December Releases by Anita Felicelli, Lise Goett, Brooke Randel & Weike Wang

December isn’t a big month for new releases, but here are excerpts from a few I happened to review early for U.S. publications BookBrowse, Foreword Reviews, and Shelf Awareness: Speculative short stories, loss-tinged poetry, a family memoir based on Holocaust history, and a satirical short novel about racial microaggressions and class divides in contemporary America.

 

How We Know Our Time Travelers by Anita Felicelli

These linked speculative stories, set in near-future California, are marked by environmental anxiety. Many of their characters have South Asian backgrounds. A nascent queer romance between co-op grocery colleagues defies an impending tsunami. A painter welcomes a studio visitor who could be her estranged husband traveling from the past. Mysterious “fog catchers” recur in multiple stories. Memory bridges the human and the artificial, as in “The Glitch,” wherein a coder, bereaved by wildfires, lives alongside holograms of her wife and children. But technology, though a potential means of connecting with the dead, is not an unmitigated good. Creative reinterpretations of traditional stories and figures include urban legends, a locked room mystery, a poltergeist, and a golem. In these grief- and regret-tinged stories, heartbroken people can’t alter their pasts, so they’ll mold the future instead. (See my full Foreword review.)

 

The Radiant by Lise Goett

In the 25 poems of Goett’s luminous third poetry collection, nature’s beauty and ancient wisdom sustain the fragile and bereaved. The speaker in “Difficult Body” references a cancer experience and imagines escaping the flesh to diffuse into the cosmos. Goett explores liminal moments and ponders what survives a loss. The use of “terminal” in “Free Fall” denotes mortality while also bringing up fond memories of her late father picking her up from an airport. Mythical allusions, religious imagery, and Buddhist philosophy weave through to shine ancient perspective on current struggles. The book luxuriates in abstruse vocabulary and sensual descriptions of snow, trees, and color. (Tupelo Press, 24 December. Review forthcoming at Shelf Awareness)

 

Also Here: Love, Literacy, and the Legacy of the Holocaust by Brooke Randel

Randel’s debut is a poised, tender family memoir capturing her Holocaust survivor grandmother’s recollections of the Holocaust. Golda (“Bubbie”) spoke multiple languages but was functionally illiterate. In her mid-80s, she asked her granddaughter to tell her story. Randel flew to south Florida to conduct interviews. The oral history that emerges is fragmentary and frenetic. The structure of the book makes up for it, though. Interview snippets are interspersed with narrative chapters based on follow-up research. Golda, born in 1930, grew up in Romania. When the Nazis came, her older brothers were conscripted into forced labor; her mother and younger siblings were killed in a concentration camp. At every turn, Golda’s survival (through Auschwitz, Christianstadt, and Bergen-Belsen) was nothing short of miraculous. This concise, touching memoir bears witness to a whole remarkable life as well as the bond between grandmother and granddaughter. (See my full Shelf Awareness review.)

  

Rental House by Weike Wang

Their interactions with family and strangers alike on two vacations – Cape Cod and the Catskills, five years apart – put interracial couple Keru and Nate’s choices into perspective as they near age 40. Although some might find their situation (childfree, with a “fur baby”) stereotypical, it does reflect that of a growing number of aging millennials. Wang portrays them sympathetically, but there is also a note of gentle satire here. The way that identity politics comes into the novel is not exactly subtle, but it does feel true to life. And it is very clever how the novel examines the matters of race, class, ambition, and parenthood through the lens of vacations. Like a two-act play, the framework is simple and concise, yet revealing about contemporary American society. (See my full BookBrowse review.)

14 responses

  1. jillmarley's avatar

    I’m amazed at the sheer volume of novels you devour, however, no posts on Christmas titles yet. Maybe the publishing companies are not interested in Christmas but surely there are stories of families gathering and issues arising. I might have to write one! I hope you have a happy Christmas with your loved ones.

    Like

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’m reading a couple of (older) Christmas novellas and might get a chance to write them up by Christmas Eve. Most years I manage some seasonal reading — last year I read one novel that was along the lines you have in mind, Flight by Lynn Steger Strong (https://bookishbeck.com/2023/12/27/christmas-reading-and-book-haul/).

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      P.S. I did review one recent release with a feel-good holiday vibe: Brightly Shining by Ingvild Rishøi (https://bookishbeck.com/2024/12/03/november-releases-including-novnov24-bennett-pimlott-rishoi-shattuck/)

      Liked by 1 person

  2. WordsAndPeace's avatar

    Nice diversity in genres!
    I never manage to read many Christmas related books either.
    I just started one that I had marked for Christmas, and I don’t even know why, as it seems to be set in November. But maybe the end is related to Christmas? At least, it’s snowing!
    Dance of Death (Dr. Basil Willing #1), by Helen McCloy
    Mystery – 1938

    Liked by 1 person

    1. jillmarley's avatar

      Snow? Ha. It’s over 40C in Australia, and I’d love some snow for Christmas.

      Like

      1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        I’d forgotten you’re in Australia, Jill. I can’t imagine having beach barbecue weather for Christmas!

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    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      It’s a good one. Keru is a prickly character who makes odd decisions, but that keeps things interesting. I’ll look into Wang’s other two novels as well.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    I’ve really liked Wang’s two other novels so I’m looking forward to her new one.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      That’s good to hear. Their premises are really attractive. I like reading about women in STEM.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Laura's avatar

    The Felicelli appeals and although I had mixed feelings about Wang’s Chemistry, I liked it enough to try something else by her. I don’t think I’ve read very much about middle-aged couples without children by choice, so that sounds interesting.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Their situation, including pressure from both sets of parents to have children, is a fairly minor element of the book, I felt, but it’s still good to have the representation.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    I’ve not read Weike Wang yet, but hope to do so before long. I think I might have that short story collection on my TBR as well.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Both very much up your alley.

      Like

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