S A L O N ' S B O O K S O F T H E Y E A R

Fiction

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THE FAMILY MARKOWITZ
By Allegra Goodman
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 262 pages.

Allegra Goodman writes circles around most other young writers by not writing circles around them. Her unfussy, matter-of-fact style borrows from Grace Paley and Philip Roth, but in "The Family Markowitz," her new collection of linked short stories, Goodman sounds like nobody else. You move through these smart and slyly funny stories, about a cerebral and squabbling extended Jewish family, with an increasing appreciation of her remarkable talent.

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READER'S BLOCK
By David Markson
Dalkey Archive, 193 pages

Hypnotic. Not a novel at all in the usual sense, "Reader's Block" is a brilliant accumulation of references and allusions ("Roland Barthes died after being hit by a laundry truck," "Tony Trollope, he was naturally called") sandwiched between the author's notes on the book that he's pointedly not writing. Pretentious? Not for a second. "Reader's Block" is both playful and, as you gradually learn more about its narrator's solitary life, remarkably poignant.

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THE GIANT'S HOUSE
By Elizabeth McCracken
The Dial Press, 259 pages

This remarkable and eccentric first novel is about two loners -- a shy young librarian and the tallest boy in the world -- and the friendship that alters their lives forever. McCracken has wit and subtlety to burn, as well as an uncanny ability to tap into the sadness that runs through the center of her characters' worlds. This book is so lovely that, when you're done reading, you'll want to sleep with it under your pillow.

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THE MOOR'S LAST SIGH
By Salman Rushdie
Pantheon, 448 pages

Packed with grand, deluded, eccentric and alarming characters, Rushdie's saga of a mongrel Indian family -- told by its sole remaining scion, who's aging at twice the rate of normal humans -- is lots of fun. Fatwa be damned -- Rushdie has lost none of his joie de vivre, energy or humor. In fact, fear, sadness and loss only provide more fuel for his robust story-telling engine. There's plenty here about the imperative to create art in the face of unpredictable repercussions, but no lectures or self-righteousness, just a restless joyful appetite for life on this flawed earth.

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INFINITE JEST
By David Foster Wallace
Little, Brown, 1079 pages

Yes, the book is perversely long, and the author's media persona drifts into annoying-wunderkind territory on occasion, but this tale of parallel lives in an elite tennis academy and a nearby halfway house has enough flashes of that hard-found rarity, pure genius, to make up for all that. There's a keen edge to Wallace's sometimes-flashy cleverness (in the near-future setting of the novel, the years are named after sponsors' products, rather than numbered). And, in one benighted former pillhead's muddling toward dignity, "Infinite Jest" builds itself a solid foundation of genuine wisdom.

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Nonfiction

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MY DARK PLACES
By James Ellroy
Knopf, 360 pages

When James Ellroy was ten years old, his mother was murdered, and her killer was never found. From that point his life spiralled down into squalor: living in filth with his ne'er-do-well dad, flirtations with right-wing extremism, drug abuse, homelessness, petty crime and various creepy, voyeuristic activities. Eventually he pulled himself together and became a crime novelist with a cult following. This brutally honest memoir cuts deeper than the bone, it goes to the marrow of self-hatred, self-pity and misogyny that Ellroy recognizes in himself and his hard-boiled brethren. Is he searching for his mother's killer as he scours the police records on her case (a litany of bleak, emotionally toxic 1950s Los Angeles), or for something else?

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THE SHADOW MAN
By Mary Gordon
Random House, 274 pages.

An intense, elegant and ultimately devastating memoir about the well-known novelist's search for information about the father who died when she was seven. The more Gordon finds out about him, however, the more he slips through her fingers. Can it be that his entire life -- his age, his education, his place of birth, his core beliefs -- was a lie? "Who am I," Gordon asks, "if my father is not himself?"

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THE TEMPLE BOMBING
By Melissa Fay Greene
Addison-Wesley, 502 pages.

This is compulsively readable social history, about the night in 1958 when Atlanta's oldest and most revered synagogue was blown apart by fifty sticks of dynamite. Melissa Fay Greene pulls together the disparate strands of this story -- about the racial tensions between blacks, whites and Jews -- with a novelist's careful eye. This is a masterful portrait of life in a Southern city at the dawn of the civil rights era.

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THE LIVING AND THE DEAD:
ROBERT MACNAMARA AND
FIVE LIVES OF A LOST WAR

By Paul Hendrickson
Knopf, 419 pages

Hendrickson traces the grim history of the Vietnam War through the lives of five people: an artist, an army nurse, a Quaker pacifist, a young Marine, and a member of a Saigon family. All of their fates were shaped in part by the central figure, defense secretary for the Kennedy and Johnson administrations and, as Hendrickson portrays him, a technocrat tormented by the moral consequences of his own hubris. This book manages the impressive feat of conveying both the pomp of history and its intimate impact on real people. If the author dips into florid boomer-journalist romanticism a bit too often, he nevertheless often attains the tragic heights for which he reaches.

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ANGELA'S ASHES
By Frank McCourt
Scribner, 364 pages

By some untraceable miracle, McCourt turns the simple stuff of his memoirs -- a childhood growing up dirt poor in Limerick, Ireland -- into an utterly captivating book. Part David Copperfield, part Stephen Dedalus, the young McCourt observes his long-suffering mother and charming, irresponsible drunkard of a father with an innocent, loving, but coolly honest eye. It's not an unusual life, but chances are that once you open this book, you'll find yourself blinking, dazed and hopelessly charmed, wondering where the last seven hours went.

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DWIGHT GARNER and LAURA MILLER