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Review_FICTION
with their faiths and the obligations of
their everyday lives. Aboulela’s novel is
empathetic and insightful, offering a
nuanced representation of the three
characters through a blend of Islamic
faith and Scottish folklore. (Feb.)
A Perfect Explanation
Eleanor Anstruther. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt,
$24 (320p) ISBN 978-0-35-812085-8
In her splendid debut, Anstruther
portrays an aristocratic woman’s aban-
donment of her husband and three
young children in the 1920s for life in a
British Christian Science retreat, and the
subsequent custody battle that followed.
That this story is based on the author’s
grandmother, Enid Campbell Anstruther,
the first British woman to perform the
pilgrimage to Mecca. After they arrive at
their cabin, they receive spectral visitations:
a healthy young
boy who makes
Moni think of
her son, a
runner Salma
begins to
believe is her
ex, and the
Hoopoe, a
mythical bird,
for Iman. There’s
a not-entirely-
successful vein of magical realism, but
readers will root for Aboulela’s well-
drawn cast as they reconcile their desires
heartbreaking
past to Miller,
building
toward an
unsettling,
unresolved con-
clusion between
the two men.
Wallace’s
inconsistent
emotional states
when he’s in
Miller’s company can be jarring; the
novel is at its best and most powerful
when Wallace is alone and readers witness
his interior solitude in the face of the
racism and loneliness he endures. Taylor’s
perceptive, challenging exploration of
the many kinds of emotional costs will
resonate with readers looking for complex
characters and rich prose. Agent: Meredith
Kaffel Simonoff, DeFiore & Co. (Feb.)
Bird Summons
Leila Aboulela. Black Cat, $16 trade paper
(304p) ISBN 978-0-8021-4915-2
Aboulela’s impressive latest (after
Elsewhere, Home) follows three Muslim
women as they travel through the
Scottish Highlands. Moni, a former
banker, is the mother of Adam, a five-
year-old with severe cerebral palsy. Her
devotion to him has driven a wedge
between her and her husband, Murtada,
who’s pressuring her and Adam to join
him in Saudi Arabia. Iman is on her
third doomed marriage; she was brought
to Britain from war-torn Syria by her
second husband. Having lived her entire
adult life as someone’s wife, she looks up
to independent Salma, the de facto
leader of the group, who’s a successful
massage therapist and has a Scottish
husband and four children. Recent social
media overtures from Salma’s college ex
back in Egypt, meanwhile, have left her
questioning what could have been. The
three women set out on a weeklong trip
to the grave of Lady Evelyn Cobbold,
★ Cesare
Jerome Charyn. Bellevue, $26.99 (368p) ISBN 978-1-942658-50-4
C
haryn’s spectacular latest (after The Perilous Adventures
of the Cowboy King) captures the madness of Nazi
Germany in a fiercely inventive merging of fiction
and fact. Erik Holdermann’s parents both die
before his ninth birthday in 1928, after which he is
raised in a Berlin orphanage. When philanthropist
Wilfrid von Hecht and his daughter, Lisa, make a visit
to the institution, Erik is smitten by Lisa, a “mischling,”
or partially Jewish, teenager a few years his senior. Their
lives diverge when Lisa marries an SS colonel and, at 17,
Erik rescues a seedy-looking man being attacked by
thugs. The man is Adm. Wilhelm Canaris, director of
the Abwehr espionage unit. Canaris has Erik trained in killing and disguise,
nicknaming him “Cesare” after the somnambulist assassin in the film The Cabinet
of Dr. Caligari. Though Erik’s covert work becomes the stuff of whispered legend,
few know that he’s helping Canaris—whose loyalty to Hitler has frayed in the face
of the Führer’s increasingly erratic leadership—to sabotage Nazi attempts to
exterminate Berlin’s Jews. After Erik re-encounters Lisa at a dinner party, the two
begin a fevered affair. When she’s sent to Theresienstadt, where a “Jewish Paradise”
designed by Nazi propagandists hides an Auschwitz way station, Erik risks his life
trying to save her. Charyn’s nuanced depiction of the bond between the eccentric
Canaris and his protégé balances the novel’s many macabre moments, and the searing
ending is a masterpiece of unsentimentalized tenderness. This extraordinary tour
de force showcases the prolific author at the top of his game. (Jan.)
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Shavonne Johnson
Mary M. Jones
Michael M. Jones
Juliet Kahn
Bridget Keown
Cheryl Klein
Rose LeGrone
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Sally Lodge
Patty MacDonald
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Chloe Maveal
Sheri Melnick
Elizabeth Morse
Dai Newman
Eric Norton
Devin Overman
Chelle Parker
Hope Perlman
Leonard Picker
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