What I've Been Reading This Summer

Dear Friends Who Read and Readers Who Are Friends,

I’ve been asked a lot this summer what I’m reading, especially from readers who are either devastated that Lin-Manuel Miranda has left “Hamilton” or devastated that he has left “Hamilton” and chosen not to run for political office – any office.

I feel their pain. I really do.

In any case, these are some of the books that I have absolutely loved so far this year. In no particular order:

* Before the Fall by Noah Hawley. A private plane crashes and two people survive, only to confront the inevitable media madness. Hawley is the brilliant mind behind the “Fargo” TV series on FX, and he is one heck of a novelist, too.

* Eligible by Curtis Sittenfield. A modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in Cincinnati. Jane Austen would be pleased with the sly humor and deep characterizations that mark every page.

* Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi. A magisterial three-century epic about Ghana and America. This is a debut novel with sentences so luminous and perfect I would read them aloud.

* Fool Me Once by Harlan Coben. Another smart, gripping page-turner. This one has already been snapped up by Julia Roberts for the movie.

* The Nest by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney. Four siblings await their share of the family fortune. Their behavior ranges from horrible to hilarious, but it always rings true.

* City of Mirrors by Justin Cronin. The third and final volume of Cronin’s masterful, often terrifying vampire trilogy.

* The Hopefuls by Jennifer Close. An often laugh-out-loud novel of ambition and marriage and politics – and whether one young couple’s marriage can survive both the nation’s capital and Texas.

* The Girls by Emma Cline. It’s 1969 and Evie, a California teen, is attracted to a cult reminiscent of Charlie Manson’s. It’s a gripping coming-of-age novel.

* Blackout: Remembering the Things I Drank to Forget by Sarah Hepola. This is a memoir about drinking and recovering from drinking, and page 214 is so exquisitely beautiful that it will break your heart.

And here are three novels arriving this autumn and winter that I am looking forward to immensely:

* The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead. A pair of slaves head north from Georgia on the Underground Railroad in antebellum America. Moving and thoughtful and magnificent.

* Little Deaths by Emma Flint. It’s 1965 in Queens, New York. Did Ruth Malone really murder her two adorable children? A lush, moody, film noir of a novel.

* Small Great Things by Jodi Picoult. White supremacists, a heroic nurse, and a courtroom drama: a gripping exploration of race and class and justice in contemporary America.

Of course, you can always see exactly what I am reading right here on Goodreads. (I’m sometimes asked why I give every book I list on Goodreads a five-star rating. The answer is simple. I know a lot of writers, so I only list the books that I enjoyed on Goodreads.)

You may have seen on the social networks that I have been riding my beloved bike a lot this summer. I also have been writing. They’re connected: I do a lot of my best work on two wheels. So, you’ll see a brand new novel soon. Stay tuned for details.

Happy reading. Fingers crossed my work never disappoints you.

All the best,

Chris B.
www.ChrisBohjalian.com
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Published on July 29, 2016 05:52
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message 1: by Gerry (new)

Gerry Durisin The Girls: gripping? really? You are far too generous. Your books never disappoint, but I'm afraid your reviews are less reliable indicators of good writing than I'd expect.


message 2: by Chris (last edited Jul 29, 2016 07:20AM) (new)

Chris I am a generous guy, LOL, especially when out comes to first novels. But I understand what you're saying, Gerry.


message 3: by Rachel (new)

Rachel I have to agree with Gerry about The Girls. I was seriously underwhelmed with it. However, several that you mentioned I put on my wish list because, frankly, you're Chris Bohjalian. ;) But also because they sound interesting.


message 4: by Chris (last edited Jul 29, 2016 07:20AM) (new)

Chris I hear ya, Rachel. Again, I am very kind to first novelists. I was one once. (Granted, that was in the Mesozoic Era.)


message 5: by Rachel (new)

Rachel Chris wrote: "I hear ya, Rachel. Again, I am very kind to first novelists. I was one once. (Granted, that was in the Mesozoic Era.)"

I appreciate that you're kind. I think Emma's writing has promise, and it's definitely exponentially better than anything I could come up with, so I will read her next as well, to see how her writing grows.


message 6: by Beth (new)

Beth Thanks for clarifying your ***** ratings. I have a question for you: how long do you give a book before you decide you just don't want to bother finishing it?


message 7: by Chris (new)

Chris I follow the Rule of Amor Towles.

I give a book this many pages: 100 minus my age.


message 8: by Mallory (new)

Mallory Do you have any nonfiction you have read this year or are currently reading this summer you would recommend (besides the memoir you mentioned)?


message 9: by Gerri (new)

Gerri Wayland Oh! I like that Rule. 30 years post undergraduate English major I still feel as if I HAVE to finish....I'm going to adopt your rule!


message 10: by Eileen (last edited Aug 03, 2016 05:43AM) (new)

Eileen Granfors I loved THE HOPEFULS! As you said, it made me laugh and cry. I like dark books too, so Megan Abbott's YOU WILL KNOW ME had me cringing at the right places. My biggest disappointment was THE SUNSHINE PILGRIMS. I am in love with Fagan's THE PANOPTICON, but 100 pages of the new book left me watching the clock. Sophomore books need compassion, but this one needed a plot editor. Eileen

ps. Memoir, ALLIGATOR CANDY, I highly recommend.


message 11: by Laurie (new)

Laurie Bring on the new book, Chris!!


message 12: by Sherry (new)

Sherry I thought The Girls was brilliant. It vividly brought back the summer of 1969 to me, and found the story quite compelling. I could have finished in in two readings, but was enjoying so much I had to slow down. I got through part two of Cronin's trilogy and loved the second one more than the first. I own City of Mirrors but haven't gotten to it yet. Reading the second part of Jane Smiley's 100 years trilogy (Early Warning) and am glad to be back as an observer to the Langdon family! Will be skipping The Nest but do want to read Before the Fall...its on my Kindle which means I'll probably forget about it! And I finally read Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands on my way to Burlington and found myself looking for the homeless kids all over Church St.


message 13: by Eileen (new)

Eileen Granfors Chris wrote: "I follow the Rule of Amor Towles.

I give a book this many pages: 100 minus my age."


Love this!

Sherry wrote: "I thought The Girls was brilliant. It vividly brought back the summer of 1969 to me, and found the story quite compelling. I could have finished in in two readings, but was enjoying so much I had t..."


message 14: by Beth (new)

Beth I've given up on the last two books I've started, following your Law of Amor Towles. Is this bad luck? Or is it that the book before was To Kill a Mockingbird? My son is reading it for HS sophomore English so after a 40 year hiatus (aargh, Paleolithic,) I picked it up. How do I go from A Genteman in Moscow to Mockingbird, with their lyric beauty..,, to anything? Any suggestions for a next book? This year I am thankful for all of your great books!


message 15: by Sherry (new)

Sherry Try Colson Whitehead's The Underground Railroad. Riveting. Beautifully constructed. IMHO.


message 16: by Eileen (new)

Eileen Granfors Paulette Jiles, News of the World. It's my #1 book for 2016, and all of those I have recommended it to also fell in love with the Captain and Johanna.


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