đ The Death of Jesus, by J. M. Coetzee
Rewriting the âboy geniusâ
âCaitlin Horrocksâs debut novel, The Vexations, a fictional dive into the early life of the French composer Erik Satie ⊠creates a wrenching portrait of overconfidence as a destructive force.â
đ The Vexations, by Caitlin Horrocks
The eerie horrors of The Perfect Nanny
âThe children who are dead at the beginning of the book are shown throughout not as idealized innocents, but as complex beings who navigate adult whims, and the line between danger and safety, with a clarity that eludes their elders.â
đ The Perfect Nanny, by LeĂŻla Slimani
The purgatory that comes after losing a child
â[Jayson] Greeneâs memoir grapples with this lesson: the ruinous insight that the world can wound loved ones at random and for no reason.â
đ Once More We Saw Stars, by Jayson Greene
đ Inferno, by Dante Alighieri
What J. D. Salinger understood about chance encounters
ââFor EsmĂ©âWith Love and Squalorâ celebrates missed connections, reminding us that even brief, glancing encounters can be enough to change a person for the better.â
đ âFor EsmĂ©âWith Love and Squalor,â by J. D. Salinger
đ âThe National Cage Bird Show,â by A. M. Homesâ
About us: This weekâs newsletter is written by Myles Poydras. The book heâs looking forward to is Caste, by Isabel Wilkerson.
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