The Short List
Four of the top recommended fiction titles this year
When Franklin Starlight is called to visit his
father, he has mixed emotions. Raised by the old man he was entrusted to
soon after his birth, Frank is haunted by the brief and troubling
moments he has shared with his father, Eldon. When he finally travels by
horseback to town, he finds Eldon on the edge of death, decimated from
years of drinking.
The two undertake difficult journey into the
mountainous backcountry, in search of a place for Eldon to die and be
buried in the warrior way. As they travel, Eldon tells his son the story
of his own life--from an impoverished childhood to combat in the Korean
War and his shell-shocked return. Through the fog of pain, Eldon
relates to his son these desolate moments, as well as his life's
fleeting but nonetheless crucial moments of happiness and hope, the
sacrifices made in the name of love. And in telling his story, Eldon
offers his son a world the boy has never seen, a history he has never
known. (Hardcover $24)
From the critically acclaimed author of "Atlas of Unknowns" and
"Aerogrammes," a tour de force set in South India that plumbs the moral
complexities of the ivory trade through the eyes of a poacher, a
documentary filmmaker, and, in a feat of audacious imagination, an
infamous elephant known as the Gravedigger.
Orphaned by poachers as a
calf and sold into a life of labor and exhibition, the Gravedigger
breaks free of his chains and begins terrorizing the countryside,
earning his name from the humans he kills and then tenderly buries.
Manu, the studious younger son of a rice farmer, loses his cousin to the
Gravedigger's violence and is drawn, with his wayward brother Jayan,
into the sordid, alluring world of poaching. Emma is a young American
working on a documentary with her college best friend, who witnesses the
porous boundary between conservation and corruption and finds herself
in her own moral gray area: a risky affair with the veterinarian who is
the film's subject. As the novel hurtles toward its tragic climax, these
three storylines fuse into a wrenching meditation on love and betrayal,
duty and loyalty, and the vexed relationship between man and nature.
With
lyricism and suspense, Tania James animates the rural landscapes where
Western idealism clashes with local reality; where a farmer's livelihood
can be destroyed by a rampaging elephant; where men are driven to
poaching. In James' arrestingly beautiful prose, "The Tusk That Did the
Damage" blends the mythical and the political to tell a wholly original,
utterly contemporary story about the majestic animal, both god and
menace, that has mesmerized us for centuries.
For readers of "The Night Circus" and "Station Eleven," a lyrical and absorbing debut set in a world covered by water
As
a Gracekeeper, Callanish administers shoreside burials, laying the dead
to their final resting place deep in the depths of the ocean. Alone on
her island, she has exiled herself to a life of tending watery graves as
penance for a long-ago mistake that still haunts her. Meanwhile, North
works as a circus performer with the Excalibur, a floating troupe of
acrobats, clowns, dancers, and trainers who sail from one archipelago to
the next, entertaining in exchange for sustenance.
In a world
divided between those inhabiting the mainland ("landlockers") and those
who float on the sea ("damplings"), loneliness has become a way of life
for North and Callanish, until a sudden storm offshore brings change to
both their lives--offering them a new understanding of the world they
live in and the consequences of the past, while restoring hope in an
unexpected future.
Inspired in part by Scottish myths and
fairytales, "The Gracekeepers" tells a modern story of an irreparably
changed world: one that harbors the same isolation and sadness, but also
joys and marvels of our own age.
Spare and unsparing, "God Help the Child"--the first
novel by Toni Morrison to be set in our current moment--weaves a tale
about the way the sufferings of childhood can shape, and misshape, the
life of the adult.
At the center: a young woman who calls herself
Bride, whose stunning blue-black skin is only one element of her beauty,
her boldness and confidence, her success in life, but which caused her
light-skinned mother to deny her even the simplest forms of love. There
is Booker, the man Bride loves, and loses to anger. Rain, the mysterious
white child with whom she crosses paths. And finally, Bride's mother
herself, Sweetness, who takes a lifetime to come to understand that
"what you do to children matters. And they might never forget."
A fierce and provocative novel that adds a new dimension to the matchless oeuvre of Toni Morrison.
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