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Fiction Takes on the Issues

All Summer Newsletter titles are discounted 20% to members through Labor Day.
$16.00
ISBN-13: 9781439198315
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Scribner, 2/2012
Crashing financial markets and the Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme serve as the backdrop to Carol Edgarian’s Three Stages of Amazement (Scribner, $16)—and also as a mirror for one family’s own series of small implosions. “Cerebral Palsy was a term sometimes used” to describe the condition of Lena Rusch and Charlie Pepper’s ailing eleven-month old, and her care has become all-consuming. Meanwhile, Charlie’s tech company is faltering and the potential financial fix comes with moral complications. This glimpse of a wealthy San Francisco family in crisis is convincing and finely wrought. While the novel is not a comedy, a scene involving black lingerie and a cell phone in a tree is possibly one of the funniest set-ups in this season’s crop of fiction. Susan Coll

The Submission (Paperback)

$15.00
ISBN-13: 9781250007575
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Picador, 3/2012
For its sharp, vivid portrait of contemporary America, The Submission (Picador, $15) would have been my pick for the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for fiction. Amy Waldman opens with an elite jury voting on New York’s 9/11 memorial—and then imagines the fallout if the winning designer were a Muslim. The news spirals outward and exposes fault lines, engulfing politicians, bloggers, reporters, lawyers, Muslim activists, and the victims’ families. We meet a firefighter’s relatives, a community of illegal Bangladeshi workers, and the enigmatic artist himself: Mohammad “Mo” Khan, an architectural prodigy and the son of secular Indian immigrants from Virginia. Waldman’s prose crackles. She is ruthless on the methods of the media, poignant on the responsibility of art, and her flawed, humane characters ignite every page. Elizabeth Sher

This Beautiful Life (Paperback)

$13.99
ISBN-13: 9780062024398
Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Harper Perennial, 2/2012
It’s every parent’s nightmare: one impulsive move by an otherwise good kid—in this case the forwarding of a sexually explicit video—throws a family into crisis and exposes every fault line in a marriage. In This Beautiful Life (Harper Perennial, $13.99), Helen Schulman takes a ripped-from-the-headlines plot and renders it into a finely crafted and nuanced narrative of a family disassembling under pressure. Although the author depicts a world of privilege in which children have slumber parties at the Plaza Hotel and where diversity at the elite Manhattan private school they attend consists of “millionaires…and…billionaires,” the stressful details and the high stakes of parenting will ring true to anyone who has ever spent a sleepless night worrying about her teen. Susan Coll