Last week was fiction heavy, and today we have a slew of the other side of the coin: many nonfiction riches await. Isaac Fitzeraldâs study of Johnny Appleseed is available, as well as Barry Walterâs comprehensive survey of LGBTQ music over the past 60 years. Essays, and histories, and memories all abound. In fiction, a new reissue by Elaine Kraf is out today, as well as Vanessa Huaâs novel, Coyoteland. Read on for the full list, and happy Tuesday! * Isaac Fitzgerald, American Rambler: Walking the Trail of Johnny Appleseed (Knopf) âI loved this book. It felt like hanging out with a friend.â âEthan Hawke Vanessa Hua, Coyoteland (Flatiron) âA tremendous, mesmerizing gift from this one-of-a-kind storyteller.â âR.O. Kwon Barry Walters, Mighty Real: A History of LGBTQ Music, 1969-2000 (Viking) âUplifting, endlessly entertaining, and informative.â âKirkus Elaine Kraf, Memory House (Modern Library) âReaders will find it an impressive exploration of an artistâs inner life.â âPublishers Weekly Rick Ross, Renaissance of a Boss: Notes From a Creative Reawakening (Hanover Square Press) âA powerful guide, packed with his tools and secrets to staying inspired.â âFrom the Publisher Bindu Bansinath, Men Like Ours (Bloomsbury) âBansinath is a gifted writer of close quarters, revealing in spare prose just how unsightly and how beautiful people can be up close.â âBrandon Taylor Joanna Stern, I Am Not a Robot: My Year Using AI to Do (Almost) Everything (Harper Business) âA highly personal portrait of what it feels like to stand on the edge of technological transformation.â âKirkus Keith Waldrop, Light While There is Light (NYRB) âAn instant eccentric classic.â âJaimy Gordon Guy Cuthbertson, Lady C: The Long, Sensational Life of Lady Chatterlyâs Lover (Yale University Press) âReaders will come away with a greater appreciation for the novel.â âPublishers Weekly Uchenna Awoke, A Siege of Owls (Catapult) âAwoke weaves his immersive and lyrical tale with folklore and vivid scenes of real-world violence. This one hits hard.â âPublishers Weekly H.W. Brands, American Patriarch: The Life of George Washington (Doubleday) âBrands documents just how extraordinaryâand essentialâGeorge Washington was and remains.â âJustin Vaughn Annakeara Stinson, Nerve Damage (Knopf) âStinsonâs voice, her prose, is a feast. I genuinely donât understand how it all works so well.â âKaveh Akbar MaĂŻa Hruska, trans. by Sam Taylor, Kafkaesque: From Jorge Luis Borges to Primo Levi, Ten Writers Who Translated Kafka and Transformed Twentieth-Century Literature (Ecco) âA thoughtful, digressive and at times sensuous production. It thrives on Kafkaâs sheer variety.â âLiterary Review Louise Wallace, Ash (Mariner) âAs poetic as it is experimental, Ash is one womanâs bold attempt to create a novel way to talk about the unprecedented.â âKatie Yee Devin Johnston, Bright Thorn: Poems 2000-2026 (FSG) âHistorical, philosophical, closely observational, and rooted evenly in the deep poetic past and the daily rhythms of American life, these poems open the world to imaginative scrutiny.â âFrom the publisher Tove Ditlevsen, trans. by Sophia Hersi Smith and Jennifer Russell, Vilhelmâs Room (FSG) âAching and accomplished ⊠A haunting and deeply felt portrayal of intimate catastrophe.â âPublishers Weekly Dimitry Elias LĂ©ger, Death of the Soccer God (MCD) âDimitry Elias LĂ©ger delivers a radiant, raucous, and unforgettable novel.â âRowan Ricardo Phillips Adrian Goldsworthy, Athens and Sparta: The Rivalry that Shaped Ancient Greece (Basic Books) âA propulsive, large-scale history of ancient Greece, written with an authority to rival Thucydides.â âKirkus Sarah Wang, New Skin (Little Brown) âMirthfully and mercilessly abject, New Skin is a page-turner that feels equal parts cinematic romp and serrated analysis of some of the most important issues of our day.â âMaggie Nelson Emma Garman, The Kindness of Strangers (Summit Books) âVivid and entertaining, and powered by such a wonderfully dry wit.â âThe Times
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