Sunday Books: coverage for October 10, 2010
- 1
The biography of bluegrass musicians whose lives are interrupted by war.
- 2
In Tom Franklin’s Southern gothic tale “Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter,” two men find their long friendship complicated by secrets and misunderstandings.
- 3
Brooklyn-based writer and musician Sara Marcus deserves a medal just for daring to write a book about Riot Grrrl, the fiercely uncompromising feminist movement of the 1990s.
- 4
This first part of a 20th century trilogy weaves five families from five countries across almost 1,000 pages. But it’s not enough.
- 5
Four groups of characters are weaved together to form a larger picture on memory and loss.
- 6
Ron Chernow offers an epic, cradle-to-grave biography of America’s first president. Never before has the Founding Father been rendered so tangibly in such a smart, tenaciously researched volume.
- 7
Trash A Novel Andy Mulligan David Fickling/Random House: 240 pp., $19.99 Popular young adult fiction is dominated by fantasy and tales that trade in the tropes of high school hierarchy and unrequited love.
- 8
The satirist gets a little less personal, penning a collection of moral-optional, fable-like tales of animals (many sporting distinctly human traits).