No new reviews lately. Life intruded, including a trip to the South, which featured a stop in Savannah, Georgia, at the house where the majority of this 1994 “non-fiction novel” is set. The story centers around the shooting of a male prostitute by a high-society …
Read MoreMicro-Review #91: Your Fathers, Where Are They? And the Prophets, Do They Live Forever?
This story about a kidnapper struggling to make sense of his world met with a frosty critical reception upon its publication (“a predictable and tiresome piece of fiction,” according to the New York Times). The book lacks the raw emotional honesty of Eggers’ earlier work, …
Read MoreMicro-Review #90: You Shall Know Our Velocity
Eggers’ first novel, published in 2002, is an ambitious literary road trip (with a few airplanes mixed in). Two young Chicagoans, Will and Hand, hatch a plan to travel around the world within seven days, giving away Will’s mini-fortune of $32,000 along the way. Why …
Read MoreMicro-Review #89: Tooth and Nail
There’s nothing stunningly unique or groundbreaking about this novel, but it’s a great read anyway. The story is ho hum: A virus has spawned hordes of zombies, and a platoon of soldiers has to fight its way through New York to a research facility. This …
Read MoreMicro-Review #88: The Anomaly
This literary thriller from France has the largest possible thematic aspirations. It asks the question, “What would you do if reality itself were destroyed?” Said destruction occurs during a Paris-to-New York flight, when a glitch in the space-time fabric shunts 240 passengers into a whole …
Read MoreMicro-Review #87: 11/22/63
This novel received glowing reviews (including from the more literary outlets) and is lauded by King fans as one of his best—but it’s hard to see the appeal. Jake Epping is a high-school teacher in Maine. He discovers a portal to 1958, and after one …
Read MoreMicro-Review #86: War
Part reportage and part meditation, this book gives us a clear-eyed look at life in the trenches. The author shadows a platoon of foot soldiers over 15 months in the Korengal Valley, Afghanistan. The resulting nuggets of observer wisdom are razor sharp (“The closer you …
Read MoreMicro-Review #85: Sophie’s Choice
Sticking with our recent focus on somber, war-related writing (thanks for ruining upbeat fiction for me, Putin), we present the 1979 novel about three people in a boarding house in post-war Brooklyn. Two of those people are scarred by the war, and the third is …
Read MoreMicro-Review #84: Night
Probably the best-known Holocaust memoir, this 1960 account of the author’s time in two concentration camps is raw and terrifying. In 1944, Wiesel and his father are deported from their village in Transylvania to Auschwitz. What follows is the destruction of all human values and …
Read MoreMicro-Review #83: This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen
Thanks to Vladimir Putin, it’s hard to read and enjoy normal novels these days—and hard not to be political. Here’s a book that shows us what happens when totalitarianism takes root in Europe. These little-known stories are based on the Polish author’s experiences in Auschwitz …
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