The descriptions of the plots are primarily based on the publishers’ summaries, and I’ve included the first sentence of each book as well. I hope at least one of the featured titles catches your attention and sends you off to your local bookstore or library. I’m currently reading, and really enjoying, two of them (Bakhita and Feast Your Eyes), and hope to get to the others fairly soon.
Literary Fiction
 Feast Your Eyes by Myla Goldberg
 (Scribner, April 16). This novel is told through a variety of media: 
catalog notes from a photography show, interviews, journal entries, and 
so forth. It’s the story of photographer Lillian Preston who is arrested
 on an obscenity charge after exhibiting partially nude photographs of 
herself and her daughter. The time period is the mid-1900s, and public 
and legal questions of art vs. pornography affect Lillian’s career and 
future. The book is told through the eyes of Lillian’s daughter, 
Samantha. Reviews: a 4.6 rating on Goodreads; star from Kirkus. Themes: women professionals, art, artists, mothers and daughters. First line: “I was ten when I saw it, Pops sitting across the breakfast table with his Daily News and his cigarette.”
Feast Your Eyes by Myla Goldberg
 (Scribner, April 16). This novel is told through a variety of media: 
catalog notes from a photography show, interviews, journal entries, and 
so forth. It’s the story of photographer Lillian Preston who is arrested
 on an obscenity charge after exhibiting partially nude photographs of 
herself and her daughter. The time period is the mid-1900s, and public 
and legal questions of art vs. pornography affect Lillian’s career and 
future. The book is told through the eyes of Lillian’s daughter, 
Samantha. Reviews: a 4.6 rating on Goodreads; star from Kirkus. Themes: women professionals, art, artists, mothers and daughters. First line: “I was ten when I saw it, Pops sitting across the breakfast table with his Daily News and his cigarette.” The Dream Peddler by Martine Fournier Watson
 (April 9, Penguin). Robert Owens, a traveling salesman, offers potions 
that will allow his customers to control their dreams. When he arrives 
in a small town at the turn of the last century, many folks want to 
dream about love and their future spouse, but some dream of revenge. 
When Robert is caught up in town scandals and gossip, secrets are 
exposed and the bonds of the community begin to crumble. Quirky 
characters and a rural-America setting add charm. Reviews: a 4.1 rating on Goodreads. Themes: marriage, love, grief, finding one’s way in life. First line: “The dream peddler came to town at the white end of winter, before the thaw.”
The Dream Peddler by Martine Fournier Watson
 (April 9, Penguin). Robert Owens, a traveling salesman, offers potions 
that will allow his customers to control their dreams. When he arrives 
in a small town at the turn of the last century, many folks want to 
dream about love and their future spouse, but some dream of revenge. 
When Robert is caught up in town scandals and gossip, secrets are 
exposed and the bonds of the community begin to crumble. Quirky 
characters and a rural-America setting add charm. Reviews: a 4.1 rating on Goodreads. Themes: marriage, love, grief, finding one’s way in life. First line: “The dream peddler came to town at the white end of winter, before the thaw.” Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl by Andrea Lawlor (Vintage, April 23). Set in the 1990s, this is a kind of retelling of Orlando
 set in the queer world of university towns and pop culture. From Riot 
Grrrl music to women’s studies classes and gay bars, Paul is able to 
gender-shift his way through a variety of alternative communities across
 late-20th-century America. But how does his fluid gender affect his 
relationships, and can he/she find (or even want) intimacy? Reviews: a 4.2 rating on Goodreads; star from Kirkus. Themes: LGBTQ+, self-realization. First line: “Like a shark, Paul had to keep moving.”
Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl by Andrea Lawlor (Vintage, April 23). Set in the 1990s, this is a kind of retelling of Orlando
 set in the queer world of university towns and pop culture. From Riot 
Grrrl music to women’s studies classes and gay bars, Paul is able to 
gender-shift his way through a variety of alternative communities across
 late-20th-century America. But how does his fluid gender affect his 
relationships, and can he/she find (or even want) intimacy? Reviews: a 4.2 rating on Goodreads; star from Kirkus. Themes: LGBTQ+, self-realization. First line: “Like a shark, Paul had to keep moving.”Books in Translation
 Lie with Me by Philippe Besson, translated from the French by Molly Ringwald
 (yes, the actor) (Scribner, April 30). While in Bordeaux as an adult, a
 novelist sees a face in the crowd that reminds him of a boy he loved 
when they were teens. Told as a memoir, this novel explores a secret 
relationship between two ill-matched boys who held on to each other at 
time when being gay in France was not part of the accepted social norm. Reviews: a 4.3 on Goodreads; Kirkus praised Ringwald’s translation. Themes: young love, LGBTQ+, self-acceptance. First line:
 “One day—I can say precisely when, I know the date—I find myself in the
 lobby bar of a hotel in a provincial city, sitting in an armchair 
across from a journalist, a low round table between us, being 
interviewed for my latest novel, which recently came out.”
Lie with Me by Philippe Besson, translated from the French by Molly Ringwald
 (yes, the actor) (Scribner, April 30). While in Bordeaux as an adult, a
 novelist sees a face in the crowd that reminds him of a boy he loved 
when they were teens. Told as a memoir, this novel explores a secret 
relationship between two ill-matched boys who held on to each other at 
time when being gay in France was not part of the accepted social norm. Reviews: a 4.3 on Goodreads; Kirkus praised Ringwald’s translation. Themes: young love, LGBTQ+, self-acceptance. First line:
 “One day—I can say precisely when, I know the date—I find myself in the
 lobby bar of a hotel in a provincial city, sitting in an armchair 
across from a journalist, a low round table between us, being 
interviewed for my latest novel, which recently came out.” Acts of Infidelity by Lena Andersson, translated from the Swedish by Saskia Vogel
 (Other Press, April 23). When Ester fell madly in love with Olof, she 
knew the actor was married. She heard him speak the words when he said 
he wasn’t going to leave his wife, but she was sure he’d eventually 
change his mind. As the years pass, however, Ester finally faces the 
truth: she is a permanent “other woman”—but what will this revelation 
lead to? Reviews: a 3.7 rating on Goodreads. Themes: marriage, affairs, self-reflection, relationships. First line: “Ester Nilsson had arrived at that point in her life when each birthday leaves its mark.”
Acts of Infidelity by Lena Andersson, translated from the Swedish by Saskia Vogel
 (Other Press, April 23). When Ester fell madly in love with Olof, she 
knew the actor was married. She heard him speak the words when he said 
he wasn’t going to leave his wife, but she was sure he’d eventually 
change his mind. As the years pass, however, Ester finally faces the 
truth: she is a permanent “other woman”—but what will this revelation 
lead to? Reviews: a 3.7 rating on Goodreads. Themes: marriage, affairs, self-reflection, relationships. First line: “Ester Nilsson had arrived at that point in her life when each birthday leaves its mark.” Bakhita by Véronique Olmi, translated from the French by Adriana Hunter
 (Other Press, April 16). This novel is based on the life of  Mother 
Josephine Bakhita, a Catholic nun, born in the mid-1800s, who devoted 
her life to serving the poor. When only 7 years old, she was kidnapped 
from her Sudanese village to be sold into slavery and a life of abuse, 
until she was bought by an Italian consul, who took her with him to 
Italy, where Bakhita’s spiritual transformation began. She survived 
unimaginable horrors before her salvation and was canonized by the 
Catholic Church in 2000. Reviews: a 4.2 rating on Goodreads. Themes: family, slavery, religion, redemption. First line: “She does not know her name.”
Bakhita by Véronique Olmi, translated from the French by Adriana Hunter
 (Other Press, April 16). This novel is based on the life of  Mother 
Josephine Bakhita, a Catholic nun, born in the mid-1800s, who devoted 
her life to serving the poor. When only 7 years old, she was kidnapped 
from her Sudanese village to be sold into slavery and a life of abuse, 
until she was bought by an Italian consul, who took her with him to 
Italy, where Bakhita’s spiritual transformation began. She survived 
unimaginable horrors before her salvation and was canonized by the 
Catholic Church in 2000. Reviews: a 4.2 rating on Goodreads. Themes: family, slavery, religion, redemption. First line: “She does not know her name.” City of Jasmine by Olga Grjasnowa, translated from the German by Katy Derbyshire
 (Oneworld, April 9). Set against the backdrop of war-torn Syria, this 
novel focuses on the fates of an ex-pat surgeon who is detained when he 
tries to leave after a short visit to renew his passport and an actress 
and her boyfriend who conspire to escape to the safety of Europe. The 
surgeon is caught in a web of resistance politics and the young couple 
finds that life as refugees falls far short of the future they had 
imagined. Reviews: a 4.2 rating on Goodreads. Themes: politics, war, survival, hope. First line:
 “The first fields are already visible through the plane window, 
followed by an ocean of houses that vanishes again; then the wing slews 
upwards and the window reveals nothing but sky blue.”
City of Jasmine by Olga Grjasnowa, translated from the German by Katy Derbyshire
 (Oneworld, April 9). Set against the backdrop of war-torn Syria, this 
novel focuses on the fates of an ex-pat surgeon who is detained when he 
tries to leave after a short visit to renew his passport and an actress 
and her boyfriend who conspire to escape to the safety of Europe. The 
surgeon is caught in a web of resistance politics and the young couple 
finds that life as refugees falls far short of the future they had 
imagined. Reviews: a 4.2 rating on Goodreads. Themes: politics, war, survival, hope. First line:
 “The first fields are already visible through the plane window, 
followed by an ocean of houses that vanishes again; then the wing slews 
upwards and the window reveals nothing but sky blue.”
Feast Your Eyes sounds fantastic - I love stories told in a unique way like that.
ReplyDeleteSo interesting about Molly Ringwald!
ReplyDeleteYours is the second post that I've read in the past five minutes that mentions My Coney Island Baby. I love character-driven novels and this one sounds like a winner.
ReplyDeleteI've only heard of the Goldberg book among these. I liked her novel Bee Season from years ago; I hope this one is good too. The Coney Island story looks a bit fetching too. thanks
ReplyDeleteI'd like to read My Coney Island Baby...sounds good!
ReplyDeleteI just put Coney Island Baby on our front counter display at the Book Cellar, I'm intrigued by it.
ReplyDelete