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X Is Where I Am

Sara Torres, trans. from the Spanish by Maureen Shaughnessy. Charco, $17.95 trade paper (240p) ISBN 978-1-917260-20-6

Spanish writer Torres’s lyrical if unfocused English-language debut follows a 28-year-old writer navigating romantic turmoil and the loss of a parent. In 2019, Sara has recently relocated from London to Barcelona for a university lecturer position. Her girlfriend, D., plans to join her soon, but in the meantime, Sara takes up with a new lover, an actress referred to only as Girl. Between rendezvousing with Girl and teaching, Sara travels to Asturias to visit her mother, María Teresa, who has been battling cancer for a decade. After María Teresa dies, Sara declines to speak at the funeral, feeling unprepared and believing that “a mother’s funeral deserves silence. A thick and heavy silence that starts in the forehead and moves down, pressing against the eyelids and blocking the throat, like being drowned in oil.” D. then joins her in Barcelona, and Sara opts to cuts things off with Girl, yet she can’t shake her lingering feelings for her now ex-lover, even as time passes and the Covid-19 pandemic keeps Sara and D. cooped up in their apartment. The depictions of Sara’s unsettled love life can be wearying, though the passages on her grief are emotionally resonant. The plot never quite takes off, but portions of this emotive novel pack a punch. (Mar.)

Reviewed on 02/27/2026 | Details & Permalink

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Nonesuch

Francis Spufford. Scribner, $31 (496p) ISBN 978-1-6682-1437-4

Spufford (Cahokia Jazz) spins a lavish historical fantasy of a secretary and her lover battling time-traveling fascists on the eve of WWII. The story opens with daring Iris Hawkins enjoying a night out after a day of drudgery at her London financial firm. By chance, she meets brilliant engineer Geoff Hale, who’s besotted with gorgeous Nazi sympathizer Lady Lalage “Lall” Cunningham, and impulsively seduces him. After spending the night with Geoff, Iris sees a nightmarish inhuman figure keeping watch outside his house. She continues seeing Geoff, and the pair are visited by a friendly angel who warns them of a threat greater than Hitler: a cabal of British fascists including Lall are planning to use imprisoned angels, like the one Iris saw outside Geoff’s house, to go back in time and alter history for the worse. Spufford approaches the magical elements with lighthearted humor (“Oh, come on,” Geoff says to the angel. “No one has believed in the luminiferous aether since about, what, 1870! It doesn’t exist!” To which the angel replies, “I see that I have used terms you find anachronistic. Would you prefer it if I said that quantum tunneling was involved?”). As Iris enters a parallel world called Nonesuch to save London, Spufford sustains the tension all the way to the miraculous finale. Readers will be enthralled. (Mar.)

Reviewed on 02/27/2026 | Details & Permalink

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Mostly Hero

Anna Burns. Faber & Faber, $20 (144p) ISBN 978-0-571-39972-7

Booker Prize winner Burns (Milkman) uses the tropes of superheroes and supervillains to explore the complications of real human relationships in this playful novella. A 26-year-old woman known as the femme fatale is dating a man called the superhero; the two are in love, but a magic spell drives the femme fatale to try to kill the superhero, who’s afraid of getting close to people, partly because he suspects his family harbors dark secrets. It turns out the femme fatale’s “out-of-time, eccentric great aunt,” who lives by herself in a skyscraper with secret passages, is an accomplished villain, and the superhero has a dossier on her. She might also be the superhero’s grandmother. The great-aunt is gearing up for one last attempt to take over the world, putting her on a collision course with the superhero—but as near deaths, real deaths, and betrayals pile up, the femme fatale and the superhero must also contend with the state of their romance, having “escalated what should have been a simple, harmonious love relationship into some critical, extreme, ‘heroes and villains’, disaster-upon-disaster.” Burns zooms through the comic action scenes and slyly reveals what’s truly at stake: two people learning to see themselves and their problems as merely ordinary. It adds up to a charming metaphorical love story. Agent: David Grossman, David Grossman Literary. (May)

Reviewed on 02/27/2026 | Details & Permalink

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The Cut Line

Carolina Pihelgas, trans. from the Estonian by Darcy Hurford. World Editions, $19.99 trade paper (142p) ISBN 978-1-64286-161-7

In the poetic English-language debut from Pihelgas, heroine Liine returns to her family farm to start over after ending an abusive relationship with Tarmo, whom she met 14 years earlier when he was her university professor. Back in rural Tsoriksoo from the city of Tartu, sometime in the near future with temperatures rising, she throws herself into improving the farmstead. She also becomes captivated by letters exchanged between her spinster great-aunt Elvi and a woman named Selma, who was the farm’s original proprietor, and who invited Elvi to live there with her before bequeathing the farm to her. The letters inspire Liine to imagine an alternative lifestyle for herself, especially as Tarmo pressures her to come back to him. Liine’s peace is intermittently disrupted by gunfire and explosions from nearby military training exercises, and she feels unsettled and vulnerable in the rural setting (“I need to run away from myself,” she reflects, recognizing that “being in the countryside turns you a little strange,” especially with the stultifying heat and unrelenting sun). As Liine yearns for independence, Pihelgas artfully traces her slow recovery from the bad relationship (“I breathe deeply, like a person who wants to be alive and dead at the same time, like someone who’s forgotten how to breathe and is now learning it again”). This one has much to savor. (Feb.)

Reviewed on 02/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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American Han

Lisa Lee. Algonquin, $28.99 (288p) ISBN 978-1-64375-725-4

A 20-something Korean American woman chafes at her immigrant parents’ expectations in this emotive and incisive debut novel. In 2002, third-year law student Jane Kim faces an existential crisis. Growing up in Napa, Calif., where her rage-prone father ran a string of businesses, Jane’s mother, a mink-wearing woman obsessed with Korean beauty rituals, subjected her to “unhinged bullying, the kind that made me numb, unable to think straight,” causing her to follow a career path she’d never desired for herself. Jane and her brother, Kevin, once excelled at tennis and piano, but when Kevin’s grades declined in high school, their father smashed his tennis rackets as punishment. Now a San Jose police officer, Kevin’s own anger gets the better of him, and he savagely beats a homeless man, undermining his successful career. When Jane announces that instead of taking the bar exam, she’s moving across the country to study Korean American history, the news is too much for her mother, who holds a “grieving party” to mark her departure. Lee’s character work is top notch, especially as she shows how each family member struggles with the Korean notion of han, an amalgamation of anger, grief, and regret over one’s decisions. It’s a remarkable achievement. Agent: Kirby Kim, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (Mar.)

Reviewed on 02/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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City Like Water

Dorothy Tse, trans. from the Chinese by Natascha Bruce. Graywolf, $16 trade paper (112p) ISBN 978-1-64445-375-9

Strung together via dream logic, this startling experimental novel from Tse (Owlish) forays into a bizarre Hong Kong vanishing around its inhabitants. The unnamed narrator, now a young man, recounts his childhood when the world was whole and he lived with his parents, who fantasized about winning the lottery, and a younger sister whom everyone seemed to forget about. Things changed after his mother joined forces with other housewives to protest a local market’s shoddy produce, and police sprayed the women with a glitter powder that turned them into statues. Then his sister vanished out a bus window, only to return to him as a disembodied voice, and his father, who once worked at a toy factory and practiced tai chi in the park, became a couch potato, to the point of being absorbed into the home’s gigantic television set. Now, neighborhood vendors disappear around him, sidewalks turn to desert, and government checkpoints prevent easy travel. Tse risks incoherence with non sequiturs and ghastly images cramming each page, including an “island-shaped tumor” floating around the protagonist’s body, but a climactic twist ties it all together. For those willing to let these images wash over them, the novel offers a rewarding exploration of change and loss. Agent: Jessica Friedman, Sterling Lord Literistic. (Mar.)

Reviewed on 02/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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All Flesh

Ananda Devi, trans. from the French by Jeffrey Zuckerman. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $18 trade paper (192p) ISBN 978-0-374-61917-6

At the beginning of this sensual and provocative novel by Mauritian writer Devi (Eye Out of Her Ruins), the unnamed but unforgettable narrator announces she’s about to livestream her own “sacrifice.” Exactly what this means is only revealed near the end. First, the narrator, who, at 16, weighs more than 400 pounds, flashes back to her gestation in her mother’s womb, claiming that she consumed her twin sister before her birth. Overwhelmed by the baby’s exceptional size (her birth weight was 22 pounds and eight ounces), the mother struggles to keep up with breastfeeding and abandons her not long after weaning. The narrator is then raised by her father, a food writer who slavishly indulges her with delicious meals. Her father also insists on addressing her as if she were two people, herself and her “disappeared twin,” claiming he has “two beautiful daughters.” She “play[s] along, even though it was no game,” and wryly observes that she “didn’t know that schizophrenia could be forced upon us.” Many painful scenes ensue, including a brief and heartbreaking reunion with her mother. After the narrator turns 16, she supplements her “morbid” and “orgasmic” eating with a life-affirming indulgence: a sexual relationship with a 30-something carpenter who seems to love her for who she is. From here, the narrative hurtles through a series of striking twists, driven in part by the pesky inner voice of the narrator’s twin sister. An epigraph from Henry Miller’s Tropic of Cancer sets the carnal and gleefully filthy tone, and Devi never lets up. The reader won’t be able to look away from this singular work. (Apr.)

Reviewed on 02/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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Now I Surrender

Álvaro Enrigue, trans. from the Spanish by Natasha Wimmer. Riverhead, $30 (464p) ISBN 978-0-593-08407-6

This three-part saga of the Apache Wars and the long shadow of imperialism constitutes a major work of historical reclamation from Enrigue (You Dreamed of Empires). It begins in 1836 in border hamlet Janos, where widow Camila Ezguerra is kidnapped from her ranch. On their trail is Lt. Col. José María Zuloaga, who’s made a name for himself killing Apaches for the “fledgling republic of Mexico,” along with a motley crew of conscripts. Enrigue alternates from their expedition to the 1886 surrender of Geronimo and its aftermath, with chapters from historical figures like President Grover Cleveland, frustrated that Geronimo wasn’t caught before (“Our army is the biggest in the world,” he tells his secretary of war) and Geronimo’s revolutionary heir, Pancho Villa, who, in 1916, describes how he learned battlefield strategies from the elder’s spirit. Threaded throughout is the author’s record of a road trip he takes with his family in present-day America, stopping at such landmarks as Geronimo’s tomb in Oklahoma, and hoping along the way to rediscover the history behind the genocide of the Americas. “Westerns,” Enrigue writes in this urgent and painstakingly researched narrative, “are the fairy tales gringos tell themselves to assure the triumph of bureaucratic reason over the excesses of individual will.” It’s an eloquent rejoinder to the mythos that made two countries while erasing the lives of their original inhabitants. Agent: Ria Julien, Francis Goldin Literary. (Mar.)

Reviewed on 02/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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The Lost Girl of Craven County

Emily Matchar. Putnam, $29 (320p) ISBN 979-8-217-04800-7

A stranger comes to town and gives purpose to a struggling young woman in this winning historical from Matchar (In the Shadow of the Greenbrier). In 1930s North Carolina, Millie Green has a mental breakdown while her younger brother dies from cancer. Three years later, still grieving and ashamed, the 25-year-old is living at home in the Jewish community of New Bern, where her mother tries to marry her off to a series of undesirable suitors. One day she discovers a girl lying bruised and dazed behind the Greens’ pickle warehouse. The family take in the young woman, who appears to be mute and unfamiliar with English. Millie tries to communicate with the girl, who eventually tells Millie she is Cecilia Aiken, a runaway from an institution that forcibly sterilizes young women deemed mentally or morally unfit. Cecilia begs Millie for help freeing her sister from the institution, and Millie, moved by Cecilia’s story, agrees to try. Though the ending is a bit too neatly redemptive, Matchar offers a clear-eyed view into the period’s poverty, misogyny, and injustice, along with a stirring depiction of resilience on the part of those “the world considers crazy or bad or broken.” There’s much to admire in this feisty tale. Agent: Allison Hunter, Trellis Literary Management. (Apr.)

Reviewed on 02/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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The Oyster Diaries

Nancy Lemann. New York Review Books, $17.95 trade paper (270p) ISBN 979-8-89623-032-8

Lemann takes readers back to the world of her 1985 cult classic Lives of the Saints with an easygoing and lovely, if inconsistent novel of late middle-age. Delery Anhalt, a native New Orleanian, lives now in Washington, D.C., with her family, but is regularly drawn back home. In New Orleans, she tends to her father, now marred to Delery’s close friend Amelia, and reflects on his aging as well as her own. Heartbroken after she’s blindsided by a betrayal, Delery comes to view herself as an innocent Don Quixote type, one who “embroider[s] everything into vast ideals.” While beautiful and deeply felt in their individual ways, the separate sections of Lemann’s novel don’t quite add up to a whole—the final section, set on an African safari with Delery’s children and husband, feels tacked on to a more cohesive work centered on New Orleans, including Delery’s present-day volunteer work there as a court-watcher in the backlogged criminal justice system. Despite the scattered structure, the novel offers an indelible ode to the struggling but vital city (“Things were different since Katrina. The scrappy quality. The gentility’s still there, but its veneer chipped. Its shabbiness increased”). It’s well worth taking the plunge. Agent: Kristi Murray, Wylie Agency. (Apr.)

Reviewed on 02/20/2026 | Details & Permalink

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