For several reasons, I rarely read short stories, and I’m not sure why I picked up Five Tuesdays in Winter, but I’m glad I did. I thoroughly enjoyed all but her final story, “The Man at the Door.” The other nine stories are engrossing and poignant. The characters are realistic and relatable. If you’re in the mood for a sweet love story, read the short story that bears the book’s title.
The Netanyahus: An Account of a Minor and Ultimately Even Negligible Episode in the History of a Very Famous Family by Joshua Cohen 237 pages
The narrator, Ruben Blum, is the only Jewish faculty member at Corbin College in upstate New York in 1959. When he is asked by his superior to entertain Ben Zion Netanyahu(Bibi’s father), who is applying for a professorship at Corbin, Blum has to say yes although he has misgivings. When Netanyahu arrives along with his outspoken wife and his three undisciplined sons in the middle of a snowstorm, chaos, drama and hilarity ensues.
If you have missed the writings of Philip Roth, read The Netanyahus. Like Roth, Cohen writes a funny yet dark work of fiction that also discusses heavy topics such as, Zionism, the history of the Jews and American capitalism.
The Trees by Percival Everett 308 pages
Something awful is happening in Money, Mississippi. White bigots are being brutally murdered, and at the scene of the crimes is a dead Black man. When the dead Black man keeps disappearing, Jim Davis and Ed Morgan are brought in from The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation to help solve the homicides. Soon these mysterious types of killings are being duplicated all over the country.
With a deft touch of black humor, Everett describes the issues of racism, lynching and revenge. His novel is also a good page-turner mystery. The Trees was a great way to bring in 2022.
The Book of Form and Emptiness by Ruth Ozeki 545 pages
The following is an inadequate summary of Ruth Ozeki’s most recent work. Thirteen year old Benny Oh falls apart after the accidental death of his father. Benny begins hearing voices emanating from inanimate objects. Benny’s mother, Annabelle, becomes a hoarder to alleviate the feeling of emptiness that occurs after her husband’s death. Benny finds solace at his local library and in the company of a troubled girl self-named Aleph; Annabelle feels comforted accumulating more and more useless objects.
Fans of Ozeki will find The Book of Form and Emptiness powerful and thought-provoking. Those who think her books are confusing and odd will feel that way about this novel as well. I felt The Book of Form and Emptiness was creative and engrossing with two well-drawn empathetic main characters.
The Promise by Damon Galgut 269 pages
On her deathbed, the matriarch of the Swart family makes her husband promise that he will give their loyal, Black servant, Salome, the dilapidated home she has been living in forever in rural South Africa. Amor, the matriarch’s youngest child and the husband are the only two who have heard the promise, but Amor relates the deathbed wish to everyone. As each family member dies, the promise continues to be ignored.
The 2021 winner of The Man Booker Prize, The Promise, is an extremely satisfying read. It explores South Africa during and after apartheid artistically through character and plot development. There is a lot to be discussed in The Promise-both in writing style and what does and doesn’t happen in the novel.
My Faves of 2021-in alphabetical order
FICTION
Crossroads by Jonathan Franzen
The Love Songs of W.E.B. DuBois by Honoree Fantonne Jeffers
Matrix by Lauren Goff
Morningside Heights by Joshua Henken
Night Came with Many Stars by Simon Van Booy
Oh, William by Elizabeth Strout
NONFICTION
Empire of Pain by Patrick Radden Keefe
In Kiltumper by Niall Williams with Christine Breen
Nomadland by Jessica Bruder
On Animals by Susan Orlean
Taste by Stanley Tucci
What I Mean by Joan Didion
CHILDREN’S BOOK
Amos McGee Misses the Bus by Philip Stead, illustrated by Erin Stead
A Calling for Charlie Barnes by Joshua Ferris 342 pages
Charlie Barnes has had four wives, four children and numerous jobs and occupations. His youngest child, Jake, a fairly well-known author, is writing a biography of Charlie including the good, the bad and the ugly. The opening scene of A Calling for Charlie Barnes describes Charlie waiting for a phone call that will tell him whether or not he has pancreatic cancer.
If you enjoy dark humor(I never laughed out loud but I smiled a lot) and scenes that will pull the rug out from under you, I recommend A Calling for Charlie Barnes. However, if you prefer a work with a chronological plot, sympathetic characters and a reliable narrator, don’t read this novel.
The Book of Magic by Alice Hoffman 378 pages
This is the third and final book in Alice Hoffman’s magic series. It follows three generations of Owens’ women, all of whom are witches. The family has been cursed for 300 years, and it involves a tragedy occurring to any family member who falls in love. When this happens to Kylie Owens, the youngest in the family, she vows to reverse the curse even if it costs her her life.
I usually enjoy Alice Hoffman, but The Book of Magic has too much magic and too little character and plot development. There are six main female characters and three secondary male characters, and none of them were fleshed out-perhaps because there were just too many of them.
The Sentence by Louise Erdrich 374 pages
Last year’s Pulitzer Prize winner has written a timely book set in Minneapolis. The main character, Tookie, has served time, arrested by the man she eventually marries. After she is released, she works in Erdrich’s book store where the ghost of an annoying customer has returned to haunt Tookie. With the help of other employees, Tookie tries to find out why this is happening to her. Along with the haunting, Tookie, her friends, family and neighbors are also dealing with the pandemic and the murder of George Floyd.
I was not enamored with the ghost story or the Native American lore in The Sentence, but I enjoyed Tookie’s discussions of books, customers, the day to day happenings at a small book store, and its survival during the pandemic. Louse Erdrich’s final acknowledgement reads, “If you are going to buy a book, including this one, please visit your nearest independent book store and support its singular vision.” Love it!!
Paradise by Abdulrazak Gurnah 247 pages
Nobel Prize winner for literature this year, Abdulrazak Gurnah has written a novel that bears no resemblance to its title. Paradise is the story of Yusuf, a handsome young boy who is given to the merchant Aziz until Yusuf’s father can pay back the debt to the merchant. While living with Aziz in East Africa, Yusuf encounters tribal wars, greedy savages and German soldiers methodically taking over his country.
Paradise is not an easy read. Gurnah describes colonial East Africa as brutal, ugly and sinister, and Yusuf at the beginning of the novel as beautiful, innocent and pure. His gradual change as a result of what he sees all around him, helps the reader understand why the author left Zanzibar for London.