It’s the last Paperback Picks of the summer, and there’s plenty to read for those of you not busy rushing around in the sunshine, including some award-winning novels, a dishy Broadway memoir, and the final words of a Hollywood legend — all in brand-new paperback. Happy reading!
“When We Were Sisters” by Fatimah Asghar (Random House, $18). Asghar was longlisted for the National Book Award for this tale of three orphaned Muslim American sisters, described as “grief-soaked and gorgeous” by The Guardian. “A poet first, Asghar picks up on the themes of her debut collection ‘If They Come for Us’ — partition and fragmentation, borders and bodies — and plays with space and silence on the page. Narrated by Kausar in vignettes, often in staccato sentences, and interspersed with poetic flashbacks from the perspective of the father and mother, this fragmentary form has the effect of ephemerality — much like life.”
“Calling for a Blanket Dance” by Oscar Hokeah (Algonquin, $17.99). Winner of the PEN America/Hemingway Award for debut fiction, Hokeah’s novel follows five decades of its main character’s life, set in rural Oklahoma. A New York Times reviewer wrote: “At the heart of the novel lay a profound reflection on the intergenerational nature of cultural trauma. Hokeah’s characters exist at the intersection of Kiowa, Cherokee and Mexican identity, which provides a vital exploration of indigeneity in contemporary American letters.”
“The Book of Goose” by Yiyun Li (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $18). Another major award winner — the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and named among the best books of 2022 by multiple outlets — this novel examines the aftermath of two teen girls who perpetrate a literary hoax in postwar rural France. New York Times reviewer Megan O’Grady wrote: “The most propulsively entertaining of Li’s novels, ‘The Book of Goose’ is an existential fable that illuminates the tangle of motives behind our writing of stories: to apprehend and avenge the truth of our own being, to make people know what it feels like to be us, to memorialize the people we keep alive in the provincial villages of our hearts.”