On the Cover of Sunday's Book Review By MAGGIE NELSON Reviewed by LAURA KIPNIS Maggie Nelson's meditation on violence in our culture aims its criticisms at the fine arts, literature, theater and even poetry. Also in the Book Review By RICHARD WHITE Reviewed by MICHAEL KAZIN The historian Richard White sees the 19th-century American railways as a Gilded Age extravagance that worked social, political and environmental havoc. By EARL SWIFT Reviewed by TOM VANDERBILT Earl Swift's account of the creation of the U.S. expressway system is textured and nuanced, easy on the asphalt, long on personalities. By ESMERALDA SANTIAGO Reviewed by GAIUTRA BAHADUR Esmeralda Santiago's heroine, a feminist before her time, runs a sugar plantation in 19th-century Puerto Rico. By GLEN DUNCAN Reviewed by JUSTIN CRONIN A novel narrated by a werewolf, morally as well as physically ambiguous, who is tortured by the spirits of his victims and ready to surrender to his pursuers. By ALICE LaPLANTE Reviewed by ZOE SLUTZKY This haunting first novel's deeply unreliable narrator is a former surgeon with Alzheimer's, the prime suspect in her best friend's murder. By TIM FLANNERY Reviewed by ANDREW C. REVKIN While detailing the great harm done by humans, Tim Flannery also writes hopefully about the earth's future. By JAMES B. STEWART Reviewed by JEFFREY ROSEN James B. Stewart warns of the risks of a perjury epidemic that has "infected nearly every aspect of society." By MARGARET DRABBLE Reviewed by NANCY KLINE Margaret Drabble's short-story collection reflects the last half of the 20th century. Children's Books By CLAIRE A. NIVOLA Reviewed by TOMIE dePAOLA This picture book documents an American girl's adventures in her father's native Sardinia. By MELISSA WALKER Reviewed by CARLENE BAUER In Melissa Walker's young adult novel, a girl coming of age in an evangelical community begins to test boundaries and question absolute faith. Reviewed by VERONICA CHAMBERS A novel of girls at an elite Swiss boarding school in the 1970s, and another of two Mexican-American fifth-graders struggling with assimilation. By PAMELA PAUL Picture books about baseball, Ben Franklin, Lewis and Clark and more. By GENE LUEN YANG Reviewed by PAMELA PAUL A graphic novel about video games, growing up Asian-American and the challenges of meeting parental expectations. | Back Page Essay By DANI SHAPIRO Can a memoirist write with total honesty if she is worried about what her son might think? By JEFF GORDINIER Poetry by Michael Dickman, Ross Gay, C. Dale Young and Chris Martin. Featuring conversations with the novelists John Banville, a k a Benjamin Black, and Esmeralda Santiago. Reviews by The Times's Critics Books News & Features By CHARLES McGRATH Donald Ray Pollock has followed his 2008 short-story collection, "Knockemstiff," with a novel, also set in the Ohio town of that redolent name. Editor's Note Thanks for taking the time to read this e-mail. Feel free to send feedback; I enjoy hearing your opinions and will do my best to respond. Blake Wilson Books Producer The New York Times on the Web |
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