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New Books in May 2011

Lies That Chelsea Handler Told Me by Chelsea Handler

Humor from Chelsea Handler, travel from Paul Theroux, stories from Julian Barnes, a graphic novel from Chester Brown and linguistic science fiction from China Mieville carry us into the Summer.

More Books in 2011

Contemporary Literature Spotlight10

Radiolab's Virtual Bookshelf

Wednesday May 11, 2011

I'm a big fan of the Radiolab podcast and and avid reader, so the Radiolab Virtual Bookshelf, a list of all the books that have been mentioned in the podcast's one-hour episodes, was a great find. Radiolab is largely a pop-sci show, and this list highlights some great reading - some of which I've delved into, but most of which will be new discovery for me. Check it out.

Photo: (Swamibu/flickr)

Unfamiliar Fishes by Sarah Vowell

Monday May 9, 2011

Sarah Vowell (The Partly Cloudy Patriot, The Wordy Shipmates) is credited with creating her own category of writer: "funny historian." And the fact that another bestselling writer and humorist - David Sedaris - is the one who gives Vowell this credit should be reason enough for readers to give Unfamiliar Fishes, Vowell's new history, a look. But there are many other good reasons, too. Read review.

Photo: Riverhead Books

The Great Night by Chris Adrian

Friday May 6, 2011

Chris Adrian's The Great Night fuses the heavy weight of the mortal coil with the mischiefs of the faerie kingdom when three individuals crossing San Francisco's Buena Vista Park en route to a party find their world intermingled with that of Titania, Oberon and Puck, fairies from Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. Read review.

Farrar, Straus & Giroux

Vanishing Point: Not a Memoir by Ander Monson

Monday May 2, 2011

Beyond its wildly captivating surface elements, the essays in Vanishing Point all return to themes of writerly ownership and its limitations. Vanishing Point attempts to find functionality in memoir without narration, all while searching for the appropriate place to situate that extracted "I."  Monson attempts to pull himself out of his own book, and by doing so places the reader in his stead.

Review of Vanishing Point by Ander Monson

Photo: Graywolf Press

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