Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Nevermore: Horse, Tracy Flick Can't Win, Trashlands, Saints of Swallow Hill, Promise Girls

 


Reported by Garry

Horse by Geraldine Brooks is the latest from the best-selling author of Caleb’s Crossing, Year of Wonders, and many others. Spanning the years between 1850 and 2019, Horse follows three interconnected timelines; this is the story of Lexington, the fastest horse ever born, and his devoted jockey, Jarrett. A discarded painting, a skeleton in an attic, the duo of Lexington and Jarrett, and the enduring echoes of the Civil War all come together in this book that our reader had a hard time putting down.  WJ



Tracy Flick Can’t Win by Tom Perrotta is the follow-up to his 1998 blockbuster novel Election. Set a couple decades later, Tracy is now the assistant principal at the high school she once attended in suburban New Jersey. Her principal announces unexpectedly that he is resigning, and Tracy guns for the position. But…Vito Falcone – the former star quarterback of the school – comes back to town and he also is aiming for the principal job. Will Tracy prevail? You will have to read this wonderful, heartwarming, and darkly funny book to find out.  NH



Trashlands by Alison Stine is a dystopian look at what may be our future, if the world does not manage to conserve our natural resources. Coral is a young woman in what used to be southeastern Ohio, part of the region called “Scrappalachia”. In this near future novel, plastic can no longer be made after climate change has had drastic consequences. As such a rarity, plastic is prized and recycled, and “pluckers” work long hours to find every scrap to trade for their essential needs. A colorful cast of characters surrounds Coral, as they do their best to survive. Our reader is looking forward to more from this young author.  KP



The Saints of Swallow Hill is a historical novel by Donna Everhart with the unusual setting of turpentine camps during the Great Depression. This harrowing and beautiful story starts in the hills of North Carolina where Rae Lynn Cobb and her husband Warren run a turpentine farm. Calamity befalls Warren, and in order to keep herself out of jail, Rae disguises herself as a man and flees to a squalid, brutal turpentine farm in Georgia, where she must make peace with her past in order to move forward. Our reader recommends this book and was particularly impressed by the amount of historical research Everhart put into bringing an obscure part of American history to life.  ML



The Promise Girls by Marie Bostwick is the story of three unconventional sisters and their narcissistic mother who raised them to be geniuses in various fields – whether they liked it or not. Decades after their mother published a tell-all that made the children household names, she wants to reunite the family for a documentary film. Meg, the artist who hasn’t picked up a paintbrush in years absolutely refuses to participate until she is in a car crash that leaves her with crippling bills. The filmmaker, Hal Seeger, himself a former child prodigy, uncovers long buried secrets and helps the sisters learn how to forge their own lives.  BM

Also mentioned:

Fears of a Setting Sun: The Disillusionment of America’s Founders by Dennis C. Rasmussen
Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr
Death at Greenway by Lori Rader-Day
Swimming with Jonah by Audrey Schulman
Monsignor Quixote by Graham Greene
Memoir of an Independent Woman: An Unconventional Life Well Lived by Tania Grossinger
Emergency!: True Stories from the Nation’s ERs by Mark Brown, M.D.
The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis
The Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin
The Lost World of James Smithson: Science, Revolution, and the Birth of the Smithsonian by Heather Ewing

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