After a cutthroat championship showdown, the Tournament of Books ends with a face-off between Toni Morrison's A Mercy and Tom Piazza's City of Refuge. See who wins this year's literary brackets!
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Jane Austen: Northanger Abbey
This novel is playfully deconstructed, as Jane's voice interjects the story to discuss "our heroine" Catherine Morland's adventures and lively imagination directly with us readers. I particularly fancied Jane's extended defense of the novel as an art form, where she calls out fiction writers themselves for diminishing their own genre as unserious with the sort of 'is the novel dead?' rhetoric that has, absurdly, not yet died out. More.
Virginia Woolf: Three Guineas (Annotated)
Woolf extends her ideas on gender and economics to include the prevention of war. Written during the Spanish Civil War, and as Hitler and Mussolini moved to extend their dominion, Woolf receives a letter from a pacifist organization asking for her membership, her financial donation, and her opinion on how our society can prevent the brutal violence that the enclosed photos of murdered Spanish children and burnt homes indicate. Woolf's response, in the form of a series of letters, is this book. More.
Jaime & Gilbert Hernandez: Love & Rockets Vol. 6: Duck Feet
This, then, was my introduction to the idiosyncratic and fantastically imagined worlds of Jaime and Gilbert Hernandez. While the stories and art of each Hernandez brother is unique, they shine extra bright by being juxtaposed, one to the other. Altogether: these rambling, lingering tales are bewitching. More.
Vladimir Nabokov: Laughter in the Dark
I often shook my head in bemused awe at the kind of stuff this writer could get away with. I mean, a villain named Axel Rex? A sentence like: "An electric milk van on fat tires rolling creamily?" Incredible. But the point is, Nabokov gets away with it. More.
Colum McCann: Let the Great World Spin: A Novel
At least eleven characters are oriented around this day, as Philippe Petit's out-of-the-ordinary act sends palpitations through their lives. More.
Alexander Maksik: You Deserve Nothing: A Novel
In a world of senseless cruelty, pettiness distorts where society places its moral outrage. For individuals, there is distance between desire and action, and conviction is rarely enough to carry us across. This is a novel about fear. More.
Best European Fiction 2012
The hybridic nature of this anthology gives it a rare dynamism. But the fiction feels more mixed than in previous editions, with more middling stories and few that I was head over heels for. More.
Krys Lee: Drifting House
With Lee’s uncommon vantage on life in both Koreas and in the West, Drifting House offers a rare look at how damaging politics takes a personal turn, undermining even what we are able to call home. More.
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