new york times notable fiction books of 2010
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New York Times Notable Fiction Books of 2010. Check one out!. American Subversive By David Goodwillie. “A bombing unites a blogger and a beautiful ecoterrorist in this literary thriller, an exploration of what motivates radicalism in an age of disillusion.” New York Times Book Review. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
New York Times Notable Fiction Books of 2010Check one out!
American Subversive By David Goodwillie
“A bombing unites a blogger and a beautiful ecoterrorist in this literary thriller, an exploration of what motivates radicalism in an age of disillusion.” New York Times Book ReviewNew York Times Notable Fiction Books of
2010
Angelology by Danielle Trussoni
“With a smitten art historian at her side, the young nun at the center of this rousing first novel is drawn into an ancient struggle against the Nephilim, hybrid offspring of humans and heavenly beings.” New York Times Book ReviewNew York Times Notable Fiction Books
of 2010
The Ask by Sam Lipsyte“A deeply cynical academic fund-raiser fighting for his job is the protagonist of this darkly humorous satire, a witty paean to white-collar loserdom.” New York Times Book Review
New York Times Notable Fiction Books of 2010
Bound by Antonya Nelson
“For Nelson’s complacent heroine, the deathof an estranged friend elicits memories of theirreckless youth.” New York Times Book Review
New York Times Notable Fiction Books of 2010
Comedy in a Minor Key by Hans Keilson
“Set in Nazi-occupied Europe, this novel, Appearing only now in English, is a midcentury Masterpiece by the centenarian Keilson, who served in the Dutch resistance.” New York Times Book ReviewNew York Times Notable Fiction Books of 2010
Double Happiness: Stories
Hughes likes to juxtapose her characters’ relative passivity with the knife edge ofEvil within or, more often, outside them.” New York Times Book Review
New York Times Notable Fiction Books of 2010
Foreign Bodies by Cynthia Ozick
This nimble, entertaining homage to Henry Jame’s late work, “The Ambassadors,”In which an American heads to Paris to retrieve a wayward son, brilliantly upendsthe theme, meaning and stylist manner of its revered precursor.”
New York Times Notable Fiction Books of 2010
Freedom by Jonathan Franzen
“Like Franzen’s previous novel, “The Corrections,” this is a masterly portrait of a nuclear family in turmoil, with an intricately ordered narrative and a majestic sweep that seems to gather up every fresh datum of our shared millennial life.” New York Times Book Review
Girl by the Road at Night: A Novel of Vietnam by David Rabe
“In this tale of war and eros, two young people from opposite endsof the earth are caught up in events far beyond their control.” New York Times Book Review
New York Times Notable Book of 2010
Great House by Nicole Krauss
“In this tragic vision of a novel, Nadia, a writer in New York, faces a wrenching parting when a girl shows up to claim an enormous desk that has been in her safekeeping for decades.” New York Times Book Review
New York Times Notable Book of 2010
How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe by Charles Yu
“Yu wraps his lonely story of a time Machine repairman in layers of gorgeous meta-science-fiction.” New York Times Book Review
New York Times Notable Book of 2010
How to Read the Air by Dinaw Mengestu
“Mengestu’s own origins inform this tale of an Ethiopian-Americantracing the uncertain road once taken by his parents.” New York Times BookReviewNew York Times Notable Book of 2010
I Curse the River of Time by Per Petterson
“This novel’s lonely Scandinavian protagonist grapples with divorce, death and the fall of the Berlin Wall.” New York Times BookReviewNew York Times Notable Book of 2010
Illustrado by Miguel Syjuco
“A murder mystery punctuated with serious philosophical musings, this novel traces 150 years of Filipino history, posing questions about identity and art, exile and duty.” New York Times BookReview
New York Times Notable Book of 2010
The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman
“This intricate novel is built around the personal stories of staff members at an improbable English-language newspaper in Rome, and of the family who founded it in the 1950s.” New York Times BookReviewNew York Times Notable Book of 2010