Saturday, February 16, 2013

Notable New Book Releases | Feb. 10 - Feb. 16


I'm really excited about a few books that were released last week. I look forward to reading each one of them. The new releases that caught my eye this week are:

Maggot Moon by Sally Gardner
February 12th 2013 by Candlewick

In Sally Gardner’s stunning novel, set in a ruthless regime, an unlikely teenager risks all to expose the truth about a heralded moon landing.

What if the football hadn’t gone over the wall. On the other side of the wall there is a dark secret. And the devil. And the Moon Man. And the Motherland doesn’t want anyone to know. But Standish Treadwell — who has different-colored eyes, who can’t read, can’t write, Standish Treadwell isn’t bright — sees things differently than the rest of the "train-track thinkers." So when Standish and his only friend and neighbor, Hector, make their way to the other side of the wall, they see what the Motherland has been hiding. And it’s big...One hundred very short chapters, told in an utterly original first-person voice, propel readers through a narrative that is by turns gripping and darkly humorous, bleak and chilling, tender and transporting.



Ghostman by Roger Hobbs
February 12th 2013 by Knopf

Stunningly dark, hugely intelligent and thoroughly addictive, Ghostman announces the arrival of an exciting and highly distinctive novelist.

When a casino robbery in Atlantic City goes horribly awry, the man who orchestrated it is obliged to call in a favor from someone who’s occasionally called Jack. While it’s doubtful that anyone knows his actual name or anything at all about his true identity, or even if he’s still alive, he’s in his mid-thirties and lives completely off the grid, a criminal’s criminal who does entirely as he pleases and is almost impossible to get in touch with. But within hours a private jet is flying this exceptionally experienced fixer and cleaner-upper from Seattle to New Jersey and right into a spectacular mess: one heister dead in the parking lot, another winged but on the run, the shooter a complete mystery, the $1.2 million in freshly printed bills god knows where and the FBI already waiting for Jack at the airport, to be joined shortly by other extremely interested and elusive parties. He has only forty-eight hours until the twice-stolen cash literally explodes, taking with it the wider, byzantine ambitions behind the theft. To contend with all this will require every gram of his skill, ingenuity and self-protective instincts, especially when offense and defense soon become meaningless terms. And as he maneuvers these exceedingly slippery slopes, he relives the botched bank robbery in Kuala Lumpur five years earlier that has now landed him this unwanted new assignment.

From its riveting opening pages, Ghostman effortlessly pulls the reader into Jack’s refined and peculiar world—and the sophisticated shadowboxing grows ever more intense as he moves, hour by hour, toward a constantly reimprovised solution. With a quicksilver plot, gripping prose and masterly expertise, Roger Hobbs has given us a novel that will immediately place him in the company of our most esteemed crime writers.



American Elsewhere by Robert Jackson Bennett
February 12th 2013 by Orbit

Some places are too good to be true.

Under a pink moon, there is a perfect little town not found on any map.

In that town, there are quiet streets lined with pretty houses, houses that conceal the strangest things.

After a couple years of hard traveling, ex-cop Mona Bright inherits her long-dead mother's home in Wink, New Mexico. And the closer Mona gets to her mother's past, the more she understands that the people of Wink are very, very different ...

From one of our most talented and original new literary voices comes the next great American supernatural novel: a work that explores the dark dimensions of the hometowns and the neighbors we thought we knew.



Did any of these books make it on to your shelf this week? Be sure to let me know what books you were excited about this week!

2 comments:

  1. I don't understand what Maggot Moon is supposed to be about. And I have to say, all three descriptions turn me away when they tell me how the book is supposed to make me feel, or that use fluff to talk up the author. "gripping, bleak, chilling, tender", "riveting opening pages, a novel that will immediately place him in the company of our most esteemed crime writers", "one of our most talented and original new literary voices comes the next great American supernatural novel"

    Let me decide for myself! :P I don't think I'll be picking up any of these.

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  2. Haha. Blurbs. :P I heard about Maggot Moon from Publisher's Weekly. They said it was a "novel about a boy in a totalitarian society who risks everything in the name of friendship". I'm a sucker for loyal friends and dystopian societies. What can I say. :D

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