Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Boswellian Top 5's of 2017 part one


This is Kay’s first official Christmas at Boswell—she was hired in the middle of last year’s Christmas craziness and was just trying to learn the shop’s systems at the same time. This is her first Christmas armed with books she loved and can recommend! She’s been a great addition to the staff in 2017; her reading tastes are varied and wonderful as represented below: 
The Readymade Thief, by Augustus Rose  
A highly unlikely, homeless heroine stumbles into an anonymous secret society; a wild cast of characters and brilliantly drawn settings knit together into a very unusual, totally engaging genre-busting story.
$26.00 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $20.80
Based on a True Story, by Delphine De Vigan 
A brilliant, haunting, insidious, anxiety-inducing, formidable and unforgettable story about a writer and an ultimately unwanted "friend" in Paris. $28.00
Wonder Valley, by Ivy Pochoda  
The story begins with a man running naked down one of LA’s congested freeways. Aren't you dying to know what happens next?!
$26.99 on Boswell Best until end of year at $21.59

The Power, by Naomi Alderman  
Girls suddenly develop the power to send electrical charges through their fingers and the world will never be the same again. 
$26.00 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $20.80
Nyxia, by Scott Reintgen 
Teenager Emmett narrates the shifting interpersonal relationships, brutal schedules, suspenseful battles, unfair rules and frequently changing circumstances facing 10 male and female contestants vying for the chance to spend a year on an inhabited alien world. $17.99

 Jen’s is our bargain and gift buyer, but also a great reader. She’s the one that couldn’t stop talking about Pachinko at the beginning of 2017, and now look at it, a New York Times selection for their Top 10 of 2017 and on a lot more year end favorite lists. What will be her gem next year? We’ll find out, but for now here is her top 5 for this year:
Pachinko by Min Jin Lee  
A father's gentle nature, a mother's sacrifice, a daughter's trust and a son's determination are the cornerstones of this grand multi-layered saga. Pachinko follows one family through an ever changing cultural landscape from 1910 Korea to 1989 Japan. As the bonds of family are put to the test in the harsh realities of their world, Sunja and those she holds dear manage to carve themselves a place to call home with hard work, self-sacrifice and a little kimchi. Through it all is a message about love, faith, and the deep rooted bonds of family. Min Jin Lee gives us a phenomenal story about one family's struggle that resonates to us today. It will take hold of you and not let go!
$27.00 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $21.60 in hardcover
$15.99 in paperback
Bear & the Nightingale by Katherine Arden 
The Bear and the Nightingale is an enchanting mix of fairytale-fantasy-historical fiction, set in medieval Russia. Nestled between the northern wilderness & civilization, is a village where old & new traditions live side by side. Vasya, the last daughter of Pyotr & Marina, is born on the howling winds of autumn. She is different from the others in her village. She is destined to be like her grandmother, gifted with powers that are her birthright. As time goes by, Vasya will be tested. Caught in the conflict between the old spirits and the new religion, Vasya must do everything in her power to save her family and village. Katherine Arden's novel is a rich, mesmerizing novel. It's the fairy tale you've been waiting for! $16.00
The Accusation by Bandi  
These forbidden stories are powerful & show us how the human spirit can flourish in the harshest elements. Couldn't put it down!
$25.00 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $20.00
Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid   
After seven husbands and fifty years in the spotlight, Evelyn Hugo has decided to tell her story. Hollywood's most scintillating star will tell all. It's an interview of a lifetime for Monique Grant, who has been handpicked by Evelyn. Monique will be the only one to ask and get the answer that the world has been dying to know: Who was the love of Evelyn Hugo's life? It's the golden age of Hollywood. There's scandal, extravagance, leading men, lavender marriages and overbearing studio bosses. If you're like me, reading The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo will leave you utterly absorbed and wishing Evelyn Hugo was a real-life film star! $26.00
The Half-Drowned King by Linnea Hartsuyker  
The Half-Drowned King is the storied tale of the legendary King Harold and the rise of a united Norway. It's a Viking saga set in the 9th century, full of traditions and myths, glory and adventure, love and betrayal. Linnea Hartsuyker breathes new life in the historical fiction genre! $27.99

Sharon has been here from the beginning of Boswell, and before that she was a bookseller for the Harry W. Schwartz Bookshop in Shorewood. Her reading has always been wide ranging and interesting. If you have a chance when you are in the shop to speak with her, then ask her about the new Juneau Black mystery novel, Cold Clay. Here are her top 5 books of 2017:
Hunger by Roxane Gay
Right from the beginning, Roxane Gay lets us know that this is not a weight-loss success story, but a memoir so deeply personal that it was extremely difficult for her to write. Parts of it are also extremely difficult to read. Every woman that breathes has issues with her body, food, and her weight, not matter what her size. Gay holds nothing back as she tells of the sexual assault that changed her forever when she was 12 years old. She concealed the trauma from her family and dealt with it the only way she knew how, by eating until her body was no longer desirable to men, but a fortress in which she could hide and protect herself from the world. She candidly explains how it feels to be at once so large and so invisible, as she moves through a world that is less than kind when it comes to judging women’s bodies.
$25.99 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $20.79
Almost Sisters by Joshilyn Jackson
The latest offering from Joshilyn Jackson is a delightful mix of humor, romance, awkward family dynamics, and completely up-to-the-minute social issues. I know it’s early but The Almost Sisters is in the running for one of my favorites of 2017. Leia Birch Briggs is a 38-year-old graphic novelist of midlevel fame. She has a one-night stand at a comic-con with a mysterious and attractive Batman. This results in a little more than morning-after regrets when Leia learns that she is pregnant. While she is deciding best how to break the news of an illegitimate biracial baby to her upstanding Southern family, other more pressing concerns take precedence. Leia learns that her beloved 90-year old-grandmother is suffering from dementia, and covering it up with the help of her best friend, Wattie. Furthermore, Leia’s perfect sister Rachel, is having trouble with her perfect marriage.  Things escalate when Leia finds out that her grandmother is hiding a bigger secret in the attic. By turns heartbreaking and hilarious, The Almost Sisters is almost perfect. $26.99
The fascinating true story of the Osage tribe in Oklahoma in the 1920s. They were extremely rich as they lived on oil land, but then they began to die under very suspicious circumstances. Grann also tells of the formation of the FBI who are brought into investigate all of the murders. $28.95 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $23.16
News of the World by Paulette Jiles
Set in northern Texas after the Civil War, Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd travels around and reads the news to rural communities. He agrees to return a young orphan girl to her family. She was held by the Kiowa for 4 years after they killed her parents. A lovely story about family and civilization and what those concepts mean. $15.99
My Absolute Darling by Gabriel Tallent
Turtle is a 14 year old girl who lives with her father in northern California. He has taught her survival skills and isolated her from her peers and her community. When she meets two boys her own age, she begins to realize that there is a world outside of her relationship with her father, and she will have to fight to gain access to it. This at times horrifying story is so beautifully written that I could not stop reading it until the edge-of-your-seat ending.
$27.00 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $21.60
Jane is our resident dynamo—such a treat to work with each and every week, sometimes I want some of her charisma and energy. She always has surprising and amazing choices in her reading. And, this year’s top 5 doesn’t disappoint:
The beauty of a South African landscape is contrasted against the harsh reality of apartheid told in the alternating voices of a black mother in search of her daughter who has vanished during a student uprising and a nine year old white girl orphaned by the death of her parents in this emotionally rendered story that 'hums' a song of familial hope. My favorite novel of 2017!
$26.00 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $20.80
Mr. Dickens and His Carol by Samantha Silva
With his life in disarray due to the failing sales of his newest book and the increasing needs of his expanding family, Charles Dickens' publisher demands that he write a Christmas book or his debts will be called in. Suffering writer's block, Dickens walks the familiar London streets that have so inspired his writing and there meets a young woman and her son Timothy who will the be muse behind the writing of what will be destined to become the most revered holiday classic.  In reimagining Dickens life, Samantha Silva writes a novel that is an irresistibly endearing companion to the annual reading of The Christmas Carol. $24.99
Set in England's Cotswold countryside, this is a charming story of a woman who inherits her father's financially troubled bookshop. Threatened by greedy property developers, Emilia finds support from the Nightingale Books' literary community whose lives intersect and have been shaped by their passion for reading. Perfect gift for bibliophiles who want to escape cold winter nights with a hot cup of tea and an engaging ode to the love of books! Highly recommended for fans of Gabrielle Zevin's Storied Life of A.J. Fikry and Nina George's Little Paris Bookshop.
$25.00 on Boswellian Best until end of year at $20.00
Gorgeous art collection of late eighteenth to early twentieth century paintings depicting the history of women's road to emancipation as they simply began to walk in public, unaccompanied.  Along with selected quotes from such literary luminaires as Jane Austen, Emily Bronte and Simone de Beauvoir, this is the perfect gift for those who enjoy a thoughtful blend of art, history and literature. $22.95
What She Ate by Laura Shapiro
Spanning nearly 200 years, award winning culinary historian invites readers to an appetizing feast profiling six women whose personal dietary tastes reflect their life stories and place in the world of social, political, and literary history. Carefully researched palatable reading for those who savor beyond what's served on the plate in front of them! $27.00
That's all for this post, part two will come in the near future...

Thursday, November 30, 2017

My Top Ten Books of 2017

All the end-of-year and top 10 lists for books are coming out now--and Boswell will not disappoint to add a few of ours to the chorus. Every year, I have asked the Boswell booksellers to contribute their five favorite books of the year. It's such an interesting flavor of books; it helps to remind me of what a great pool of diverse readers we have. Then, I take two books from each bookseller and put them on the Boswellian Best, which I discount 20% till the end of the year. If you want to see them gush about their favorite books, just ask them about it. I will feature each booksellers five favorite books in future blog posts.


Last year, I completely forgot to put out my own five favorite reads of 2016, so I am going to put out my personal top 10 for 2017. I personally think that this was a great year for books! I had so much fun with books that I am familiar with and those that I discovered for the first time. I read for Indies Introduce (a program where booksellers read debut books and pick ten books to feature in the forthcoming season) and discovered some amazing books I would never have picked up (in fact my number 1 and 2 books of the year come from that program). So, overall a great reading year:

Starting with a bit of horror mixed with dystopian, The Salt Line tells the tale of our world being driven behind salt lines by ticks. Now, these are not some normal ticks, these things are horrible creatures that spread death and disease around quickly. Holly Goddard Jones has some brilliantly descriptive passages detailing these bloody scenes. The story starts with a group of people going on an outing to the tick inhabited world for a bit of sightseeing. You can see where this is going, right? Just a fun, creepy read. $26.00  
I have been a fan of Kristin Cashore since her first novel, Graceling. Jane, Unlimited is unlike anything she has written to date. Jane finds herself at a crossroads, where she could go in multiple directions and the story would change greatly depending on her choice. Kristin Cashore explores each path and shows us where they lead and end, kind of like a super-sized, pumped up adrenaline choose-your-own-adventure. Brilliant concept!
$18.99 on Boswellian Best till the end of the year for $15.19
This book has been getting all kinds of press lately. It made both the Washington Post and New York Times Top 10 books of 2017. The power that Naomi Alderman refers to, is the electricity that women are able to discharge from themselves. As you can imagine, it changes the dynamics of the world; the power shift in society is part of the beauty of the tale—this is the book to read after Handmaid’s Tale!
$26.00 on Boswellian Best till the end of the year for $20.80
Lee has found herself in the crosshairs of a secret society that thinks she is the missing component of ritual they have been hoping to complete. Running from them, she finds help from Tomi, who she doesn’t trust at first but eventually does as she has no one else. The story unravels in the underbelly of Philadelphia, in art theft, hacking, drugs, urban spelunking and with a society that thinks Marcel Duchamp art holds the keys to complete understanding. Such a fast-paced thriller, it won’t disappoint!
 $26.00 on Boswellian Best till the end of the year for $20.80
Such an important book for anyone living near a Great Lake, or anyone interested in conservation of our water supply. We all know the tales of invasive species and water shortages that could spurt water wars in the future, but Dan Egan details all the in-and-outs that we may have missed and need to have sharpened to deepen our understanding of this pressing issue.  A must read! $27.95
Jeannie was named after her father's dead daughter, Jeanne, from a previous marriage and The Glass Eyeis the story of how Jeannie, in turn, copes with the grief of her own father’s death. Vanasco has this unique and brilliant way of structuring her narrative that leaves the reader bewildered and enlightened at the same time. She talks about the frustration of writing this book for her father, her hero, as she copes with her own mental breakdowns. I am not one for memoirs, but this is a rare gem that highlights something so sacred as a daughter’s relationship to her father.
$15.95
4. The House of Government by Yuri Slezkine
Focusing on one building, where many of the Soviet elites lived with their families. It was full of luxury and shimmered with the promise of what was to come under Stalin. Yuri Slezkine details and tracks the families and their internal and external dealings. So many characters! Such a rich trove of information about life behind the Iron Curtain—but it all comes crashing down with a great purging. Inhabitants are abducted at night never to be seen from again. A story of how the revolution ultimately failed the true believers. Epic and unbelievably great! $39.95
One day Apollo is happy, with work and his wife and a child. His wife has begun to behave oddly, but that could be chalked up to depression. In one instant, his life changes as his wife disappears and his child is gone. Apollo must undertake a quest to discover where she has gone, and why she would wreck the life beyond all recognition. A magical, fairytale vibe persists throughout the book that only Victor LaValle could pull off. I have been in love with his books since his last book, The Devil in Silver. Do yourself a favor and dip into some of his dark tales.
$26.00 on Boswellian Best till the end of the year for $20.80
I loved this book—it’s dark, and tough to read at parts but so worth it. Stephen Florida is in his senior of college and he has big plans. He wants to win his weight class in wrestling to solidify his legacy. Everything goes awry with an injury. He spirals out of control and drives himself into isolation. Gabe Habush does an excellent job of getting inside of Stephen’s head and relaying his uncertainties and his self-destructive impulses that he has no way to stop. I highly recommend this book.
$25.00 on Boswellian Best till the end of the year for $20.00

Such a raw, festering wound kind of read--when it got really bad, I just wanted to itch it away. Fourteen-year-old Turtle lives with her father, Martin, outside of town, in a remote area. You will end up hating her father, but also, you will see the true paranoid brilliance in the monster that Gabriel Tallent created. As the Turtle unfolds the story for us, we are treated to brutal events that shape her life and we witness her survival instincts kick in as she begins understanding what the world could be as opposed to the one she knows. This is a gripping story I will never forget, not one single scene.
$27.00 on Boswellian Best till the end of the year for $21.60

Sunday, January 8, 2017

Boswell's Tim McCarthy on Emily Fridlund's "History of Wolves," the #1 Indie Next Pick for January 2017

From Boswell's Tim McCarthy:

"Fourteen-year-old Madeline, who is called Linda, or Commie, or Freak at school, has grown up in Loose River, Minnesota, the Walleye Capitol of the World, a place where the summer tourists crowd a very small one street town. Her parents and several other families arrived in the early 1980's as a group, in a failed attempt to create a communal family. Long ago the others have given up, leaving Linda, her mother and father living in a tiny cabin, where Linda sleeps under the loft rafters. Only the new teacher tries to call her Mattie; and without hesitation she introduces herself as Linda to the new Gardner family, who have built a beautiful house across the lake.

"Linda's layers of isolation become clear, from kids at school, from her own parents, and even within a comforting and beloved land saturated with forests and lakes. It's her new, and increasingly troubling, strange interactions with the teacher and the Gardners which confuse and transform her. The new family--Patra, her four-year-old son Paul, and her husband Leo--are the center of Linda's story. Fridlund has given her main character a strong, steady voice as she moves through her teenage life one step at a time. Linda has the recognizable thoughts of a teenager, with a direct honesty that made me feel proud of her. I wanted to hear what she had to say, even as her story began to make me afraid and sad.

"Fridlund has a remarkable ability to show how the smallest details and changes in people and places can cause sudden, unexpected emotional shifts; and she folds events from different points in Linda's life, ranging from a very young girl to a women in her thirties, into a narrative somehow made clearer by the time changes rather than confusing. History of Wolves was as compelling as the best books I've read this year. Fridlund's debut as a writer is exceptional."

Thanks, Tim! Emily Fridlund appears at Boswell on Friday, January 13, 7 pm, in conversation with proprietor Daniel Goldin. We've had several folks contacting us after reading History of Wolves saying it's the best novel they've read in a long time.