiences the ride in sensuous detail, from a closer vantage point than many authors can achieve.”
–Los Angeles Review of Books

peter swanson_every vow you break

Peter Swanson, Every Vow You Break
(William Morrow)

“Readers will bask in the creepiness of being stranded on a remote island, considering how far some might go to punish those who break sacred promises.”
–Library Journal

Horizontal Vertigo - A City Called Mexico

Juan Villoro, tr. Alfred MacAdam, Horizontal Vertigo
(Pantheon)

“An unparalleled portrait of a city in danger of growing past all reasonable limits.”
–Kirkus

melanie challenger_how to be animal

Melanie Challenger, How to Be Animal
(Penguin Books)

“What How to Be Animal brings forth so beautifully is that impermanence is not a state confirmed by death.”
–Bookforum

When Women Invented Television The Untold Story of the Female Powerhouses Who Pioneered the Way We Watch Today

Jennifer Keishin Armstrong, When Women Invented Television
(Harper)

“In prose as charming as the women she writes about, she makes her subjects feel knowable.”
–The Boston Globe

Andrew Steele_Ageless

Andrew Steele, Ageless
(Doubleday)

Ageless is a rich and exciting exploration of that surprisingly intriguing topic we’d rather not talk about: old age.”
–The Irish Times

Alberto Angela_Cleopatra

Alberto Angela, tr. Katherine Gregor, Cleopatra
(Harpervia)

“[Alberto Angela] effectively draws on previous scholarship, wading through legend and myth to get at the truth of what actually occurred.”
–Kirkus

places of mind

Timothy Brennan, Places of Mind
(FSG)

“In immensely readable prose, Brennan flexes his expertise as one of the world’s leading authorities on Said.”
–Bookforum

Alexander Nemerov, Fierce Poise

Alexander Nemerov, Fierce Poise
(Penguin Press)

“Pairing vivid anecdotal biography with energetic descriptive analysis, the author recalibrates our perception of Frankenthaler’s undulating and entrancing canvases, on which she channeled in-the-moment feelings and celebrated the ‘beauty and power and glory’ of life.”
–Booklist

Kate Masur_Until Justice Be Done

Kate Masur, Until Justice Be Done
(W. W. Norton)

“If this is a cleareyed book, it’s still a heartening one. Masur takes care to show not only the limitations of what was achieved at each step but also how even the smallest step could lead to another.”
–The New York Times Book Review

Absentees: On Variously Missing Persons by Daniel Heller-Roazen

Daniel Heller-Roazen, Absentees
(Zone Books)

“…it’s a fundamental inquiry into the disposition among bodies, language, and politics.”
–4Columns

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