The living dead
David Grossman's remarkable tone poem is an excoriating tribute to parental love.
Beneath Zeppelins
Novelist Juliet West tracks two dreamers through the London firestorm that is World War I.
Other language, other self
Rome-born Francesca Marciano uses her global reach to seek meaning in identity.
Homeland revisited
In "Shotgun Lovesongs," Nickolas Butler begs the age-old question of going home again.
Past imperfect
With some stalwart exceptions, past-gazing smothers the 2013 best-off American short story collection.
The meat we eat
In "Beastly Things," a dead veterinarian opens the door to meat industry horrors.
Lahiri’s leap
A story about two brothers and their times successfully creates a narrative outside nationality.
Messing with time
Rachel Joyce's "Perfect," set in the 1970s, takes two tiny seconds for a troubling ride.
A wordmonger’s return
Paul Harding's second novel, "Enon," burnishes the author's transcendentalist credentials.
Kibbutz Yekhat
Amos Oz revives his kibbutz fervor in "Between Friends," eight interlocking stories.
Criminal calles
In Dona Leon's "The Golden Egg," an apparent suicide opens the door to secrets and lies.