Friday, July 17, 2020

10 April New Releases To Put On Hold at the Library Right Now

10 April New Releases To Put On Hold at the Library Right Now Live your best bookish life with our New Release Index. It’s a fantastically functional way to keep track of your most anticipated new releases. It’s available exclusively to Book Riot Insiders. Subscribe to Book Riot Insiders! There are so many great books being released, all the time. How to choose? And the lists! Library hold lists are so lonnnnnnng. As the late, great Tom Petty sang, the waiting is the hardest part. Ive got the cure for the common hold: Here are ten books of note coming out in April to help you get a jump on that long library hold list. Dread Nation by Justina Ireland The Civil War is derailed by a zombie infestation that changes the course of history in this fantastic novel about America, racism, and the undead. Jane McKeene is a fantastic character, a young Southerner sent to school in Baltimore to learn how to fight zombies, who must also fight enemies of the living kind. (April 3) The Female Persuasion by Meg Wolitzer   The author of  The Interestings  returns with a multilayered novel about ambition, power, friendship, and romantic ideals. Greer always thought she knew what she wanted until she met Faith, who opens Greers eyes to a whole world of possibility and leads her away from the future she thought she would have. (April 3) The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath by Leslie Jamison   Jamison returns with her first book since The Empathy Exams, in which she examines stories of addiction recovery, including her own. Using a blend of memoir, investigative reporting, and literary criticism, she deftly tells a new narrative about recovery, the history of recovery, the criminalization of addiction, and more.   (April 3) The Oracle Year by Charles Soule   The film rights to comic writer Soules first novel, about a man in NYC who wakes up one day with the ability to see the future, have already been sold in a major deal.  (April 3) Meaty: Essays by Samantha Irby Given the success of the brilliant and hilarious Irbys 2017 essay collection, We Are Never Meeting in Real Life, it seems like a perfect move to reprint this older collection (featuring a cuter critter on the cover this time around). (April 3) Varina by Charles Frazier   The author of the mega-hit Cold Mountain is back with his fourth novel. Set in the same place at Cold Mountain, about a teen girl named Varina who weds the much-older Jefferson Davis, who goes on to be appointed President of the Confederacy. (April 3) Circe by Madeline Miller Miller follows up  The Song of Achilles  with a new story of mythology, about Circe, a young witch banished by Zeus who must choose between the gods or the mortals.  (April 10) Macbeth by Jo Nesbo   A thriller based on the Shakespeare classic, set in a 1970s industrial town, from the author of  The Snowman. Part of Hogarths Shakespeare series. (April 10) How to Write an Autobiographical Novel: Essays by Alexander Chee  If nothing else about the coming year excites you, at least be happy we have a new Alexander Chee book!  And  it’s nonfiction! I love his novels, but he is also wicked smart  and  has many insightful, thoughtful things to say about the world. Includes a beautiful essay about his father that will have you crying in your cornflakes.  (April 24) The Girl Who Smiled Beads: A Story of War and What Comes After by Clemantine Wamariya and Elizabeth Weil In 1994, Wamariya and her sister fled the Rwandan massacre and spent the next several years walking through other African countries in search of safety before they were granted refugee status by the United States. This is her story about her two lives, one of fear and death, and the other seemingly the American dream but always shadowed by her past. (April 24)