
This
Alex Award winning story is about June, an awkward, intelligent fourteen-year-old girl who adored her uncle Finn. The story is told from June’s point of view. June is a loner who likes to walk in the woods and pretend she’s living in the Middle Ages. The novel explores her relationships with Finn, her often difficult older sister, and Finn’s boyfriend Toby whom she gets to know and secretly befriends after Finn dies of AIDS. I don’t think I will ever forget this wonderfully unique novel. A friend told me it was the best book she read last year, and I wonder if I will discover one I like more this year. I kind of doubt it.
| posted Apr 3, 2013 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

In the midst of a blustery Minnesota winter, reading indoors where it's warm and cozy is hard to beat. Consider creating a book list of your favorite titles (or limit your list to a theme or category) on
Bookspace -- it's so easy. Here's a list entitled
Books Way Too Good to Miss. Avid readers will enjoy your suggestions during
Winter Jackets.
| posted Feb 10, 2013 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

In 2002 one hundred authors from 54 countries were asked to name their top 10 works of fiction of all time. The result is this compilation of the 100 Best Books of All Time. I have read only 23 of these titles so I have some catching up to do. I was surprised to see Pippi Longstocking on this
list but Norwegian Book Clubs came up with the idea to do the compilation so perhaps I shouldn't be too surprised. Take a look and see how many you have read (so far). By the way, if you click on the Print icon, you can see the 100 titles at one time.
| posted Jan 16, 2013 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

Edina native Todd M. Johnson will read from his accomplished debut novel
The Deposit Slip tomorrow night (January 8) at 7:00 p.m. at the Ridgedale Library. Publisher's Weekly says, "With an irresistible set-up, suspense, a subtle love triangle, strong dialogue, characters, and a focused plot, Johnson makes a strong first literary case." Books will be available for purchase and signing.
| posted Jan 7, 2013 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

A book is always a thoughtful gift. But it's sometimes confusing to wander around a bookstore. The New York Times can help. They have compiled a
Holiday Gift Guide of this year's notable fiction, poetry and nonfiction, selected by the editors of the New York Times Book Review. Still unsure what to buy? Librarians have great suggestions for you. Just ask... we're happy to help. Also check out Bookspace's
What We're Reading for even more book ideas.
| posted Nov 27, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

Hilary Mantel made history yesterday. She was the first woman and the only Briton to win the Booker Prize twice. Ms. Mantel won her second Booker for
Bring Up the Bodies. She won her first in 2009 for
Wolf Hall.
| posted Oct 17, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

Acclaimed author
Larry Watson will speak at the Ridgedale Library on Saturday, October 6th at 1:00. I read and very much enjoyed two of his novels
Montana, 1948 and his latest
American Boy. Mr. Watson creates characters and stories that are impossible to forget. So begins David Hayden's story of what happened in Montana in 1948: "From the summer of my twelfth year I carry a series of images more vivid and lasting than any others of my boyhood and indelible beyond all attempts the years make to erase or fade them...."
Please join us on October 6th to meet Larry Watson.
| posted Sep 20, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

I'm a big fan of
Walter Mosley's Easy Rawlins mysteries (most famously,
Devil in a Blue Dress) and so I was nervous picking up a novel that is not one his Noir detective stories. But Mosley can tell just about any story and keep you engaged and he succeeds with
The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey. Ptolemy Grey is 91, in the early stages of dementia and in need of settling some very important business. Enter seventeen year old Robyn, and young woman taken in by Ptolemy's extended family who enters into a helpful and challenging relationship with the old man. As always, Mosley's characters are incredibly interesting with all the flaws and beauties of real people. This is not a shoot 'em up edge-of-your-seat novel, but there is some shooting and you'll care enough for Ptolemy to remain on the edge of your seat till the last page. Another great one from a great African-American novelist.
| posted Aug 27, 2012 by David Lane |
Category: Fiction |

"The Women's National Book Association has announced
Ann Patchett as the winner of the 2012-2013 WNBA Award. The award is presented by WNBA to a living American woman who derives part or all of her income from books or the allied arts and has done meritorious work in the world of books beyond the duties or responsibilities of her profession or occupation. Patchett, in addition to authoring a number of bestselling books, opened Parnassus Books in Nashville in 2011." - Publishers Weekly.
Read more about Ann Patchett and her award.
| posted Aug 16, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

Beloved Irish author
Maeve Binchy died today at age 72. Her first novel
Light a Penny Candle was published in 1982. Read more
here. Fans may want to watch this
video on Maeve's philosophy of life.
| posted Jul 31, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

I finally found the time to read that most acclaimed novel by Canadian master
Robertson Davies,
'Fifth Business'. It was a thoroughly engaging and deeply satisfying read. It is the story of the life of the narrator, Dunstan Ramsay, a retired school master who relates his experiences from early childhood to the present. We meet a host of wonderfully told characters engaged in any number of mild and intense encounters, and follow Dunstan’s development as an insightful but conflicted man. All of the story lines – from small town gossip and meanness, to the terror of World War I, to the intricacies of the magician’s craft, to unrequited love – draw you in with wonder and exquisite writing. I plan to read both sequels in this series, known as The Deptford Trilogy.
| posted Jul 20, 2012 by David Lane |
Category: Fiction |
Nora Ephron died yesterday at age 71. I love her movies (When Harry Met Sally, Sleepless in Seattle, and Julie & Julia) and her 1983 novel
Heartburn is a personal favorite. Nora
Ephron's wit made this story delightful even though it's based on Nora's marriage and divorce from Watergate journalist Carl Bernstein. She will be missed tremendously. Read more about Nora
Ephron here. And here are Nora's
Must Reads.
| posted Jun 27, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

“A fictional biography whose subject in the beginning is a sixteen-year-old boy in the Elizabethan era and in the end -- three hundred years later -- is a thirty-six-year-old woman.” Okay, so would you pick up a book based on this summary? I was actually intrigued by the summary of
Orlando, especially by its being written by
Virginia Woolf. This is a wonderfully fun novel and a wild ride through four centuries, exploring the roles of men and women at different eras and the social mores of those times. Woolf cleverly matches her prose style to the literary style of the period in which Orlando lives, creating always-changing moods and sheer delight for the reader. I have read that the novel is based in part on Woolf’s life with her lover Vita
Sackville-West, and that may be. But most of all, this book is just plain fun to read. A great introduction to an incredibly talented author.
| posted Jun 18, 2012 by David Lane |
Category: Fiction |

One of our greatest writers,
Ray Bradbury, died yesterday at age 91. He wrote more than 27 novels and 600 short stories.
“You must write every single day of your life... You must lurk in libraries and climb the stacks like ladders to sniff books like perfumes and wear books like hats upon your crazy heads... may you be in love every day for the next 20,000 days. And out of that love, remake a world.” ~ Ray Bradbury
And more on Ray Bradbury and libraries: http://nationalbook.tumblr.com/post/24555708196/remembering-ray-bradbury-1920-2012
| posted Jun 6, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

The children's Carnegie Medal was established in 1936. This June at the American Library Association's annual conference the first winners of the Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction will be announced.
The three finalists for Fiction are
The Forgotten Waltz by Anne Enright,
Lost Memory of Skin by Russell Banks, and
Swamplandia! by Karen Russell. Find the nonfiction finalists
here. The selection committee includes chair Nancy Pearl of
Book Lust fame. How exciting to have Carnegie Medals for both adult and children's literature!
| posted May 27, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

Mexican novelist and essayist
Carlos Fuentes died May 15 at the age of 83. In his obituary, The New York Times described him as "one of the most admired writers in the Spanish-speaking world." Fuentes wrote
The Old Gringo in 1985, and his latest work
Destiny and Desire was published in 2011.
| posted May 20, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: Fiction |

Book Tours at the MIA! These are "lively discussions of works of art related to popular books." Drop in Tuesday mornings at 11:30 or Thursday evenings at 6:30 for a free docent tour. Some of the fiction titles coming up for tours are
Dreams of Joy (June),
Luncheon of the Boating Party (August),
Cutting for Stone (October) and
Madonnas of Leningrad (December). Past titles also can be explored when you arrange a private tour with the MIA. For more information, please read
here.
| posted May 5, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: fiction |

I’ve just now finished this book and want to write this before the experience subsides. One reviewer of
As God Commands, the award-winning novel by Italian author
Niccolo Ammaniti, said “If the
Coen brothers ever wanted to go Italian,
this’d be prime adaptation material.” Indeed. This is a brutal, sometimes darkly humorous novel of three men and one man’s son from the underside of society, bleeding anger and scheming on ways to make something of their lives.
Ammaniti, also the author of the brilliant suspense novel
I’m Not Scared, describes characters, places and circumstances with a sense of foreboding and reality that cannot be denied. I stopped halfway through, horrified by an event in the story, and decided to return it unread the following morning. But at the library I picked it up just to read to the end of that page and wound up ignoring my responsibilities and reading the whole damned book in one long sitting. For better or for worse, this is what a great book can do.
| posted May 3, 2012 by David L. |
Category: fiction |

The 2012 Pulitzer Prizes were announced this week, but alas, no prize was awarded for Fiction. This has not happened since 1977. The jurors read some 300 books but none was chosen for the coveted prize. A few came close: read
more about it.
BookSpace has a list of the
Pulitzer Prize winners in fiction, nonfiction and poetry for the past ten years.
| posted Apr 18, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: fiction |

Dora Saint, known to millions of readers as
Miss Read, died April 7 at the age of 98. The first Miss Read novel,
Village School, was published in 1955. "In the world of Miss Read, almost no problem was so great that it couldn’t be solved by a glass of milk, a good cup of tea and the passage of time," says the Washington Post.
| posted Apr 18, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: fiction |

Even though spy thrillers are not my cup of tea, I took a chance with
The Expats by Chris
Pavone. Kate Moore is a CIA agent and her husband Dexter does not know that little tidbit about his wife. Dexter, a banking security consultant, announces they must move to Luxembourg. Kate is happy to leave behind her undercover job and devote herself to their two young sons. However, she begins to suspiciously view their new friends in Luxembourg and soon she even questions her husband's actions. Kate investigates and the plot becomes more complicated. She enjoys being back in spy mode but things come to a feverish climax as Kate and Dexter manage so many deceptions. Do they even know each other?
Pavone's debut novel is a very entertaining page-turner.
| posted Mar 31, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: fiction |

If you’re one of the many adults who are hooked on
The Hunger Games, you’ll find some similar reading ideas on our new
If You Liked...The Hunger Games book list.
Or maybe you have a reader too young for this dark story?
KidLinks provides great suggestions with
If You Like The Hunger Games for the under 12 set.
| posted Mar 28, 2012 by Sharon M. |
Category: fiction |
The Yiddish Policemen’s Union and
The Adventures of Kavalier and Clay are two of my favorite novels by one of my favorite authors,
Michael Chabon. My latest foray was into
Gentlemen of the Road, a rollicking, old-style adventure that kept me both amused and engaged. I am blown away by
Chabon's breadth of style and creativity. This novel reads like those childhood adventures (Arabian Nights, Adventures of Tin-Tin) you read late into the night with a flashlight. Travel with
Zelikman, a cranky physician with a strange taste in hats, and ex-soldier
Amram, a beast of a man responsible for most of the clever (often hilarious) quips, as they make their rootless way through the Caucasus Mountains, circa A.D. 950. Historical fiction? More like hysterical fiction!
| posted Mar 12, 2012 by David L. |
Category: fiction |

It’s hard to believe that it’s been 20 years since I read
Gloria Naylor's wonderful novel, “
The Women of Brewster Place.” Now I’ve had the hard pleasure of reading an equally powerful story by an author deserving of more recognition,
Stewart O'Nan . "
Everyday People” is the story of an African-American neighborhood in Pittsburg, one that has lost its center and suffers the urban decay plaguing too many of our minority-intensive communities. The story follows the lives of a half dozen characters ranging from a wheelchair-bound graffiti artist to an elderly woman who’s lost children to violence, to a young woman struggling to balance motherhood with college to an Italian ice-cream van driver who has served the neighborhood for decades.
O’Nan has an uncanny ability to lend reality to the characters he invents. I missed them all for a week after finishing the book. The last line of this book, by the way, is one of the best I’ve read in years.
| posted Feb 9, 2012 by David L. |
Category: fiction |

USA Today recently reported that Minneapolis is the third most literate city in the country (Washington D.C. and Seattle are #1 and #2). Our wonderful libraries and bookstores must take some credit!
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2011-01-10-literary10_ST_N.htm Let's see Minneapolis take the #1 spot next time!
| posted Jan 29, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: fiction |

John Barron of the Chicago Sunday Sun-Times says of Chad
Harbach's novel
The Art of Fielding, "It's hard to figure who wouldn't take to this captivating, breezy debut... it has it all: love, the search for identity, redemption, a superbly drawn setting, engaging characters...and baseball." It's been compared to John Irving's
The World According to Garp (which piqued my interest as
Garp remains one of my all-time favorite novels). Ten years in the writing, The Art of Fielding brought
Harbach a whopping $665,000 advance. It's a character-driven novel set at a fictional Wisconsin college. I
loved the first half. Then
Harbach lost his way and my interest waned. Where was this book going, I wondered? I wasn't emotionally engaged at its dramatic and tear-jerking ending. Tighter editing was sorely needed (the book goes on much too long at 512 pages).
Harbach's talent is evident but I hope he finds a new editor.
| posted Jan 17, 2012 by Kim B. |
Category: fiction |