Hi everyone, here are our five suggested reads of the week!
–
Foursome by Christina Baker Kline
Kline’s (The Exiles) latest is a work of historical fiction that has ties to her own family. Writing about her distant cousins, Adelaide (Addie) and Sarah (Sallie) Yates, who married conjoined twin brothers Chang and Eng Bunker in 19th-century North Carolina, Kline uses older sister Sallie’s voice to drive the novel. With this unique foundation for storytelling, readers get a taste of the hardships the Yates-Bunker families might have endured and their lives as plantation owners with 21 children between them. Issues such as racism, gender roles, motherhood, and identity are touched on, as well as difficult topics such as sexual violence and enslavement. Written with compassion and sensitivity, the book gives readers a behind-the-scenes look at the once perceived scandalous lives of the two Yates-Bunker families. Strong characterizations and imagery quickly move the work along, making this novel hard to put down.
VERDICT Readers familiar with Darin Strauss’s 2000 novel Chang and Eng will appreciate a version of the story told from the wives’ perspectives. Kline points out the liberties she took in crafting this novel, an emotionally moving read for book groups and anyone interested in witnessing a slice of life of two famous brothers and their families. -Starred Library Journal Review
–
The Jellyfish Problem by Tessa Yang
Yang’s first novel (after the story collection The Runaway Restaurant) is imaginative, spanning a range of topics and featuring lyrical writing and complex characters. Marine biologist Jo Ness grieves the loss of her best friend and colleague Aldo, who was working with her on a jellyfish guide. She receives a call from Nadia, an old friend she hasn’t seen in years, pleading for her help with a massive jellyfish that is terrorizing a Maine island community. Nadia is nowhere to be found when Jo arrives in Shattering Point, and the locals there each have a different take on the sea monster, which they have named Clementine. With a varied cast of characters, the novel captivates from start to finish and provides a sense of solace as the events unfold. The finale is perfection, sure to leave readers feeling satiated and impassioned, with sticking power that lasts long after the book’s close.
VERDICT Perfect for fans of Shelby Van Pelt’s Remarkably Bright Creatures or Emily Habeck’s Shark Heart who are looking for the same immersiveness, heartbreak, and comfort those novels evoked. –Starred Library Journal Review
–
Summerland Cove: A Novel by Ellen Baker
Lindy has the summer of a lifetime planned at her family’s beloved cottage in Summerland Cove, Maine, where she’s spent summers all her life and where she and her husband David met as teenagers. She’s slated big events three weekends in a row: David’s fiftieth birthday party, her parents’ fiftieth anniversary party, and her oldest daughter Hailey’s wedding. But when David doesn’t show up for his own party, everything about the life they’ve created together is thrown into question, as the shattered family sets out looking for him. Has he been in an accident? God forbid, been the victim of a crime? Or is it something more cliché—a midlife crisis, an affair? Surely, he’ll show up for his beloved daughter’s wedding—won’t he?
The agonizing days tick by and still no David. Lindy’s four nearly grown children are panicked. Lindy struggles to remain calm, even as long-buried details of the family’s past begin to surface, offering distressing clues. Meanwhile, her mother seems to be harboring secrets of her own, her father has grown alarmingly absent-minded, and Hailey wrestles with whether she should get married at all—even if her father does turn up.
A richly drawn novel of mothers, marriages, and one endearingly messy family, Summerland Cove beautifully evokes the crisp air and rocky beaches of coastal Maine, while poignantly revealing how complicated histories can shape the present in unexpected ways.
–
Waiting On A Friend: A Novel by Natalie Adler
DEBUT Adler’s debut novel is poignant, reminding readers of the fear and anguish that came with the rise of the HIV and AIDS epidemic in the 1980s. It is 1984, and Renata is a 29-year-old bisexual woman living on New York City’s Lower East Side. All around her, friends and neighbors are dying from AIDS, and Renata has a special gift for seeing and communicating with ghosts. When her friend, roommate, and occasional lover Mark dies, Renata’s grief grows because he’s the one ghost she can’t seem to reach. She starts receiving fliers from Manhattan Remediation, a service that claims to be able to dispose of paranormal problems in one’s home. Renata is immediately suspicious about these claims, and the novel goes on to detail her efforts to uncover the company’s fraud and manage her heartache. Despite the book’s tragic plot, there is a certain humor in Renata’s observations, especially of customers at the vintage clothing store where she works. She is a memorable character in a community of sadness, and her communication with ghosts is spellbinding.
VERDICT Adler’s debut is highly recommended for readers who enjoy vividly drawn literary fiction about the past.
–
What to Make of a Life: Cliffs, Fog, Fire and the Self-Knowledge Imperative by Jim Collins
Jim Collins, international bestselling author of Good to Great, offers transformative lessons on constructing—and reconstructing—a life through the cliff moments and transitions we all will face repeatedly in our lives.
What to make of a life?
It is a question we all wrestle with more than once: How do we find our way in the world? How do we make it past the cliffs, significant events that can radically change a life? How do we keep the inner fire burning bright, long and late? Inspired by relentless curiosity, Jim Collins devoted a decade to studying these questions and to minutely analyzing those moments when life flips from clarity to confusion and casts us into a befuddling fog.
His exploration follows various lives side-by-side, paired together at cliffs, and analyzes the different choices made and divergent paths taken. Two rock musicians confronting a future without the group that had brought them success. Two public figures tainted by scandal having to make decisions about how to rebuild their lives. Two suffragists achieving their epic goal and so left with the puzzle of what to do next. Two figure skaters seeking new purpose when their Olympic careers come to an end. What emerges from Collins’s extensive studies—of writers, actors, scientists, leaders and many others—is a framework for understanding how individual lives can be built, sustained and constantly renewed.
By examining the long arc of these remarkable lives, Collins tackles life’s questions. What does it take to:
Discover a deeply fulfilling role in life—one that you are naturally ‘encoded’ for—and then to find a second one, if the first one ends?
Overcome a major cliff—a fracture point that forces choices about what’s next and calls for you to re-envision the years to come?
Make your personal economics work so that you can focus on one big thing that feeds your inner fire?
Navigate the fog, when you feel uncertain or even outright lost, and build confidence step by step?
Build personal momentum decade upon decade, so that your most creative and energetic years are spread across an entire lifetime?
Achieve the imperative to “Know Thyself” and apply self-knowledge to each phase of life
And for the first time, Collins movingly chronicles his own story to reveal how undertaking this project transformed him, changing his thinking and reshaping his emotions in fundamental ways. Surprising, story-driven, deeply researched, and uplifting, What to Make of a Life is a book like no other, convincingly showing how a richly fulfilled life is within reach of us all.
–
Happy reading!
Linda Reimer, SSCL
–
Weekly Suggested Reading Five postings are usually published on Wednesdays, unless Monday is a holiday and then they are published later in the week.
–
Note: Book summaries are from the respective publishers unless otherwise specified.
–
Information on the four library catalogs
The Digital Catalog aka Libby: https://stls.overdrive.com/
The Digital Catalog, is an online catalog containing eBooks, eAudiobooks, and digital magazines. You can use your library card and checkout content on a PC; you can also use the companion app, Libby, to access titles on your mobile devices; so you can enjoy eBooks and eAudiobooks on the go!
All card holders of all Southern Tier Library System member libraries can check out items from the Digital Catalog.
–
Hoopla Catalog: https://www.hoopladigital.com/
The Hoopla Catalog features on demand checkouts of eBooks, eAudiobooks, comic books, albums, movies and TV shows. Patron check out limit is 10 items per month.
Hoopla is a Southeast Steuben County Library service available to all Southeast Steuben County Library card holders.
The Hoopla companion app, also called Hoopla is available for mobile devices, smart TVs & media streaming players.
–
Kanopy Catalog: https://www.kanopy.com/en
The Kanopy Catalog features thousands of streaming videos available on demand.
The Kanopy Catalog is available for all Southern Tier Library System member library card holders, including all Southeast Steuben County Library card holders!
You can access the Kanopy Catalog through a web browser, or download the app to your phone, tablet or media streaming player (i.e. Roku, Google or Fire TV).
–
StarCat: The catalog of physical/traditional library materials: https://starcat.stls.org
Card holders of all Southern Tier Library System member libraries can access StarCat to search for and request materials available at libraries through out the Southern Tier Library System.
–
Have questions about how to access Internet based content (i.e. eBooks, eAudios)? Feel free to drop by the Reference Desk or call the library and we will assist you! The library’s telephone number is: 607-936-3713.
–
Tech & Book Talk is a Southeast Steuben County Library blog.




