War in mind
Pamela Schoenewaldt offers World War I historical fiction sympathetic to the plight of German-Americans.
An American nightmare
Toni Morrison's "God Help the Child" shifts from racism to child abuse, though the two are kin.
A sense of Venice
Tiziano Scarpa's tactile guide is still probably the book you want at hand if you're lagoon-bound.
Robinson, Lila, and God
Marilynne Robinson's "Lila" completes her Gilead, Iowa trilogy with brilliance and compassion.
Doerr’s luminous light
Despite some overwrought trimmings, here is a World War II book with a vision.
Munro’s damaged lives
Canadian Nobel winner Alice Munro's final collection depends on deft portrayals of small-town sadness.
Jacobson’s Final Solution
Howard Jacobson's "J" pushes the British-styled Jewish question into dystopian territory.
Ulysses in Australia
Richard Flanagan's "The Narrow Road to the Deep North" features a full-fledged epic hero.
Mixed blessings
Ian McEwan's "The Children Act" shines mostly when one case comes front and center.
Kat Zet, née Auschwitz
British novelist Martin Amis offers a fierce satire to revive ever-vital Holocaust themes.
Unhappiness
Yasmina Reza applies a shrewd and knowing scalpel to the foibles of the French elite.