
There are plenty of books coming out this winter we can’t wait to read. Here are 16 that look especially good.
‘American Dirt’ by Jeanine Cummins
(Flatiron Books, fiction $27.99, Jan. 21 release)
Lydia Quixano Pérez’s comfortable life in Acapulco is upended when her journalist-husband publishes a tell-all profile on the jefe of a drug cartel. Lydia flees with her 8-year-old son, making a perilous, uncertain journey to the U.S. border. Best-selling author and border expert Don Winslow has called this “a ‘Grapes of Wrath’ for our times.”
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‘Consider This’ by Chuck Palahniuk
(Grand Central Publishing, nonfiction, $27, Tuesday)
The best-selling novelist of “Fight Club” offers stories of his writing life and advice for writers.
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‘Little Gods’ by Meng Jin
(Custom House, fiction, $27.99, Jan. 14)
Meng Jin’s moving debut follows 17-year-old Chinese immigrant Liya from America to her unfamiliar home country with the ashes of her recently deceased mother, a mysterious woman it seems she never really knew.
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‘A Long Petal of the Sea’ by Isabel Allende
(Ballantine, fiction, $28, Jan. 21)
The “The House of Spirits” author has written a historical epic spanning decades that follows a pregnant young widow and her dead love’s brother, forced into an unwanted marriage as they flee the Spanish Civil War for a life in South America.
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‘Name Drop’ by Ross Mathews
(Atria, nonfiction, $26, Feb. 4)
TV personality Ross Mathews (“RuPaul’s Drag Race,” “Chelsea Lately”) dishes on Hollywood celebrities and shenanigans.
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‘The Big Goodbye’ by Sam Wasson
(Flatiron Books, nonfiction, $28.99, Feb. 4)
“Chinatown” (1974) was a watershed moment in a colorful era of American filmmaking. Sam Wasson tells the story of its making and principle players including Jack Nicholson, Roman Polanski and Robert Evans.
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‘The Regrets’ by Amy Bonnaffons
(Little, Brown and Company, fiction, $27, Feb. 4)
Rachel finds herself drawn to a young man she’s noticed for weeks sitting at her Brooklyn bus stop. He’s handsome, witty, mysterious — and dead. Steamy ghost sex? You have our attention.
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‘The Obama Portraits’ by Taina Caragol, Dorothy Moss, Richard J. Powell and Kim Sajet
(Princeton University Press/National Portrait Gallery, nonfiction, $24.95, Feb. 11)
Historians examine the “inception, evolution and impact” of Kehinde Wiley’s 2018 portrait “President Barack Obama” and Amy Sherald’s 2018 painting “First Lady Michelle Obama,” with interviews with the artists.
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‘Franklin & Washington: The Founding Partnership’ by Edward J. Larson
(William Morrow, nonfiction, $29.99, Feb. 11)
Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Edward J. Larson writes a dual biography of two founding fathers, shedding light on a decades-long bond that made America possible.
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‘The Adventurer’s Son’ by Roman Dial
(William Morrow, nonfiction, $28.99, Feb. 18):
On July 10, 2014, Cody Roman Dial, 27, the son of Alaskan scientist and National Geographic explorer Roman Dial, went alone into Corcovado National Park, a rainforest on Costa Rica’s remote Pacific coast, and was never seen again. This book is the result of a father’s quest to unravel the mystery of his son’s disappearance.
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‘Apeirogon’ by Colum McCann
(Random House, fiction, $28, Feb. 25)
Two men — one Israeli, the other Palestinian — are connected in grief by the loss of their daughters in this ambitious, hopeful novel about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from the National Book Award-winning author of “Let the Great World Spin.”
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‘The Night Watchman’ by Louise Erdrich
(Harper, fiction, $28.99, March 3)
National Book Award-winning author Louise Erdrich based her new book on the life of her grandfather, who worked as a factory night watchman and took his fight against Native dispossession from rural North Dakota all the way to Congress.
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‘The Mirror & the Light’ by Hilary Mantel
(Henry Holt & Co., fiction, $30, March 10)
The final book in two-time Man Booker Prize-winner Hilary Mantel’s historical trilogy charts the rise and fall of Thomas Cromwell in the court of King Henry VIII.
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‘The Boy from the Woods’ by Harlan Coben
(Grand Central Publishing, fiction, $29, March 17
Wilde was found living feral in the woods as a child, with no memory of his past. Thirty years later, a child goes missing, and a criminal attorney asks Wilde to use his unique skills to help find the missing girl.
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‘Rise: My Story’ by Lindsey Vonn
(Dey Street Books, nonfiction, $28.99, March 2)
Lindsey Vonn, the greatest female ski racer of all time, is coming out with a memoir.
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‘The Glass Hotel’ by Emily St. John Mandel
(Afred A. Knopf, fiction, $26.95, March 24)
“Station Eleven” author Emily St. John Mandel’s new novel connects two seemingly disparate events: a woman’s mysterious disappearance from a ship at sea and the collapse of a massive Ponzi scheme. Note: The author will be at The Book Stall, 811 Elm St., Winnetka, at 6:30 p.m. April 23.
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