Archives de catégorie : Fiction

WRITTEN IN STARLIGHT d’Isabel Ibañez

An adventurous South American Tomb Raider! This hotly anticipated companion to Woven in Moonlight follows an outcast Condesa, as she braves the jungle to forge an alliance with the lost city of gold.

WRITTEN IN STARLIGHT
by Isabel Ibañez
Page Street, January 2021
(chez Sterling Lord Literistic)

Catalina Quiroga is a Condesa without a country. She’s lost the Inkasisa throne, the loyalty of her people, and her best friend. Banished to the perilous Yanu Jungle, Catalina knows her chances of survival are slim, but that won’t stop her from trying to escape. Her duty is to rule. While running for her life, Catalina is rescued by Manuel, the son of her former general who has spent years searching for allies. With his help, Catalina could find the city of gold that’s home to the fierce Illari people and strike a deal with them for an army to retake her throne. But the elusive Illari are fighting a battle of their own―a mysterious blight is corrupting the jungle, laying waste to everything they hold dear. As a seer, Catalina should be able to help, but her ability to read the future in the stars is as feeble as her survival instincts. While searching for the Illari, Catalina must reckon with her duty and her heart to find her true calling, which is key to stopping the corruption before it destroys the jungle completely.

Isabel Ibañez is the author of Woven in Moonlight (Page Street), which received two starred reviews and earned praise from NPR. She was born in Boca Raton, Florida, and is the proud daughter of two Bolivian immigrants. Isabel is an avid movie goer and loves hosting family and friends around the dinner table. She currently lives in Winter Park, Florida, with her husband, their adorable dog, and a serious collection of books.

SIMON B. RHYMIN’ de Dwayne Reed et Ellien Holi, illustraté par Robert Paul Jr.

A humorous and heartwarming bounce-to-the-beat underdog story about a young rapper whose rhymes help bring his community together.

SIMON B. RHYMIN’
by Dwayne Reed with Ellien Holi, illustrated by Robert Paul Jr.
Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, March 2021
(chez Sterling Lord Literistic)

Eleven-year-old Simon Barnes dreams of becoming a world-famous rapper that everyone calls Notorious D.O.G. But for now, he’s just a Chicago fifth grader who’s small for this age and afraid to use his voice. Simon prefers to lay low at school and at home, even though he’s constantly spitting rhymes in his head. But when his new teacher assigns the class an oral presentation on something that affects their community, Simon must face his fears. With some help from an unexpected ally and his neighborhood crew, will Simon gain the confidence to rap his way to an A and prove that one kid can make a difference in his ‘hood?

Dwayne Reed, who is known as Teach Mr. Reed on social media, is a Chicago teacher, singer, and rapper who has appeared on Good Morning America, MTV’s TRL, Windy City Live, World News Tonight, and more. The video for his hit song, “Welcome to the 4th Grade,” has been viewed over 1.7 million times on YouTube. He has 39,000 Twitter followers and 4,500 YouTube subscribers. When he’s not writing, rapping, or teaching, Dwayne can be found presenting at educator conferences across the U.S.

THE HUMAN ZOO de Sabina Murray

An investigation into Filipino society and its past in this novel set in the Philippines under the presidency of Rodrigo Duterte.

THE HUMAN ZOO
by Sabina Murray
Grove Atlantic, August 2021
(chez Sterling Lord Literistic)

Filipina-American Ting Velosa travels from New York to Manila, both to escape her imminent divorce, and to begin research for a biography of Timicheg, an indigenous Filipino man brought to New York at the start of the twentieth century to be exhibited as part of a ‘human zoo.’ But as she speaks with family and friends, and revisits old haunts, she finds modern Filipino society languishing under the capricious dictatorship of Procopio ‘Copo’ Gumboc. To make her way, Ting must balance the aristocratic traditions of her family, seemingly at odds with both situation and circumstance; reconnecting with her high school friend Inchoy, a gay socialist and professor of philosophy; and beginning a new affair with her old boyfriend Chet, a businessman with questionable ties to the regime. All the while, family duty dictates that Ting be responsible for Laird, a cousin’s fiancé, who has come to the Philippines to rediscover his roots, nevermind not speaking a word of Tagalog. As Ting works on her book, she cannot extricate herself from Laird’s insurgent nationalism, nor from the increasingly repressive regime, even as she finds ways to remain on the periphery of lurking danger. Shuffled between history and the unfolding present, Ting finds herself inevitably colliding with the question of whether the country of her birth will ever change.

Sabina Murray is the author of the novels Forgery, A Carnivore’s Inquiry, Slow Burn, and Valiant Gentlemen, a New York Times Notable Book for 2016, as well as two short story collections, the Pen/Faulkner Award winning The Caprices, and Tales of the New World. She grew up in Australia and the Philippines and is currently a member of the M.F.A. faculty at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. In addition to the PEN/Faulkner Award, she has also received a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, a Massachusetts Cultural Council Grant, a UMass Research and Creativity Award, and a Fred R. Brown Literary Award from the University of Pittsburgh, and has been a Guggenheim Fellow, a Bunting Fellow at Radcliffe, and a Michener Fellow at UT Austin. She is the writer of the screenplay for the film “Beautiful Country,” for which she was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award and a Norwegian Amanda Award.

HOW TO QUIT de Genevieve Sly Crane

Every two years, a woman abandons her life and starts a new one and is never sorry.

HOW TO QUIT
by Genevieve Sly Crane
Gallery/Simon & Schuster, Summer 2021
(chez Sterling Lord Literistic)

Credit: Andrew Baris

Cricket Waller collected her own lives. Her first missing person flyer showed her with braces. Her second came from her life in New Mexico, when she’d called herself Leah. Her third flyer, taken from Manhattan, had been hardest to find. Everyone goes missing in Manhattan, but Cricket didn’t consider the other people who collected her flyers: Her husbands. Her boyfriend. Her parents. Her son.

Genevieve Sly Crane was the Pledge Mistress of her own sorority. She graduated from Stony Brook University with her MFA in Creative Writing and Literature in 2013. Her work has appeared in The Southampton Review and American Short Fiction. Her story “Endings, Bright and Ugly” was a finalist in the 2017 American Short(er) Fiction Prize. She teaches in the Department of English at Monroe College.

PILOT IMPOSTER de James Hannaham

A meditation and artful exploration into the shape-shifting voice of Fernando Pessoa, who was one of the most significant literary voices of the 20th century and one of the greatest poets in the Portuguese language.

PILOT IMPOSTER
by James Hannaham
Soft Skull, Fall 2021
(chez Sterling Lord Literistic)

Photo : © D.R.

PILOT IMPOSTER is wholly extracted from an anthology of poems by the beloved Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa (1888–1935). During a plane trip from Cape Verde to Lisbon, PEN/Faulkner award-winner James Hannaham started reading Pessoa & Co., Richard Zenith’s definitive English translations of Pessoa’s selected works. Hannaham’s trip took place two months after the 2016 election of Donald Trump, so like many people, ideas about unfitness for service, incompetence, and failures of leadership were much on his mind. Once in Lisbon, Hannaham started a regular practice of reading from Zenith’s anthology, meditating on a response, and writing pieces that span across a range of narrative forms. So began his exploration of Portugal’s role in colonialism, the global slave trade, and racialized false beliefs about people of African descent. The final design of PILOT IMPOSTOR will include snapshots of Lisbon, archival photos, and other pictures, in an effort to comprise a work that, like Lisbon and Pessoa, reveals the instability of its identity—and all identities—by exposing its multiple incarnations.

James Hannaham is the author of the novel Delicious Foods for which he received a PEN/Faulkner award and God Says No, which was honored by the American Library Association. He holds an MFA from the Michener Center at the University of Texas at Austin, and lives in Brooklyn, where he teaches creative writing at the Pratt Institute. Delicious Foods was recently longlisted for the Grand Prix de Littérature Américaine Award.