International fiction

The Unfolding by A.M. Homes

Reviewed by Nishtha Banavalikar

The Big Guy is a smooth talker, a networker, and he’s got a plan to take back control of his country. It’s the 2008 American presidential election, and the Big Guy’shorse, John McCain, has lost the race to Barack Obama…

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The Book of Goose by Yiyun Li

Reviewed by Tracy Hwang

Meet Fabienne and Agnès, the heroines of The Book of Goose and a pair of adolescent, antisocial girls in 1950s rural France. The two best friends start a game of writing a booktogether, where Fabienne comes up with the story…

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Liberation Day by George Saunders

Reviewed by Rosalind McClintock

I admit, I have never read George Saunders, which makes me some sort of short-story philistine I believe, and I love short stories. So, I am afraid I cannot compare this collection to his previous works. What I can tell…

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Our Missing Hearts by Celeste Ng

Reviewed by Tye Cattanach

Anyone familiar with the work of Celeste Ng knows to expect complex and heartfelt family stories cleverly intertwined with thought-provoking commentary about race and socio-economic differences. The premise for Our Missing Hearts seems simple. The national security law PACT has…

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We Spread by Iain Reid

Reviewed by Justin Avery

Canadian author Iain Reid’s early novels, I’m Thinking of Ending Things and Foe, introduced an exciting new voice in suspenseful, atmospheric genre fiction, with both titles already adapted for the screen. His third novel, We Spread, is another masterful…

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Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver

Reviewed by Aurelia Orr

Barbara Kingsolver reimagines and recaptures the soul and spirit of Charles Dickens’ David Copperfield in her breathtaking new novel set in modern Southern Appalachia, USA. Damon (quickly nicknamed Demon) was never destined to live an easy life. Born to a…

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Bliss Montage by Ling Ma

Reviewed by Tristen Brudy

‘The house in which we live has three wings. The west wing is where the Husband and I live. The east wing is where the children and their attending au pairs live. And lastly, the largest but ugliest wing, extending…

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Lessons by Ian McEwan

Reviewed by Mark Rubbo

One of the perks of being a bookseller is that you’re able to read books long before they are published. I read Lessons back in June and couldn’t stop telling people about it. Often the response I received was along…

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Wildflowers by Peggy Frew

Reviewed by Tye Cattanach

Sisters. They can be the strongest of allies, the fiercest of enemies. In her latest novel, Wildflowers, Peggy Frew delves, with startlingly precise detail, deep into the fraught history and heartbreaking present of three girls born to Robert and…

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Babel: An Arcane History by R.F. Kuang

Reviewed by Jennifer Fraioli


1828. Robin Swift is saved from the sickness sweeping across Canton by a strange Englishman and a bar of silver. He is given a proposition: he can travel with this stranger, Professor Lovell, to a life of physical comfort in…

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