Fiction A to Z
December 2022

Recent Releases
The Lindbergh Nanny
by Mariah Fredericks

Hopewell, New Jersey, 1932: Nanny Betty Gow is horrifed to discover that her young charge, Charlie, is missing. She can only hope it's another of his father's strange pranks (as history records, unfortunately it isn't).

Read it for: Betty's wrenching first-person narration vividly conveys her love for Charlie,  the palpable fear for his safety, and the gnawing distrust that someone close at hand is responsible.

For fans of: Historical mysteries with a true crime edge.
The Night Ship
by Jess Kidd

Cast adrift: The lives of motherless children unfold in parallel narratives on an island off Western Australia's coast. In 1629, Mayken (disguised as a boy) navigates the brutal aftermath of a Dutch shipwreck. In 1989, Gil grieves his mother's death as local tensions escalate.

Take a taste: "The greatest shame of humankind is the failure of the strong to protect the weak."

Reviewers say:  A "well-researched, spellbindingly dark and folklore-infused novel.... Recommended especially to Alma Katsu's fans" (Booklist).
Dinosaurs
by Lydia Millet

What happens: Wealthy but brokenhearted Gil takes refuge in Arizona, where the activities of nearby neighbors (and desert wildlife) pique his interest. Although the novel explores themes of human cruelty (bullying, animal violence), its ending is affirming, joyful, and moving. 

Read it for: a leisurely-paced, hopeful story with a likeable protagonist whose second act may be the best one yet.

Try this next: Matthew Quick's We Are the Light.
None of This Would Have Happened If Prince Were Alive
by Carolyn Prusa

Meet: Ramona, would-be superwoman, juggling a demanding job while toilet training a toddler and fielding her mother's ongoing criticism.  And that's before finding out her husband is unfaithful and there's an actual Category 4 hurricane on the way.

Read it for: Peak Gen X pop culture asides and relatable laugh-'til-you-cry scenes of ridiculous problem solving.
When Franny Stands Up
by Eden Robins

Calling all Marvelous Mrs. Maisel fans: Franny grows up in 1950s Chicago, feeling out of place both as a Jewish girl and within a family where trauma is very personal.

What happens: performing stand-up gives Franny (and her audience) a shared space to address difficult topics -- racism, war, trauma, guilt, gender identity and sexuality -- with honesty, warmth, and laughter.
 
Signal Fires
by Dani Shapiro

What it's about: A car crash leaves one teen dead and two siblings divided by a secret. The novel moves from era to era, back and forth in time, assembling a cast of characters who must first reconcile inner demons before connecting with others.

Read it for: richly developed, complex characters; a moving, thoughtful meditation on what gives life meaning.

Try this next: A Little Hope by Ethan Joella
Visit Arlington Public Library to discover more great books!
Arlington Public Library
1015 N Quincy St
Arlington, Virginia 22201
703-228-5990

https://library.arlingtonva.us/