What Should You Read Next? the Best Reviewed Books.

Aug 14, 2023 7 mins read

Featuring New Titles by James McBride, Sin Blaché & Helen Macdonald, John Glatt, and More

James McBrude’s The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store, Sin Blaché & Helen Macdonald’s Prophet, and John Glatt’s Tangled Vines all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week.

Brought to you by Book Marks, Lit Hub’s “Rotten Tomatoes for books.


 

James McBride_The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store Cover

1. The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride
 

“Confirms the abiding strength of McBride’s vernacular narrative. With his eccentric, larger-than-life characters and outrageous scenes of spliced tragedy and comedy, “Dickensian” is not too grand a description for his novels, but the term is ultimately too condescending and too Anglican. The melodrama that McBride spins is wholly his own … If there’s a ramshackle quality to McBride’s plotting, it’s the artful precariousness of a genius. His expansive collection of ominous, preposterous and saintly characters twirls like loose sticks in a river, guided by a physics of chaos beyond all calculation except awe … We all need—we all deserve—this vibrant, love-affirming novel that bounds over any difference that claims to separate us.”  

 

Catherine Chidgey_Pet Cover

2. Pet by Catherine Chidgey
(Europa Editions)

4 Rave • 1 Positive
Read Catherine Chidgey on loss-of-innocence narratives here
 

“Chidgey is an agile writer, and here fuses pacy storytelling with some resonant metaphors … The drama to come is hinted at early and often but even so, the darkness of the novel’s denouement is hard to fully anticipate … As satisfying a narrative as Pet is, lingering uncertainty is the source of its real power, enabling it to maintain its hold over the imagination long after the final page has been turned.”

 

Helen MacDonald and Sin Blaché _Prophet Cover

3. Prophet by Sin Blaché and Helen Macdonald
(Grove)

1 Rave • 6 Positive

“Striking in its originality and its capacity to instill unease, even terror. It evolves over time, with the consequences of its use growing ever more disturbing and incomprehensible … A chilling speculative thriller in which some suffer, and others profit, from idealizing the past.”

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