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March 2024 Book Marks - Lee Woodruff
In like a lion and out like a lamb. That’s always been the saying about the month of March. And while I’m dredging up quaint sayings, how about a riddle? What’s the only day of the year that is also a command? Cue the drumroll….“March Fourth.” Enough with the cheesy one-liners, let’s turn our attention to some great reads for March, and its one heck of a bonanza time of year for storytellers. There’s something for everyone on the shelves of the libraries and bookstores waiting for you right now. Fiction: After Annie by Anna Quindlen Annie Brown is making dinner in the kitchen when she asks her husband to fetch her an aspirin for a headache. A few minutes later, she’d dead of an aneurism, leaving four young children and a grieving husband who’s still madly in love with her. Everyone is lost without Annie, including her oldest friend, whose demons and addictions reappear without her anchor. Annie’s daughter Ali moves into the void, forced to grow up by her mother’s loss as she confronts the truths involved in adulthood. And yet in the first year of sorrow and tiny triumphs, each of them begins to understand that the legacy their mother left is the knowledge of how to move forward into the “after” part of life. One of my favorite writers of all time, Quindlen’s story gives us hope, even in the face of the most unimaginable loss. Historical Fiction: Finding Margaret Fuller by Allison Pataki Pataki has a knack for unearthing incredibly influential but overlooked historical female characters and breathing life into them. In her newest book, she tackles one of the “great figures in literary and social history whom we never study.” As one of the “Transcendalists,” a group of artists, writers and thinkers centered around Concord and Cambridge, Massachusetts, Margaret Fuller was one of the few women able (as in allowed) to intellectually hang with the likes of Emerson, Thoreau, Louisa May Alcott, and other thinkers of her time. When she moves to New York City to hang out with Poe, Greeley and Hawthorne, she enters another elite world. It’s believed that character Hester Prynne, in the “The Scarlett Letter,” is based on Fuller’s modern, unconventional personality, as she chose to have a child out of wedlock and routinely travelled abroad unaccompanied and unafraid. Fuller embodies the early incarnation of what would later grow into the woman’s movement, although most aspects of her life have since been forgotten. While she died tragically in a shipwreck, the legacy she left is brilliantly brought to life by Pataki, who places you inside Fuller’s head and heart. Memoir: Combat Love by Alisyn Camerota If you didn’t catch CNN anchor Alisyn Camerota’s novel “Amanda Wakes Up,” there’s still time. And while that novel was based on aspects of her experience in morning TV, this book is a deep, funny, poignant and hugely self-aware coming of age memoir about family, heartbreak, and what happens when the ones you love aren’t always there for you. Growing up on the Jersey Shore in the years where punk rock was hot and Springsteen was “the other choice,” Camerota chronicles her attraction to the crazy, nihilistic and hard-driving world around a local band called “Shrapnel.” As a diehard groupie, she relays her near misses with sex, violence, drugs and serious rock and roll at some of NY’s most infamous clubs. But at its heart, it’s the story of a single mother and daughter, who love, fight, feign indifference and end up with their own shrapnel in a family where the foundations have crumbled with her father’s departure. A writer with a bold yet self-deprecating voice, she chronicles what it means to search for home and happiness. Fiction: Blank by Zibby Owens Zibby Owens is everywhere and readers are better for it. Her podcast, publishing imprint, and bookstore highlight the work of both debut and NYT Bestselling icons. She has published a memoir and children’s book, and this month she debuts her first novel, which has been her dream for a long time. With her bird’s eye view, she takes a look inside the publishing industry and behind the curtain of the machine to illuminate the challenges that both authors and the industry face in the world of everything, all at once. Pippa Jones turned in her second book after a successful first novel, but she’s told she needs to scrap it because it’s too similar to a book coming out by a blockbuster writer. Now her confidence and creativity are frozen and she’s staring at a blank page. And she’s already spent the advance! The solution to a new book lies in an idea from her son, which sends her on a wild writing adventure that will teach her more about career, marriage, family and friends than sitting around and writing in a quiet room ever could. Publisher Zibby Owens has entered the book world with a splash and this debut novel follows suit. Fiction: A Great Country by Shilpi Somaya Gowda This engrossing novel takes you deep in the heart of the American immigrant experience, looking at how we define belonging with a tale about race, class, wealth, caste and family dynamics. Twenty years ago, the Shah parents immigrated to America and climbed their way up the ladder to a respectable and prosperous life in Irvine, CA. When they decide to move to the tony gated community of Pacific Hills, with its ocean views and landscaped lawns, things begin to go sideways. Their 12-year-old son is arrested for a harmless mistake, and everything that unwinds from that one pivotal moment will change how they see themselves, how they look at their dreams and what the cost of ambition can be. This book entertains as well as makes you think about the myths around “model minorities,” and the price of the American dream for all of us. Fiction: North Woods by Daniel Mason Imagine a house as the primary character in a novel that goes from Colonial times to […]
Lee Woodruff