By Bookazine Blogger Carissa Law Word has it, some of the most illustrious names in the literary sphere will be releasing new work, from Sally Rooney and Amor Towles to Yuval Noah Harari. These highly anticipated novels veritably run the gamut: there is your emotionally incontinent romance, a particularly zany variety of children’s book, and a certain occult je ne sais quoi—inter alia. |
Beautiful World, Where are You by Sally RooneySeptember 1st, 2021 |
After the meteoric rise from Normal People that launched her into the stratosphere of pop-lit pantheons, Sally Rooney has penned another novel with a rhetorical title—Beautiful World, Where Are You. From the synopsis offered by the publisher, Rooney seems to have diverged from the interiorly rich, will-they-won't-they love story, to a philosophical dialectic thread through fictitious characters, on how two people, in the thick of adolescent metamorphosis, find beauty in a messy world. |
A Slow Fire Burning by Paula HawkinsAugust 31st, 2021 |
A Slow Fire Burning is a slow, by no means dull, burn; a tundra of bleak, roiling resentment tumbling from Hawkins’ previous books, The Girl on the Train and Into the Water. Then as now, the cathecting revenge episodes are indubitably the hallmarks of her thrillers on deceit, murder, and no one, not even Gillian Flynn, should expect less. |
Apples Never Fall by Liane MoriartySeptember 14th, 2021 |
Is love a blessing or a curse, a tonic or a dagger? Liane Moriarty intermittently flips the coin, or one could say her command for words necessitates it to stay put, in an interminable spin. It is because of this prowess that Moriarty quarried deep into the cobweb of marriage, family—without getting ensnared herself. |
The Man Who Died Twice by Richard OsmanSeptember 16th, 2021 |
Second not in place but sequence, The Man Who Died Twice is just as gripping as the first in Richard Osman’s mystery-solving quartet. Members of the Thursday Murder Club, by chance or design, are enlisted to save an old friend who needs their help, bad. Osman’s galloping plot, as if wheezed out unvarnished from his frontal lobe, describes essentially, how not to keel over. |
Silverview by John Le CarreOctober 14th, 2021 |
John Le Carre was a spy novel writer par excellence, and so it came as a pleasant surprise when we caught wind of his new novel. To be released in October, Silverview is Le Carre’s 26th and final touch to his oeuvre, featuring the Secret Intelligence Service, a bookseller and a Polish émigré. The crux of the book, quoting a blurb, is “an encounter between innocence and experience and between public duty and private morals." |
The Lincoln Highway by Amor TowlesOctober 5th, 2021 |
Amor Towles’ earlier works were set in late 1930s Manhattan and Bolshevik Russia. With the arrival of the Lincoln Highway, set in 50s America, it is fair to say Amor Towles has a tendency to elegize. That is not to say his work is derivative, only to posit this tendency, as it were, bodes better for the imagination. Slated for publication in October, the novel retains the immersive sense of place consistent in Towles’ writing, while providing an altogether new set of characters riding on a consequential left turn. |
Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony DoerrSeptember 28th, 2021 |
For a species like us that relies on myth for self-preservation, Anthony Doerr’s Cloud Cuckoo Land offers a sizable dose of catharsis. As it follows the protagonists across different timelines, all united by a single copy of an ancient text, Doerr affirms our interconnectedness, and attaches an apologia for the chimerical that all but declaimed the power—of stories passed down. |
Sapiens Graphic History Vol 2 by Yuval Noah HarariNovember 2nd, 2021 |
Based on Yuval Noah Harari's internationally bestselling phenomenon, the graphic format is an alternate portal by which readers explore the past through an intellectual and artistic lens. With the ripening neoplasm of atomizing information, Harari parses knotted webs and synthesizes a larger truth by presenting a diorama of our civilization. |
Will by Will Smith with Mark MansonNovember 9th, 2021 |
Written in collaboration with self-help phenomenon Mark Manson, Smith’s memoir is a triumph of will (no pun intended). Whether you’re a fan of Will Smith or not has no bearing on what you can extract from this awe-inspiring autobiography, and his at times corny epiphanies find their validation in his life-affirming tales. |
Big Panda and Tiny Dragon by James NorburyOctober 20th, 2021 |
Inspired by Buddhist philosophy, Big Panda and Tiny Dragon is a souffle of contentment. Images of blooming meadows and verses that swell and then ebb, Norbury assays to waylay readers mindlessly careening in the attention economy. |
The Christmas Pig by JK RowlingOctober 12th, 2021 |
Returning with an iridescent story, JK Rowling traces the journey of Jack in locating his lost companion during the most festive time of the year. Laden with illustrations of charming spreads and decorative art, The Christmas Pig is bound to make its way into children’s yearning hearts. |
Daughter of the Deep by Rick RiordanOctober 10th, 2021 |
The author of Percy Jackson moved his set to the underworld, following a female protagonist sent on a weekend trial at sea. With impeccable pacing and panache, Rick Riordan’s new novel has the scent of yet another bestseller. |
Pony by RJ PalacioSeptember 28th, 2021 |
Quixotic was the archetypal American hero, goes the credo. RJ Palacio precisely presents the hero we’re familiar with, male, that is, who undertakes a quest for the sake of transcendental love. But far from being an insipid rehash, it has a bent that produces a transmogrifying effect, which, in part, can be imputed to the touch of magic introduced. |
The 143-Storey Treehouse by Andy GriffithsOctober 19th, 2021 |
We know Andy and Terry’s treehouse is different from your regular treehouse in one or two ways: a wrecking ball, a toffee apple orchard, a cavernous cave with a veritable dragon, etc.We don’t know the reasoning behind the numbers chosen for their book titles. But maybe that is the point. |
Cat Kid Comic Club #2 Perspectives by Dav PilkeyNovember 30th, 2021 |
In this continuation of the Cat Kid Comic Club, the award-winning author and illustrator Dav Pilkey conscripts a bricolage of techniques—acrylic paints, colored pencils, Japanese calligraphy, photography, collage, gouache, watercolors—to elucidate every frog’s perspective. Paired with his droll humor and elliptical storytelling, readers will be roped into a rapturous tailspin. |
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15 Most Anticipated Books for the Second Half of 2021
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