Literary Hub

The Best Reviewed Books of the Week

Fiction

1. Golden Hill by Francis Spufford

(5 Rave, 3 Positive)

“…an ebullient, freewheeling historical fiction … Its action is so vivid that you seem to be consuming breaking news. Delirious storytelling backfilled with this much intelligence is a rare and happy sight.”

Dwight Garner (The New York Times)

*

2. The Accomplished Guest by Ann Beattie

(2 Rave, 5 Positive)

“When I read Beattie’s stories, I think of Chekhov’s; when I read Chekhov’s stories, I think of Beattie’s. Both are writers for the ages … She is one of our few contemporary masters of storytelling.”

Howard Norman (The Washington Post)

*

3. The Marsh King’s Daughter by Karen Dionne

(3 Rave, 1 Positive, 1 Mixed)

“Karen Dionne takes a standard story involving the kidnapping of a woman and the life she experiences with her captor and elevates it to a new level … The way the story unfolds both captivates and disturbs.”

Jeff Ayers (The Minneapolis Star)

*

4. A House Among the Trees by Julia Glass

(3 Rave, 1 Positive, 1 Pan)

“…a lovely meditation on the mysteries of creativity and its costs, not just to creators, but to those who surround them … It’s a pleasure to be in the hands of a consummate storyteller.”

Wendy Smith (The Boston Globe)

*

5. The Child by Fiona Barton

(2 Rave, 2 Positive, 1 Pan)

“And as soon as you think you’ve figured out who did what, it changes. Then changes again. In addition to being a page-turning whodunit, The Child is also a subtle exploration of the relationships between mothers and their children, their bonds and battles.”

Mary Cadden (USA Today)

**

Non Fiction

1. Toscanini: Musician of Conscience by Harvey Sachs

(3 Rave, 2 Positive)

“Mr Sachs’s writing style is precise, fluent and gripping. And one can dip in and out of the book, since Mr Sachs helpfully offers reminders of important characters and explains basic concepts. As a study of the life and times of one of the greatest conductors of all time, this book will not soon be bettered.”

-(The Economist)

*

2. Too Fat, Too Slutty, Too Loud by Anne Helen Petersen

(2 Rave, 5 Positive, 1 Pan)

“…[a] raucous and smart new book … Because these criticisms are, writ large, the same ones flung daily at nonceleb women, the book is a timely and essential read.”

Keziah Weir (Elle)

*

3. Deep Thinking by Garry Kasparov

(2 Rave, 2 Positive)

“Even for readers with only a passing interest in chess, it’s an absorbing, page-turning thriller that weaves a personal account of intellectual combat with the wider picture of what it’s like to come up against a powerful corporation that is determined to do whatever it takes to crush opposition.”

John Naughton (The Guardian)

*

4. No is Not Enough by Naomi Klein

(4 Positive)

“I hope that Klein’s book is read by more than just her (mostly) leftwing fan base. For whatever you think about her economic arguments, she makes a powerful and an important point: that you cannot understand Trump without looking at how he reflects bigger cultural and social dynamics.”

Gillian Tett (The Financial Times)

Read an interview with Naomi Klein here

*

5. American Kingpin by Nick Bilton

(3 Positive, 1 Mixed)

“…the most comprehensive narrative thus far. The cast of characters has been established over the years since Ulbricht’s arrest, but Bilton’s impressive reporting gives more space to a story that could use some sprawl.”

Nitasha Tiku (The New York Times)

***

Originally published in Literary Hub.

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