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Indiebestsellers Indie Bestsellers 2019 Paperback FICTION NONFICTION 1. The Tattooist of Auschwitz 1. Born a Crime Heather Morris, Harper, $16.99 Trevor Noah, Spiegel & Grau, $18 2. A Gentleman in Moscow 2. Sapiens Amor Towles, Penguin, $17 Yuval Noah Harari, Harper Perennial, $22.99 3. The Overstory 3. The Mueller Report Richard Powers, Norton, $18.95 The Washington Post, Scribner, $15 4. Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely 4. Calypso David Sedaris, Back Bay, $17.99 Fine Gail Honeyman, Penguin, $16 5. You Are a Badass Jen Sincero, Running Press, $16 5. Little Fires Everywhere Celeste Ng, Penguin, $17 6. White Fragility Robin DiAngelo, Beacon Press, $16 6. The Woman in the Window A.J. Finn, Morrow, $16.99 7. Killers of the Flower Moon David Grann, Vintage, $16.95 7. There There Tommy Orange, Vintage, $16 8. How to Change Your Mind Michael Pollan, Penguin, $18 8. Less Andrew Sean Greer, Back Bay, $15.99 9. HBR’s 10 Must Reads on Mental Toughness 9. The Immortalists Harvard Business Review Press, $24.95 Chloe Benjamin, Putnam, $16 10. HBR’s 10 Must Reads on Managing 10. Before We Were Yours Yourself Lisa Wingate, Ballantine, $17 Harvard Business School Press, $24.95 11. The Handmaid’s Tale 11. Braiding Sweetgrass Margaret Atwood, Anchor, $15.95 Robin Wall Kimmerer, Milkweed Editions, $18 12. The Lost Girls of Paris 12. I’ll Be Gone in the Dark Pam Jenoff, Park Row, $16.99 Michelle McNamara, Harper Perennial, $17.99 13. The Power 13. Shoe Dog Naomi Alderman, Back Bay, $16.99 Phil Knight, Scribner, $20 14. Ghosted 14. My Own Words Rosie Walsh, Penguin, $16 Ruth Bader Ginsburg, S&S, $18 15. All the Light We Cannot See 15. Just Mercy Anthony Doerr, Scribner, $17 Bryan Stevenson, Spiegel & Grau, $16 Based on sales at independent bookstores from January 1, 2019, to December 1, 2019. Copyright American Booksellers Association. All rights reserved..
Recommended publications
  • Form As Theme in Richard Powers' the Overstory
    “The tree is saying things in words be- fore words”: form as theme in Richard Powers’ The Overstory di Pia Masiero* Abstract: Richard Powers’ 2019 Pulitzer Prize-winning book, The Overstory, is a very ambi- tious work which purports to raise the awareness on the life of trees proposing an eco- centered way of being revolving around the enlargement of the concepts of agency and crea- tivity. This article focuses on the formal ways in which Powers has strived to give voice to the-other-than human. Specifically, it presents the structuring of the plot according to the ex- tended metaphor of the tree and its rhetorical functioning according to the parabolic form. These macro principles are translated into two micro choices – the positing of a nonhuman narrator and the present as the dominant tense – that sustain and mirror the novel’s thematic concerns. The close readings of the existential trajectories of two female characters open up to a reflection on Powers’ gender politics. Richard Powers’ 2019 Pulitzer Prize-winning book, The Overstory, contains the ingredients that according to the foundational book by Lawrence Buell, The Envi- ronmental Imagination, “comprise an environmentally oriented work” (7), namely, 1. The nonhuman environment is present not merely as a framing device but as a presence that begins to suggest that human history is implicated in natural history. 2. The human inter- est is not understood to be the only legitimate interest. 3. Human accountability to the envi- ronment is part of the texts’ ethical orientation.. 4. Some sense of the environment as a pro- cess rather than a constant or a given is at least implicit in the text.
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  • 100 Best Last Lines from Novels
    100 Best Last Lines from Novels 1. …you must go on, I can’t go on, I’ll go on. –Samuel Beckett, The Unnamable 22. YOU HAVE FALLEN INTO ARt—RETURN TO LIFE –William H. Gass, (1953; trans. Samuel Beckett) Willie Masters’ Lonesome Wife (1968) 2. Who knows but that, on the lower frequencies, I speak for you? –Ralph Ellison, 23. In your rocking-chair, by your window dreaming, shall you long, alone. In your Invisible Man (1952) rocking-chair, by your window, shall you dream such happiness as you may never feel. –Theodore Dreiser, Sister Carrie (1900) 3. So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past. –F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby (1925) 24. Go, my book, and help destroy the world as it is. –Russell Banks, Continental Drift (1985) 4. …I was a Flower of the mountain yes when I put the rose in my hair like the Andalusian girls used or shall I wear a red yes and how he kissed me under the 25. It was the devious-cruising Rachel, that in her retracing search after her missing Moorish wall and I thought well as well him as another and then I asked him with children, only found another orphan. –Herman Melville, Moby-Dick (1851) my eyes to ask again yes and then he asked me would I yes to say yes my mountain flower and first I put my arms around him yes and drew him down to me so he could 26. The knife came down, missing him by inches, and he took off.
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  • What Happens When the Bird and the Fish Fall in Love?
    Faculty of Arts and Philosophy 2006-2007 WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE BIRD AND THE FISH FALL IN LOVE? A thematic exploration of identity and racial issues in Richard Powers’ The Time of Our Singing Supervisor: Dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the Prof. Dr. Kristiaan Versluys requirements for the degree of ‘Licentiaat in de Taal - en Letterkunde: Germaanse Talen’ by Tessa De Smet ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This dissertation could not have been written without the help and support of a few people. I am particularly grateful to my supervisor, Professor Dr. Kristiaan Versluys, for his encouraging words, helpful comments and constructive feedback. Thanks also go to Romanie for introducing me to the work of Richard Powers, to Froya, Jordi and my parents for their support and unconditional trust (thanks Dad for proofreading!) and to all my friends in Bruges, Ghent and elsewhere for making spare time as carefree and enjoyable as possible! Thank you all! Tessa Ghent, May 2007 CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 1 PART 1 : Theoretical Framework 4 CHAPTER 1: Race 5 What’s in a Name: The Many Meanings of Race 5 A Historical Framework: Past and Present Race Theories 8 A Future Beyond Race? America’s Hopeful Dream 12 CHAPTER 2: Identity (& Race) 16 2.1 Who is it that can tell me who I am? Identity m/Matters 16 2.2 The Persistent Effects of Colour Labelling: Racial Identity 22 2.3 Neither Black nor White yet Both: Crossing Racial Boundaries 28 PART 2 : Literary Analysis 35 CHAPTER 3: Characterisation: A Composition in Black & White 36 3.1 Interracial Literature: A Literary Tradition 37 3.2 The Portrait of a Family: Fish or Bird? 41 3.3 Racial Identity: The Theoretical Models applied 49 CHAPTER 4: Grand Novels have Grand Ideas: Race, Culture & History 55 4.1 Culture: Who Gets to Sing What? 55 4.2 History: Uncanting the can’t 60 4.3 Race: Older Than History and Build to Outlast It 67 CONCLUSION 74 REFRENCES 76 INTRODUCTION Richard Powers, sometimes characterised as ‘the greatest author you’ve never heard of’ (in Flanders §1), was born in Illinois, in June 1957.
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  • OLLI Spring 2020 the Novels of Richard Powers: an Overview
    Regier – Syllabus for The Novels of Richard Powers: An Overview - 1 OLLI Spring 2020 The Novels of Richard Powers: An Overview Instructor: Willis Goth Regier E-mail address: [email protected] Course Description: Authors like to hear that their latest book is their best. When saying that about a Richard Powers novel we should always add “so far.” Every new novel makes some advance upon the others, and who is to say that one step is more important than another? Yet some novels seem to be strides rather than steps, and his latest, The Overstory (2018) is such a stride. This course will survey each of Powers’ twelve novels in chronological order, from Three Farmers on Their Way to a Dance (1985) to The Overstory. I will feature favorite passages in each novel, reflect their glories, and indicate what is distinctive about each. Powers’ readers will be reminded of novels they wish to reread. The course will also consider Powers’ novels as twelve parts of a whole which, properly put together, gives us a large look at Richard Powers. I will propose theses about the novels: They refuse to succumb to the predictabilities of a genre. They change themes, structures, and tones, though some themes recur and reassert their importance. The twelve take up complex issues and pose problems of individual responsibility. They have in common Powers’ resolution to make each unique and his determination in every case to “get it right.” Recommended: Richard Powers, The Overstory (New York: W. W. Norton, 2018). Regier – Syllabus for The Novels of Richard Powers:
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  • Addition to Summer Letter
    May 2020 Dear Student, You are enrolled in Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition for the coming school year. Bowling Green High School has offered this course since 1983. I thought that I would tell you a little bit about the course and what will be expected of you. Please share this letter with your parents or guardians. A.P. Literature and Composition is a year-long class that is taught on a college freshman level. This means that we will read college level texts—often from college anthologies—and we will deal with other materials generally taught in college. You should be advised that some of these texts are sophisticated and contain mature themes and/or advanced levels of difficulty. In this class we will concentrate on refining reading, writing, and critical analysis skills, as well as personal reactions to literature. A.P. Literature is not a survey course or a history of literature course so instead of studying English and world literature chronologically, we will be studying a mix of classic and contemporary pieces of fiction from all eras and from diverse cultures. This gives us an opportunity to develop more than a superficial understanding of literary works and their ideas. Writing is at the heart of this A.P. course, so you will write often in journals, in both personal and researched essays, and in creative responses. You will need to revise your writing. I have found that even good students—like you—need to refine, mature, and improve their writing skills. You will have to work diligently at revising major essays.
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  • January 2014
    THE DEAD IN THEIR VAULTED ARCHES: TOP ! A Flavia de Luce Novel PICK by Alan Bradley (Delacorte Press) “Flavia de Luce is still on the loose! This time, the almost-twelve-year-old prodigy explores some tantalizing mysteries involving her own family. Flavia uncovers surprising secrets about the characters we know and love and meets some fascinating new people, including a precocious distant cousin. You’ll enjoy seeing new depths in Flavia—this novel takes the series in an exciting direction.” —Nancy Russell, Columbus Metropolitan Library, Columbus, OH The top ten books published this month that librarians across the country love. JANUARY 2014 A STAR FOR LOST LAKE: A Novel THE DAYS OF MRS. BLAKE: A Novel by Sarah Addison Allen ANNA MADRIGAL: by April Smith (St. Martin’s Press) A Novel (Knopf) “I was thrilled to find out that by Armistead Maupin “A little-known slice of American Sarah Addison Allen had a new (Harper) history receives meticulous, book out, and it did not disap- “So good to see all these elegant treatment in this point. Allen’s trademark magic beloved characters again! And compelling novel about a is woven throughout the story we finally get the true story of group of mothers who travel and can be found in the lake, Anna Madrigal. If you’re either to post-WWI Europe to visit the town, and the people, but a fan of the Tales of the City the graves of their fallen at its heart, this story is about series, Burning Man or both, soldier-sons. Cora Blake, finding home—something we this is a fun Sunday-afternoon grieving the loss of her only child, pulls the group can all relate to.” kind of book.” together to provide support on their difficult pilgrimage.
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  • NARRATIVE Directions in Econarratology
    ENVIRONMENT New NARRATIVE Directions in Econarratology edited by ERIN JAMES AND ERIC MOREL ENVIRONMENT AND NARRATIVE THEORY AND INTERPRETATION OF NARRATIVE James Phelan and Katra Byram, Series Editors ENVIRONMENT AND NARRATIVE NEW DIRECTIONS IN ECONARRATOLOGY EDITED BY Erin James AND Eric Morel THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS COLUMBUS Copyright © 2020 by The Ohio State University. This edition licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: James, Erin, editor. | Morel, Eric, editor. Title: Environment and narrative : new directions in econarratology / edited by Erin James and Eric Morel. Other titles: Theory and interpretation of narrative series. Description: Columbus : The Ohio State University Press, [2020] | Series: Theory and interpretation of narrative | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Summary: “Collection of essays connecting ecocriticism and narrative theory to encourage constructive discourse on narrative’s influence of real-world environmental perspectives and the challenges that necessitate revision to current narrative models”—Provided by publisher. Identifiers: LCCN 2019034865 | ISBN 9780814214206 (cloth) | ISBN 0814214207 (cloth) | ISBN 9780814277546 (ebook) | ISBN 0814277543 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: Ecocriticism. | Environmental literature. | Narration (Rhetoric) Classification: LCC PN98.E36 E55 2020 | DDC 809/.93355—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019034865 Cover design by Andrew Brozyna Text design by Juliet Williams Type set in Adobe Minion Pro for Ben and Freddie, my favorites From Erin for Grandmaman, an avid reader and early recommender of books From Eric CONTENTS Acknowledgments ix INTRODUCTION Notes Toward New Econarratologies ERIN JAMES AND ERIC MOREL 1 I. NARRATOLOGY AND THE NONHUMAN CHAPTER 1 Unnatural Narratology and Weird Realism in Jeff VanderMeer’s Annihilation JON HEGGLUND 27 CHAPTER 2 Object-Oriented Plotting and Nonhuman Realities in DeLillo’s Underworld and Iñárritu’s Babel MARCO CARACCIOLO 45 II.
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  • Pynchon's Bequest
    Pynchon’s Bequest Robert L. McLaughlin Stephen J. Burn and Peter Dempsey, eds. Intersections: Essays on Richard Powers. Champaign: Dalkey Archive P, 2008. Paper, xxxix + 336. $29.95. Although Thomas Pynchon has famously avoided the spotlight, he and his work—especially Gravity’s Rainbow—nevertheless cast a large shadow over contemporary American fiction. In a Bloomian anxiety of influence, a subsequent generation of fiction writers—I’m thinking of writers like the late David Foster Wallace, William T. Vollmann, Rick Moody, Bradford Morrow, Mary Caponegro, Michael Chabon, A. M. Homes, Colson Whitehead, and the subject of the collection of essays under review, Richard Powers—has been inspired to write by Pynchon’s great novels but has also sought to find a way out from under their shadow. This anxiety is made more acute by the concomitant sense that the postmodernism exemplified by Pynchon and his fellow experimental writers of the sixties and seventies (Barth, Coover, Sorrentino, Gaddis, Barthelme, Reed, and so on) has reached something of a dead end. That is, postmodernism’s consciousness of language, its iconoclasm, and its questioning of all master narratives, which in the 1960s played an important role in exposing and debunking many long-held social conceits and hypocrisies, by the late 1980s and 1990s had devolved into an all-purpose irony, the rolling of the eye and the nudging in the ribs that mocks any assertion that eschews irony’s game and aspires to sincerity. As Wallace explained in a 1993 interview with Larry McCaffery, “Irony’s useful for debunking illusions, but most of the illusion-debunking in the U.S.
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  • **Download High-Res Images of Finalist Book Covers and Headshots: Here for Information Contact: Patrick Kowalczyk, Patrick@Pkpr
    **Download high-res images of finalist book covers and headshots: here For information contact: Patrick Kowalczyk, [email protected] Jenny Chang, [email protected] PKPR, 212.627.8098 RECOGNIZING THE POWER OF LITERATURE TO PROMOTE PEACE AND RECONCILIATION, DAYTON LITERARY PEACE PRIZE ANNOUNCES 2019 FINALISTS IN FICTION & NONFICTION Shortlist includes Tigerland by Wil Haygood, There There by Tommy Orange, Educated by Tara Westover; Winners to be honored at a gala ceremony on November 3rd, 2019 Dayton, OH (August 28, 2019) – Recognizing the power of literature to promote peace and reconciliation, the Dayton Literary Peace Prize Foundation today announced the finalists for the 2019 Dayton Literary Peace Prize in fiction and nonfiction. Inspired by the 1995 Dayton Peace Accords that ended the war in Bosnia, The Dayton Literary Peace Prize is the only international literary peace prize awarded in the United States. The Prize celebrates the power of literature to promote peace, social justice, and global understanding. This year's winners will be honored at a gala ceremony in Dayton on November 3rd. Writer N. Scott Momaday, who for more than half a century has illuminated both the ancient and contemporary lives of Native Americans through fiction, essays, and poetry, will receive the 2019 Ambassador Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award, named in honor of the noted U.S. diplomat who helped negotiate the Dayton Peace Accords. The full list of finalists can be found below and at www.daytonliterarypeaceprize.org. “At a time when the Dayton community and the nation are still reeling from the August 4th mass shooting, this year’s finalists offer moving examples of people who have forged a path to peace and reconciliation through even the most violent and unjust situations,” said Sharon Rab, Chair of the Dayton Literary Peace Prize Foundation.
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  • Post-Racial Realities Passing Narratives in Contemporary U.S. Fiction
    Post-Racial Realities Passing Narratives in Contemporary U.S. Fiction Inaugural Dissertation zur Erlangung des akademischen Grades einer Doktorin der Philosophie am Fachbereich für Philosophie und Geisteswissenschaften der Freien Universität Berlin Graduiertenschule für Nordamerikastudien John-F.-Kennedy-Institut für Nordamerikastudien, Abteilung Literatur Vorgelegt von Mag.a Artium Yulia Kozyrakis Berlin, August 2014 Gutachter: Erstgutachterin: Prof. Dr. Ulla Haselstein Zweitgutachterin: Prof. Dr. Ruth Mayer Datum der Disputation 02. Februar 2015 Ehrenwörtliche Erklärung Ich erkläre hiermit ehrenwörtlich, dass ich die vorliegende Dissertation selbstständig und ohne fremde Hilfe angefertigt habe. Andere als die angegebenen Quellen und Hilfsmittel wurden nicht benutzt. Die den benutzten Quellen wörtlich oder inhaltlich entnommenen Stellen sind als solche kenntlich gemacht worden. Ich habe bisher weder diese, noch eine andere Arbeit als Dissertation vorgelegt. Berlin, August 2014 POST-RACIAL REALITIES PASSING NARRATIVES IN CONTEMPORARY U.S. FICTION Yulia Kozyrakis TABLE OF CONTENTS ILLUSTRATIONS ................................................................................................................ V 1. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................. 1 1.1. REPEATING THE PARENTS’ HISTORY? THE RETURN OF THE RACIAL PASSER ....... 5 1.2. FOCUSING ON THE PASSING FIGURE.................................................................... 15 1.3. THE GENRE OF THE
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  • Comic Relief
    Comic Relief 1.) Bossypants by Tina Fey (2 copies Overdrive, 2 copies Libby) ​ ​ 2.) Where’d you go, Bernadette by Maria Semple (13 copies Overdrive, 13 copies Libby) ​ 3.) Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson (1 copy Overdrive, 1 copy Libby) ​ 4.) Catch 22 by Joseph Heller (3 copies Overdrive, 1 copy Libby) ​ 5.) Naked by David Sedaris ( 3 copies Overdrive, 3 copies Libby) ​ 6.) Yes Please by Amy Poehler (19 copies Overdrive, 19 copies Libby) ​ 7.) Born a Crime by Trevor Noah (29 copies Overdrive, 10 copies Libby) ​ 8.) Dear Girls by Ali Wong ( 5 copies Overdrive, 5 copies Libby) ​ 10.) Is Everyone Hanging Out With Me? By Mindy Kaling (25 copies Overdrive, 25 copies Libby) ​ ​ ​ 11.) Paddle Your Own Canoe by Nick Offerman (1 copy Overdrive, 1 copy Libby) ​ ​ Available only as an eAudiobook: A Confederacy of Dunces by John Peter Toole (2 eAudiobooks Overdrive) ​ ​ Pulitzer Prize Winners 2015-2019 Fiction 2015. All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr. (7 copies Overdrive, 7 copies Libby). ​ ​ 2016. They Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen (22 copies Overdrive, 22 copies Libby) ​ ​ 2017. The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead. (66 copies Overdrive, 66 copies Libby) ​ ​ 2018. Less by Andrew Sean Greer (27 copies Overdrive, 27 copies Libby) ​ ​ 2019. The Overstory by Richard Powers (27 copies Overdrive, 27 Libby) ​ ​ Nonfiction 2015. The Sixth Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert. (1 copy Overdrive, 1 copy Libby) ​ ​ 2016. The Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS by Joby Warrick (5 copies Overdrive, 5 copies Libby) ​ ​ 2017. Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City by Matthew Desmond.
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  • Chronicles of the End of the World: the End Is Not the End Arnaud Schmitt
    Chronicles of the End of the World: The End is not the End Arnaud Schmitt To cite this version: Arnaud Schmitt. Chronicles of the End of the World: The End is not the End. Transatlantica. Revue d’études américaines/American Studies Journal, Association Française d’Études Américaines, 2017. hal-02524953 HAL Id: hal-02524953 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02524953 Submitted on 30 Mar 2020 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Transatlantica Revue d’études américaines. American Studies Journal 2 | 2016 Ordinary Chronicles of the End of the World Introduction. Chronicles of the End of the World: The End is not the End Arnaud Schmitt Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/8349 ISSN: 1765-2766 Publisher AFEA Electronic reference Arnaud Schmitt, « Introduction. Chronicles of the End of the World: The End is not the End », Transatlantica [Online], 2 | 2016, Online since 14 September 2017, connection on 19 April 2019. URL : http://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/8349 This text was automatically generated on 19 April 2019. Transatlantica – Revue d'études américaines est mis à disposition selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale - Pas de Modification 4.0 International.
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