The Saturday Night Book Mixer


Want the motivation for reading something new and different? Eager to talk about what you've read with intelligent and fun people? Interested in seeing what the bookstore is like after-hours? Join the Mix by coming to the Queen Anne Books Saturday Night Book Mixer, an open-minded, intellectual, social book club.

We meet every other month, usually the last Saturday at 8:00pm. Our book choices are usually a little edgier than the traditional book club fare, and our discussions are focused yet fun. After about an hour talking about the book, most of us head to a bar or coffee shop to socialize. This helps us spend our book club time talking openly and in-depth about the book, then gives us a great opportunity to bond with fellow readers afterwards.

Everyone is welcome to take part in the discussion, and all are encouraged to join us for social time after, too. Remember, they're Saturday nights starting at 8:00.

For a listing of meeting dates and times please click on the "Store Events" link on the left.

Happy Mixing!

How the Dead Dream (Paperback)

By Lydia Millet
$12.71
ISBN-13: 9780156035460
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Mariner Books, 09/01/2009

Discussing March 27, 2010:
As a wealthy, young real-estate developer in Los Angeles, T. lives an isolated life. He has always kept his distance from people -- from his doting mother to his crass fraternity brothers -- but remains unaware of his loneliness until one night, while driving to Las Vegas, he hits a coyote on the highway. The experience unnerves him and inspires a transformation that leads T. to question his business pursuits for the first time in his life, to take a chance at falling in love, and finally to begin breaking into zoos across the country, where he finds solace in the presence of animals on the brink of extinction. A beautiful, heart-wrenching tale, "How the Dead Dream" is also a riveting commentary on inidividualism and community in the modern social landscape and how the lives of people and animals are deeply entwined. Judged by many-- including the "Los Angeles Times" and "The Washington Post Book World--" to be Millet's best work to date, it is, as "Time Out New York" perfectly states: "This beautiful writer's most ambitious novel yet, a captivating balancing act between full-bodied satire and bighearted insight."


By Dirk Wittenborn
$15.00
ISBN-13: 9780143115670
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Penguin (Non-Classics), 06/01/2009
Discussed November 14, 2009: An honest, insightful, and ruefully funny look at the fate of one American family vis--vis the rise of modern psychopharmacology.

Citizen Vince (Paperback)

By Jess Walter
$14.95
ISBN-13: 9780061577659
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Harper Perennial, 06/01/2008

Discussing January 30, 2010

At 1:59 a.m. in Spokane, Washington--eight days before the 1980 presidential election--Vince Camden pockets his stash of stolen credit cards and drops by an all-night poker game before heading to his witness-protection job dusting crullers at Donut Make You Hungry. Along with a neurotic hooker girlfriend, this is the total sum of Vince's new life. But when a familiar face shows up in town, Vince realizes his sordid past is still too close behind him. During the next unforgettable week, he'll negotiate a coast-to-coast maze of obsessive cops, eager politicians, and assorted mobsters--only to find that redemption might exist, of all places, in the voting booth. 

 


The White Tiger (Paperback)

By Aravind Adiga
$14.00
ISBN-13: 9781416562603
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Free Press, 10/01/2008
Discussed September 26, 2009:
Introducing a major literary talent, "The White Tiger" offers a story of coruscating wit, blistering suspense, and questionable morality, told by the most volatile, captivating, and utterly inimitable narrator that this millennium has yet seen.
Balram Halwai is a complicated man. Servant. Philosopher. Entrepreneur. Murderer. Over the course of seven nights, by the scattered light of a preposterous chandelier, Balram tells us the terrible and transfixing story of how he came to be a success in life -- having nothing but his own wits to help him along.
Born in the dark heart of India, Balram gets a break when he is hired as a driver for his village's wealthiest man, two house Pomeranians (Puddles and Cuddles), and the rich man's (very unlucky) son. From behind the wheel of their Honda City car, Balram's new world is a revelation. While his peers flip through the pages of "Murder Weekly" ("Love -- Rape -- Revenge "), barter for girls, drink liquor (Thunderbolt), and perpetuate the Great Rooster Coop of Indian society, Balram watches his employers bribe foreign ministers for tax breaks, barter for girls, drink liquor (single-malt whiskey), and play their own role in the Rooster Coop. Balram learns how to siphon gas, deal with corrupt mechanics, and refill and resell Johnnie Walker Black Label bottles (all but one). He also finds a way out of the Coop that no one else inside it can perceive.
Balram's eyes penetrate India as few outsiders can: the cockroaches and the call centers; the prostitutes and the worshippers; the ancient and Internet cultures; the water buffalo and, trapped in so many kinds of cages that escape is (almost) impossible, the white tiger. And with a charisma as undeniable as it is unexpected, Balram teaches us that religion doesn't create virtue, and money doesn't solve every problem -- but decency can still be found in a corrupt world, and you can get what you want out of life if you eavesdrop on the right conversations.

By Muriel Barbery, Alison Anderson
$15.00
ISBN-13: 9781933372600
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Europa Editions, 09/01/2008
Discussed July 25, 2009
The enthralling international bestseller... We are in the center of Paris, in an elegant apartment building inhabited by bourgeois families. Renee, the concierge, is witness to the lavish but vacuous lives of her numerous employers. Outwardly she conforms to every stereotype of the concierge: fat, cantankerous, addicted to television. Yet, unbeknownst to her employers, Renee is a cultured autodidact who adores art, philosophy, music, and Japanese culture. With humor and intelligence she scrutinizes the lives of the building's tenants, who for their part are barely aware of her existence.
Then there's Paloma, a twelve-year-old genius. She is the daughter of a tedious parliamentarian, a talented and startlingly lucid child who has decided to end her life on the sixteenth of June, her thirteenth birthday. Until then she will continue behaving as everyone expects her to behave: a mediocre pre-teen high on adolescent subculture, a good but not an outstanding student, an obedient if obstinate daughter.
Paloma and Renee hide both their true talents and their finest qualities from a world they suspect cannot or will not appreciate them. They discover their kindred souls when a wealthy Japanese man named Ozu arrives in the building. Only he is able to gain Paloma's trust and to see through Renee's timeworn disguise to the secret that haunts her. This is a moving, funny, triumphant novel that exalts the quiet victories of the inconspicuous among us.

By Yoko Ogawa
$14.00
ISBN-13: 9780312427801
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Picador, 02/01/2009
Discussed June 6, 2009
He is a brilliant math Professor with a peculiar problem--ever since a traumatic head injury, he has lived with only eighty minutes of short-term memory.
She is an astute young Housekeeper, with a ten-year-old son, who is hired to care for him.
And every morning, as the Professor and the Housekeeper are introduced to each other anew, a strange and beautiful relationship blossoms between them. Though he cannot hold memories for long (his brain is like a tape that begins to erase itself every eighty minutes), the Professor's mind is still alive with elegant equations from the past. And the numbers, in all of their articulate order, reveal a sheltering and poetic world to both the Housekeeper and her young son. The Professor is capable of discovering connections between the simplest of quantities--like the Housekeeper's shoe size--and the universe at large, drawing their lives ever closer and more profoundly together, even as his memory slips away.
"The Housekeeper and the Professor "is an enchanting story about what it means to live in the present, and about the curious equations that can create a family.

Gods Behaving Badly (Hardcover)

By Marie Phillips
$13.99
ISBN-13: 9780316067638
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Back Bay Books, 12/01/2008
Discussed March 28, 2009
Being a Greek god is not all it once was. Yes, the twelve gods of Olympus are alive and well in the twenty-first century, but they are crammed together in a London townhouse-and none too happy about it. And they've had to get day jobs: Artemis as a dog-walker, Apollo as a TV psychic, Aphrodite as a phone sex operator, Dionysus as a DJ. Even more disturbingly, their powers are waning, and even turning mortals into trees--a favorite pastime of Apollo's--is sapping their vital reserves of strength. Soon, what begins as a minor squabble between Aphrodite and Apollo escalates into an epic battle of wills. Two perplexed humans, Alice and Neil, who are caught in the crossfire, must fear not only for their own lives, but for the survival of humankind. Nothing less than a true act of heroism is needed-but can these two decidedly ordinary people replicate the feats of the mythical heroes and save the world?

By Karen Abbott
$15.00
ISBN-13: 9780812975994
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Random House Trade Paperbacks, 06/01/2008
Discussed January 31, 2009 (originally scheduled for Nov)
Step into the perfumed parlors of the Everleigh Club, the most famous brothel in American history-and the catalyst for a culture war that rocked the nation. Operating in Chicago's notorious Levee district at the dawn of the last century, the Club's proprietors, two aristocratic sisters named Minna and Ada Everleigh, welcomed moguls and actors, senators and athletes, foreign dignitaries and literary icons, into their stately double mansion, where thirty stunning Everleigh "butterflies" awaited their arrival. Courtesans named Doll, Suzy Poon Tang, and Brick Top devoured raw meat to the delight of Prince Henry of Prussia and recited poetry for Theodore Dreiser. Whereas lesser madams pocketed most of a harlot's earnings and kept a "whipper" on staff to mete out discipline, the Everleighs made sure their girls dined on gourmet food, were examined by an honest physician, and even tutored in the literature of Balzac. Not everyone appreciated the sisters' attempts to elevate the industry. Rival Levee madams hatched numerous schemes to ruin the Everleighs, including an attempt to frame them for the death of department store heir Marshall Field, Jr. But the sisters' most daunting foes were the Progressive Era reformers, who sent the entire country into a frenzy with lurid tales of "white slavery"----the allegedly rampant practice of kidnapping young girls and forcing them into brothels. This furor shaped America's sexual culture and had repercussions all the way to the White House, including the formation of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. With a cast of characters that includes Jack Johnson, John Barrymore, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., William Howard Taft, "Hinky Dink" Kenna, and AlCapone, Sin in the Second City is Karen Abbott's colorful, nuanced portrait of the iconic Everleigh sisters, their world-famous Club, and the perennial clash between our nation's hedonistic impulses and Puritanical roots. Culminating in a dramatic last stand between brothel keepers and crusading reformers, "Sin in the Second City" offers a vivid snapshot of America's journey from Victorian-era propriety to twentieth-century modernity. Visit www.sininthesecondcity.com to learn more

By Joshua Ferris
$13.99
ISBN-13: 9780316016391
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Back Bay Books, 02/01/2008
Discussed July 26, 2008
No one knows us quite the same way as the men and women who sit beside us in department meetings and crowd the office refrigerator with their labeled yogurts. Every office is a family of sorts, and the ad agency Joshua Ferris brilliantly depicts in his debut novel is family at its strangest and best, coping with a business downturn in the time-honored way: through gossip, pranks, and increasingly frequent coffee breaks. With a demon's eye for the details that make life worth noticing, Joshua Ferris tells a true and funny story about survival in life's strangest environment--the one we pretend is normal five days a week.

Catch-22 (Paperback)

By Joseph Heller
$16.00
ISBN-13: 9780684833392
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Simon & Schuster, 09/01/1996
Discussed September 27, 2008
"Catch-22" is like no other novel. It is one of the funniest books ever written, a keystone work in American literature, and even added a new term to the dictionary. At the heart of "Catch-22" resides the incomparable, malingering bombardier, Yossarian, a hero endlessly inventive in his schemes to save his skin from the horrible chances of war. His efforts are perfectly understandable because as he furiously scrambles, thousands of people he hasn't even met are trying to kill him. His problem is Colonel Cathcart, who keeps raising the number of missions the men must fly to complete their service. Yet if Yossarian makes any attempts to excuse himself from the perilous missions that he is committed to flying, he is trapped by the Great Loyalty Oath Crusade, the hilariously sinister bureaucratic rule from which the book takes its title: a man is considered insane if he willingly continues to fly dangerous combat missions, but if he makes the necessary formal request to be relieved of such missions, the very act of making the request proves that he is sane and therefore ineligible to be relieved. "Catch-22" is a microcosm of the twentieth-century world as it might look to some one dangerously sane -- a masterpiece of our time.

What Is the What (Paperback)

By Dave Eggers
$15.95
ISBN-13: 9780307385901
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Vintage, 10/01/2007
Discussed May 31 2008
"What Is the What" is the epic novel based on the life of Valentino Achak Deng who, along with thousands of other children--the so-called Lost Boys--was forced to leave his village in Sudan at the age of seven and trek hundreds of miles by foot, pursued by militias, government bombers, and wild animals, crossing the deserts of three countries to find freedom. When he finally is resettled in the United States, he finds a life full of promise, but also heartache and myriad new challenges. Moving, suspenseful, and unexpectedly funny, "What Is the What" is an astonishing novel that illuminates the lives of millions through one extraordinary man.

The Book Thief (Paperback)

By Markus Zusak
$11.99
ISBN-13: 9780375842207
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Knopf Books for Young Readers, 09/01/2007
Discussed March 29, 2008
It's just a small story really, about among other things: a girl, some words, an accordionist, some fanatical Germans, a Jewish fist-fighter, and quite a lot of thievery. . . .
Set during World War II in Germany, Markus Zusak's groundbreaking new novel is the story of Liesel Meminger, a foster girl living outside of Munich. Liesel scratches out a meager existence for herself by stealing when she encounters something she can't resist-books. With the help of her accordion-playing foster father, she learns to read and shares her stolen books with her neighbors during bombing raids as well as with the Jewish man hidden in her basement before he is marched to Dachau.
This is an unforgettable story about the ability of books to feed the soul.

Intuition (Paperback)

By Allegra Goodman
$14.00
ISBN-13: 9780385336109
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Dial Press Trade Paperback, 03/01/2007
Discussed January 27, 2008
Hailed as "a writer of uncommon clarity" by the "New Yorker," National Book Award finalist Allegra Goodman has dazzled readers with her acclaimed works of fiction, including such beloved bestsellers as "The Family Markowitz" and "Kaaterskill Falls," Now she returns with a bracing new novel, at once an intricate mystery and a rich human drama set in the high-stakes atmosphere of a prestigious research institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Sandy Glass, a charismatic publicity-seeking oncologist, and Marion Mendelssohn, a pure, exacting scientist, are codirectors of a lab at the Philpott Institute dedicated to cancer research and desperately in need of a grant. Both mentors and supervisors of their young postdoctoral proteges, Glass and Mendelssohn demand dedication and obedience in a competitive environment where funding is scarce and results elusive. So when the experiments of Cliff Bannaker, a young postdoc in a rut, begin to work, the entire lab becomes giddy with newfound expectations. But Cliff's rigorous colleague-and girlfriend-Robin Decker suspects the unthinkable: that his findings are fraudulent. As Robin makes her private doubts public and Cliff maintains his innocence, a life-changing controversy engulfs the lab and everyone in it. With extraordinary insight, Allegra Goodman brilliantly explores the intricate mixture of workplace intrigue, scientific ardor, and the moral consequences of a rush to judgment. She has written an unforgettable novel.

The Keep (Paperback)

By Jennifer Egan
$13.95
ISBN-13: 9781400079742
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Anchor, 07/01/2007
Discussed 10/20/07
Award-winning author Jennifer Egan brilliantly conjures a world from which escape is impossible and where the keep -the tower, the last stand -is both everything worth protecting and the very thing that must be surrendered in order to survive. Two cousins, irreversibly damaged by a childhood prank, reunite twenty years later to renovate a medieval castle in Eastern Europe. In an environment of extreme paranoia, cut off from the outside world, the men reenact the signal event of their youth, with even more catastrophic results. And as the full horror of their predicament unfolds, a prisoner, in jail for an unnamed crime, recounts an unforgettable story that seamlessly brings the crimes of the past and present into piercing relation.

By Malcolm Gladwell
$15.99
ISBN-13: 9780316010665
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Back Bay Books, 04/01/2007
Discussed on August 25, 2007
A thought-provoking read. With examples ranging from divorce prediction at Gottman's Love Lab to the Pepsi Challenge to the Diallo case, Gladwell's clear, enjoyable writing just might change the way you look at the world and decision-making.

By Marisha Pessl
$15.00
ISBN-13: 9780143112129
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Penguin (Non-Classics), 05/01/2007
Discussed on June 30, 2007
Structured around a syllabus for a Great Works of Literature class, this mesmerizing debut, uncannily uniting the trials of a postmodern upbringing with a murder mystery, heralds the arrival of a vibrant new voice in literary fiction.

Slow Man (Paperback)

By J. M. Coetzee
$14.00
ISBN-13: 9780143037897
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Penguin (Non-Classics), 10/01/2006
Discussed April 28, 2007
J. M. Coetzee, one of the greatest living writers in the English language, has crafted a deeply moving tale of love and mortality in his new book, "Slow Man." When photographer Paul Rayment loses his leg in a bicycle accident, he is forced to reexamine how he has lived his life. Through Paul's story, Coetzee addresses questions that define us all: What does it mean to do good? What in our lives is ultimately meaningful? How do we define the place we call home? In his clear and uncompromising voice, Coetzee struggles with these issues and offers a story that will dazzle the reader on every page.

By Laila Lalami
$13.00
ISBN-13: 9780156030878
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Mariner Books, 10/01/2006
Discussed February 24, 2007
In her exciting debut, Laila Lalami evokes the grit and enduring grace that is modern Morocco and offers an authentic look at the Muslim immigrant experience today.
The book begins as four Moroccans illegally cross the Strait of Gibraltar in an inflatable boat headed for Spain. There's Murad, a gentle, educated man who's been reduced to hustling tourists around Tangier; Halima, who's fleeing her drunken husband and the slums of Casablanca; Aziz, who must leave behind his devoted wife to find work in Spain; and Faten, a student and religious fanatic whose faith is at odds with an influential man determined to destroy her future.
What has driven these men and women to risk their lives? And will the rewards prove to be worth the danger? Sensitively written with beauty and boldness, this is a gripping book about people in search of a better future.

Shalimar the Clown (Paperback)

By Salman Rushdie
$14.95
ISBN-13: 9780679783480
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Random House Trade Paperbacks, 10/01/2006
Discussed 12/2/06
This is the story of Maximilian Ophuls, America's counterterrorism chief, one of the makers of the modern world; his Kashmiri Muslim driver and subsequent killer, a mysterious figure who calls himself Shalimar the clown; Max's illegitimate daughter India; and a woman who links them, whose revelation finally explains them all. It is an epic narrative that moves from California to Kashmir, France, and England, and back to California again. Along the way there are tales of princesses lured from their homes by demons, legends of kings forced to defend their kingdoms against evil. And there is always love, gained and lost, uncommonly beautiful and mortally dangerous.
"Absorbing . . . Everywhere Rushdie takes us there is both love and war, in strange and terrifying combinations, painted in swaying, swirling, world-eating prose that annihilates the borders between East and West, love and hate, private lives and the history they make." -"Time"

By Don DeLillo
$16.00
ISBN-13: 9780140283303
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Penguin (Non-Classics), 06/01/1999
Discussed 11/4/06
Winner of the National Book Award in 1985, Don DeLillo's postmodern masterpiece is about Jack and Babette, a middle America couple with children from previous marriages. After a deadly toxic accident and Babette's addiction to an experimental drug, Jack is forced to question everything about his life.

By Francoise Dorner
$14.00
ISBN-13: 9781590511862
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Other Press, 06/01/2006
Discussed 9/30/06
"As an entomologist of the ways of love, Dorner has a rare precision� we devour her book, realizing that it shows the building and the destruction of a couple carried away by work and day-to-day concerns. Her story is our own, and that is why we love it."--"Paris Match" "To save our marriage I tried offering him another woman. He has started fantasizing about her. He doesn't know it's me� and she is now destroying us." Nina and Roger have a humdrum marriage, not helped by the pressures of their work running a newspaper kiosk on the shaded side of a busy street in Paris. Shuttling between her straight-laced husband, her selfish mother, the father she has never known, and her best friend who has--inconveniently--just split up with her brother-in-law, Nina decides one day to leaf through the girlie magazines she sells every day. She glimpses a world of pleasure and desire, and innocently believes she has found a way of rekindling something that may never have been there. As she explores her own longings and discovers how attractive she is to other men, how can she fail to win back the attention of the man she loves?

AA Gill is Away (Paperback)

By A.A. Gill
$14.00
ISBN-13: 9780743276672
Availability: Not Readily Available, please call or email for information
Published: Simon & Schuster, 10/01/2005
Discussed 7/29/06
A. A. Gill is one of the most feared writers in London, noted--according to the "New York Times"--for his "rapier wit." Some even consider the mere assignment of a subject to Gill a hostile act. But when the notice "AA GILL IS AWAY" runs in the "Sunday Times" of London, the city can rest peacefully in the knowledge that the writer is off traveling. "My editor asked me what I wanted from journalism and I said the first thing that came into my head--I'd like to interview places. To treat a place as if it were a person, to go and listen to it, ask it questions, observe it the way you would interview a politician or a pop star," Gill writes. Upon his return, readers are treated to an account of his vacations to places like famine-stricken Sudan, the pornography studios of California's San Fernando Valley, the dying Aral Sea or the seedy parts of Kaliningrad. The result is one of the most fascinating, stylish and irreverent collections of travel writing.

Never Let Me Go (Paperback)

By Kazuo Ishiguro
$15.00
ISBN-13: 9781400078776
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Vintage, 03/01/2006
Discussed 6/3/06
From the Booker Prize-winning author of "The Remains of the Day "comes a devastating new novel of innocence, knowledge, and loss. As children Kathy, Ruth, and Tommy were students at Hailsham, an exclusive boarding school secluded in the English countryside. It was a place of mercurial cliques and mysterious rules where teachers were constantly reminding their charges of how special they were. Now, years later, Kathy is a young woman. Ruth and Tommy have reentered her life. And for the first time she is beginning to look back at their shared past and understand just what it is that makes them special-and how that gift will shape the rest of their time together. Suspenseful, moving, beautifully atmospheric, "Never Let Me Go "is another classic by the author of "The Remains of the Day"

By Laurence Sterne, Joan New, Melvyn New
$12.00
ISBN-13: 9780141439778
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Penguin Classics, 05/01/2003
Discussed 4/06
Rich in playful double entendres, digressions, formal oddities, and typographical experiments, "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman provoked a literary sensation when it first appeared in England in a series of volumes from 1759 to 1767. An ingeniously structured novel (about writing a novel) that fascinates like a verbal game of chess, "Tristram Shandy is the most protean and playful English novel of the eighteenth century and a celebration of the art of fiction; its inventiveness anticipates the work of Joyce, Rushdie, and Fuentes in our own century.

By Marjane Satrapi
$12.95
ISBN-13: 9780375714573
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Pantheon, 06/01/2004
Discussed 3/25/06
-A best-seller in Europe, where it also won several prestigious comic book awards, Satrapi's Persepolis has been met with universal praise by American critics. It made Library Journal's List of the Best Books of 2003, as well as drawing glowing reviews from such widely read publications as the New York Times, Vogue, USA Today and Publisher's Weekly. It is the 2006 selection for Seattle Reads.
Satrapi's work has broad appeal. Persepolis is touted as being thought-provoking enough to draw an adult audience, but as a coming of age story, it also features a central character with whom teens can identify. The Young Adult Library Services Association included Persepolis on their 2004 list of the Best Books for Young Adults. - Persepolis is educational. Through the experience of a sympathetic protagonist, events from a broad historical context are made accessible to a large audience, an audience who may only know of Iran through CNN Coverage. In the aftermath of 9/11, the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the president's labeling of Iran, Iraq and North Korea as the "Axis of Evil," Satrapi's work may give the people of her native country a human face and readers a fresh perspective of an unfamiliar culture. Says Satrapi: "The only thing I hope is that people read my book and see that this abstract thing, this Axis of Evil, is made up of individuals with lives and hopes."

Shroud (Paperback)

By John Banville
$13.00
ISBN-13: 9780375725302
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Vintage, 06/01/2004
Discussed 2/25/06.
One part Nietzsche, one part Humbert Humbert, and a soupcon of Milton's Lucifer, Axel Vander, the dizzyingly unreliable narrator of John Banville's masterful new novel, is very old, recently widowed, and the bearer of a fearsome reputation as a literary dandy and bully. A product of the Old World, he is also an escapee from its conflagrations, with the wounds to prove it. And everything about him is a lie. Now those lies have been unraveled by a mysterious young woman whom Vander calls "Miss Nemesis." They are to meet in Turin, a city best known for its enigmatic shroud. Is her purpose to destroy Vander or to save him--or simply to show him what lies beneath the shroud in which he has wrapped his life? A splendidly moving exploration of identity, duplicity, and desire, Shroud" is Banville's most rapturous performance to date.

PopCo (Paperback)

By Scarlett Thomas
$14.00
ISBN-13: 9780156031370
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Mariner Books, 01/01/2004
Discussed 1/21/06
PopCo tells the story of Alice Butler-a subversively smart girl in our commercial-soaked world who grows from recluse orphan to burgeoning vigilante, buttressed by mystery, codes, math, and the sense her grandparents gave her that she could change the world. Alice-slight introvert, crossword compositor- works at PopCo, a globally successful and slightly sinister toy company. Lured by their CEO to a Thought Camp out on the moors, PopCo's creatives must invent the ultimate product for teenage girls. Meanwhile, Alice receives bizarre, encrypted messages she suspects relate to her grandfather's decoding of a centuries-old manuscript that many-including her long-disappeared father-believe leads to buried treasure. Its key, she's sure, is engraved on the necklace she's been wearing since she was ten. Using the skills she learned from her grandparents and teaching us aspects of cryptanalysis, Alice discovers the source of these creepy codes. Will this lead her to the mysterious treasure or another, even more carefully guarded secret?

Snow (Paperback)

By Orhan Pamuk
$14.95
ISBN-13: 9780375706868
Availability: Readily Available
Published: Vintage, 07/01/2005
Discussed 12/05
From the acclaimed author of My Name is Red, comes a spellbinding tale of disparate yearnings--for love, art, power and God--set in a remote Turkish town, where stirrings of political Islamism threaten to unravel the secular order.