Paperback Picks is back — now a once-a-month compilation. Here are seven great books just out in paperback; some of which I’ve read and enjoyed, and some I can’t wait to get to.
“Fledgling” by Octavia E. Butler (Grand Central Publishing): Butler, who died in 2006 (and lived in the Seattle area during her last years), was a pioneering Black female writer in science fiction. This reissue of her acclaimed 2005 vampire novel — in which a 53-year-old vampire presents as a 10-year-old Black girl — makes appropriate reading for this shadowy season. “In charged, erotic prose, Butler weaves a mystery that’s as titillating as it is disturbing,” wrote a New York Times reviewer.
“The Family Chao” by Lan Samantha Chang (W.W. Norton): Chang’s 2021 novel is at once multigenerational family story, immigrant saga, coming-of-age tale, whodunit mystery and literary pastiche (inspired by “The Brothers Karamazov”). And, like in the multicourse Chinese dinners featured in the plot, each element contributes to a hugely satisfying whole.
“Cloud Cuckoo Land” by Anthony Doerr (Scribner): The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “All the Light We Cannot See” returns with a very different kind of novel: one that spans multiple times and places — from mid-15th century Constantinople to a futuristic spaceship, with several stops in between — to form a love letter to books and libraries.