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    13 new books to add to your TBR pile right now.

    Katie Yee

    August 31, 2021, 8:58am

    Stephen Graham Jones_My Heart is a Chainsaw

    Stephen Graham Jones, My Heart Is a Chainsaw
    (Gallery/Saga Press)

    “Readers will be drawn in by the effortless storytelling and Jade’s unique cadence. This is a methodically paced story where every detail both entertains and matters, and the expertly rendered setting explodes with violent action.”
    –Booklist

    several people are typing

    Calvin Kasulke, Several People Are Typing
    (Doubleday)

    “In this gloriously inventive debut, Kasulke has constructed a funny, tender, and compelling novel that consists entirely of messages on the workplace app Slack … This is a workplace comedy that brilliantly captures the era of remote work.”
    –Booklist

    three rooms

    Jo Hamya, Three Rooms
    (Mariner)

    “In precise prose, Hamya captures the disillusionment and despair plaguing her protagonist. This perceptive debut will delight fans of Rachel Cusk.”
    –Publishers Weekly

    Mrs. Dalloway_Virginia Woolf, Merve Emre

    Virginia Woolf and Merve Emre, The Annotated Mrs. Dalloway
    (Liveright)

    “[Emre’s] introduction combines personal testimony about her relationship to the novel—she is so devoted that she retyped Woolf’s manuscript for this edition—with deep research into its genesis.”
    –Wall Street Journal

    Matt Siegel, The Secret History of Food: Strange and True Stories About the Origins of What We Eat

    Matt Siegel, The Secret History of Food
    (Ecco)

    “Siegel’s book is as entertaining as it is informative, sprinkled with humorous anecdotes and connections to popular culture. He takes intel gathered from nutritionists, psychologists, food historians and paleoanthropologists and weaves together a tale that moves seamlessly from one topic to the next.”
    –BookPage

    Mark Piesing_N-4 Down

    Mark Piesing, N-4 Down
    (Custom House)

    “…this is a book with much to enjoy and a good illustration of what human curiosity, determination and courage—and sometimes a healthy dollop of vanity—can achieve.”
    –The Wall Street Journal

    Paula Hawkins, A Slow Fire Burning

    Paula Hawkins, A Slow Fire Burning
    (Riverhead)

    “A chilling story that’ll leave you with more questions than answers, A Slow Fire Burning gives the term ‘thriller’ a whole new meaning.”
    –PopSugar

    Nichola Raihani_The Social Instinct

    Nichola Raihani, The Social Instinct
    (St. Martin’s)

    “This enriching survey should have broad appeal.”
    –Publishers Weekly

    Craig Whitlock_The Afghanistan Papers

    Craig Whitlock, The Afghanistan Papers
    (Simon & Schuster)

    “A veteran Washington Post investigative reporter delivers a dispiriting history of the 20-year Afghanistan debacle … By this authoritative account, the Afghanistan War has been a colossal failure that should have been ended years ago.”
    –Kirkus

    Hilma Wolitzer, Today a Woman Went Mad in the Supermarket

    Hilma Wolitzer, Today a Woman Went Mad in the Supermarket
    (Bloomsbury)

    “Each of these stories is like a circus clown car, stuffed with more meaning than Wolitzer’s deceptively simple sentences seem able to contain.”
    –Los Angeles Times

    Kia Corthron, Moon and the Mars
    (Seven Stories Press)

    “Playwright and novelist Corthron (The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter) combines a propulsive coming-of-age story with a fascinating history of the years before and after the Civil War.”
    –Publishers Weekly

    Exodus, Revisited

    Deborah Feldman, Exodus, Revisited
    (Plume Books)

    “A Hasidic woman delivers a deeper explanation of why she left her Orthodox community … A satisfying story of self-discovery.”
    –Kirkus

    Stephon Alexander, Fear of a Black Universe: An Outsider's Guide to the Future of Physics

    Stephon Alexander, Fear of a Black Universe
    (Basic Books)

    “Lush with ideas and bold in its analysis of the status quo, this book reorients our view of science and the universe.”
    -Kirkus

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