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16 New Books to Watch For in November - The New York Times

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Though details are scant, this is shaping up to be the biggest book of the year. We know it’s the first of a projected two-volume project and encompasses the former president’s campaign and early years in the White House. Crown is printing 3 million copies, and booksellers are hoping the book will offset a string of difficult months since the pandemic hit.

Life as we knew it has come to an end: Technology has stopped working, a before-and-after moment that gives this novel its title. Sandy, who used to be a Hollywood screenwriter, now lives in Maine alongside his sister in a farming collective. A figure from their past shows up after an improbable cross-country journey (10 months on the road in a nuclear-powered tunnel digger), threatening their post-Arrest life.

Krauss, the author of such novels as “Great House” and “The History of Love,” returns with a story collection that poses questions about intimacy, family and power.

Although Hazzard is best remembered for her novels “The Transit of Venus” and “The Great Fire,” her shorter pieces helped propel her to literary stardom. This collection includes her first published story, “Harold,” which she wrote when she was a dissatisfied U.N. employee and sent to The New Yorker. One character’s remark in a later story, “The Flowers of Sorrow,” could be a neat summary of Hazzard’s austere, elegant work: “We should remember that sorrow does produce flowers of its own. It is a misunderstanding always to look for joy.”

The Norwegian master of crime fiction — our columnist has said that no one “makes my skin crawl like Nesbo” — homes in on two brothers straining under a family secret.

In the 1930s, an Englishman, Maurice Wilson — a traumatized veteran of the Great War — decided he would fly to Mount Everest, crash-land on the slopes and climb to the summit alone. (Never mind that he was a novice pilot and had never climbed a mountain.) It’s not a spoiler to say that things didn’t go well, but Caesar puts the man, and his quest, in historical context.

A longtime international correspondent for The Times, Walsh covered and lived in Pakistan for nearly a decade before the government kicked him out in 2013. Here he sketches a portrait of the country based on the lives of nine people, including the country’s founder, Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

For years, members of the San Carlos Apache tribe have been fighting to preserve this copper-rich land from mining. Redniss, a writer and artist, blends reporting and illustration to chronicle the ongoing fight in southern Arizona, drawing on oral histories, anthropological accounts and more.

Growing up in an ultra-Orthodox Brooklyn neighborhood, Ari, the teenage protagonist of this debut novel, spends lonely years studying. But a sudden move to a wealthy Florida suburb — where “everyone has a Chagall” — causes him to reconsider his faith and values.

This is a comprehensive biography of Rich, who, when she died in 2012, was one of the most acclaimed poets of her generation and a face of American feminism. Holladay spent years researching the book, and identifies Rich’s endless self-reinvention as the central theme of her work: “The absence of a knowable self was her deepest wound and her greatest prod.”

The author, a professor of Italian history, situates President Trump in a long line of dictators across the world, from Libya’s Muammar el-Qaddafi to Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

Two parents search for their son, an actor who they worry has become homeless, which leads them to an activist group in Minneapolis that is more dangerous than it first appears.

Harris, the author of best-selling novels such as “Munich” and “Fatherland,” returns to familiar territory. This story is focused on the V2 — which, when it was launched in 1944, was among the world’s first long-range guided ballistic missiles — and Germany’s last-ditch effort to win the war.

In poor communities across the U.S., including Flowers’s hometown in Alabama, too many Americans lack a basic dignity — as she puts it, “the right to flush and forget.” Without a way to remove sewage from their homes, people live in filth. The author, a 2020 MacArthur Grant winner, delves into the racial and economic factors that keep people living in unsanitary conditions, and traces her own path as an activist.

As an undergraduate at Harvard, Cooper became obsessed with the unsolved murder of Jane Britton, an anthropology student there, in 1969. As Cooper was digging, new D.N.A. analysis eventually identified a suspect, but the real thrills of the story are the twists and turns that kept the killing a mystery for decades.

Ivy, the narrator of this debut novel, spent her early years in China with her grandmother before coming to the United States, and she’s a thief and an excellent liar. Dark impulses haunt her throughout her life and eventually jeopardize what she wants most: acceptance into a wealthy, WASPy East Coast family.

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16 New Books to Watch For in November - The New York Times
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