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Browse: Home / Tom Nissley / Page 5

Tom Nissley

Oct

2

2017

Days Without End

Days Without End by Sebastian Barry

To call Days Without End “Blood Meridian lite” might sound dismissive, but it’s not. (In fact, for many readers, it might be just right.) You can’t get any darker than Cormac McCarthy’s Western hellscape, and while Barry’s novel encounters much of the same arbitrary mass slaughter as it makes its own way around the 19th-century West, it also …

Sep

21

2017

Chibi Samurai Wants a Pet

Chibi Samurai Wants a Pet by Sanae Ishida

Those of us who loved the quirkily indomitable spirit of Ishida’s first picture book, Little Kunoichi the Ninja Girl, will be glad to see Little Kunoichi return in a supporting role in the story of her best pal’s search for an animal pal, Chibi Samurai Wants a Pet. Filled with asides both goofy and educational …

Sep

13

2017

Little Fires Everywhere

Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng

It’s all well and good until a baby arrives after decades of longing, strangers slowly weave themselves into the mix, and one seemingly perfect family starts to slowly unravel. Sometimes you just gotta scorch the earth and start over. If you start reading this book at noon, you’ll finish by midnight. If you start at …

Sep

4

2017

This Is How We Do It

This is How We Do It by Matt Lamothe

This Is How We Do It is not the first book to show kids how other kids around the world live, but it’s a particularly thoughtful and appealing approach. Using photographs and descriptions sent to him by seven real families in seven countries (Japan, Peru, Iran, Russia, India, Italy, and Uganda), Lamothe has drawn everyday aspects …

Aug

7

2017

1

remark

Arbitrary Stupid Goal

Arbitrary Stupid Goal by Tamara Shopsin

First of all, Arbitrary Stupid Goal is not about football. (It’s just a funny cover.) It is, ostensibly, about the general store Tamara Shopsin’s parents ran in Greenwich Village, which they turned into a diner so they could keep making rent, and which became a small, secret legend. But it’s really about the old, weird Village, …

Jul

17

2017

Dear Cyborgs

Dear Cyborgs by Eugene Lim

Dear Cyborgs is a tiny book; in your hand it’s almost lighter than air. And the writing has an airy lightness to it to: not funny-light, but nimble and light on its feet, even as it deals with such weighty matters as how to maintain an activist life in the face of oppression and failure. Grounded …

Jul

3

2017

Upstream

Upstream: Searching for Wild Salmon, from River to Table by Langdon Cook

We live in salmon country, right? That’s what we tell ourselves, and in many ways it’s still true, but it’s a complicated, conflicted business now, with hatcheries, dams, $56 Copper River entrees, and, yes, millions of wild salmon still wriggling their way up Northwest streams and rivers to spawn. Cook is a superb guide to …

Jun

19

2017

Awkward Thoughts of W. Kamau Bell

The Awkward Thoughts of W. Kamau Bell by W. Kamau Bell

Phinney Books’ Audiobook of the Week I am learning: a comedian reading their own audiobook is a good way to go. (Eddie Izzard next?) But W. Kamau Bell is not your average comedian, and his Awkward Thoughts is not your average comedian’s book. There’s not a punch line in every paragraph; sometimes there isn’t one on …

Mar

30

2017

Amerika

Amerika by Franz Kafka

This week, someone absconded (yes, it happens, especially in that corner of the store) with almost our entire Kafka section, but they left this one behind, which is somehow fitting. It’s the forgotten one of Kafka’s novels, and for that reason and many others I often say it’s my favorite of his books, or of …

Mar

17

2017

The Tournament of Books:
March Madness of Literature

Those of you who set aside much of your March for college basketball know what it’s like to get all revved up for three weeks of the NCAA tournament, only to see your favorite team get knocked out by noon on the first Thursday of play. Well, that’s what it was like for me to …

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