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            <![CDATA[ 15 New Books to Watch For in April ]]>
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            <![CDATA[ <p id=article-summary class=css-w6ymp8 e1wiw3jv0>Dive into a long-awaited biography of Philip Roth, an exposé of the Sackler family and novels from Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney, Jhumpa Lahiri and Katherine Heiny.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12026 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Antiquities-by-Cynthia-Ozick-205x300.jpg alt=Antiquities by Cynthia Ozick width=205 height=300 />
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<h3 id=link-4aa74dfc class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Antiquities,’ by Cynthia Ozick (Knopf, April 13)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>It’s 1949 and Lloyd Wilkinson Petrie has set out to write a memoir of his years at the Temple Academy for Boys. As he grapples with his fading memories, he focuses on a former classmate, Ben-Zion Elefantin, and on his own fascination with archaeology.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12027 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Antitrust-Taking-on-Monopoly-Power-From-the-Gilded-Age-to-the-Digital-Age-203x300.jpg alt=Antitrust Taking on Monopoly Power From the Gilded Age to the Digital Age width=203 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-20e26bca class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Antitrust: Taking on Monopoly Power From the Gilded Age to the Digital Age,’ by Amy Klobuchar (Knopf, April 27)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Klobuchar, the senior senator from Minnesota, is the chair of the Senate subcommittee overseeing antitrust enforcement. Here she gives a sweeping look at the history of antimonopoly laws in the U.S. and outlines a plan to better enforce the fight against monopolies, particularly those in the tech and pharmaceutical industries.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12028 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Beautiful-Things-A-Memoir-198x300.jpg alt=Beautiful Things A Memoir width=198 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-5c7295a7 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Beautiful Things: A Memoir,’ by Hunter Biden (Gallery Books, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Biden’s younger son tells his story of addiction and sobriety — and the relentless scrutiny of growing up in the public eye. He doesn’t hold back details of his family life, including his relationship with his older brother’s widow, is candid about his lowest lows and offers a peek at his life in Los Angeles, with a new wife and young child.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12029 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Bomber-Mafia-202x300.jpg alt=The Bomber Mafia width=202 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-7d5eeaf7 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War,’ by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown, April 27)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Readers of “The Tipping Point,” “Outliers,” “Blink” and Gladwell’s other books will recognize his approach in this account of the bombing of Tokyo in 1945. He focuses on two American generals — Haywood Hansell and Curtis LeMay — and how their differing approaches to air warfare left a profound military legacy. In his prologue, Gladwell mentions his personal connection — he lived in England as a child, surrounded by reminders of the war, which nurtured a lifelong obsession.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12030 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Early-Morning-Riser-205x300.jpg alt=Early Morning Riser width=205 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-56dda5f2 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Early Morning Riser,’ by Katherine Heiny (Knopf, April 13)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>It’s 2002 and Jane, who has moved to a small Michigan town to teach elementary school, falls for a local woodworker: Duncan looked “like the Brawny paper towel man, and no less handsome.” It feels like her new boyfriend has been involved with nearly every woman in town, and he’s still on very friendly terms with his ex-wife. The novel follows them for over a decade, as their lives become more entwined and Jane puts down roots.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12031 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Empire-of-Pain-197x300.jpg alt=Empire of Pain width=197 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-2b3113d2 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty,’ by Patrick Radden Keefe (Doubleday, April 13)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>The Sackler family and their company, Purdue Pharma, have played an outsize role in the opioid epidemic. Purdue, which recently pleaded guilty to charges related to the way it marketed OxyContin, will pay roughly $8.3 billion to settle the case; the Sacklers have agreed to pay civil penalties of $225 million. Keefe, a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of “Say Nothing,” a history of the Troubles in Ireland, examines the family’s impact on American society and health.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12032 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/First-Person-Singular-194x300.jpg alt=First Person Singular width=194 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-4d057f8e class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘First Person Singular: Stories,’ by Haruki Murakami. Translated by Philip Gabriel. (Knopf, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>A man recounting a one-night stand and a monkey who steals the names from Tokyo residents are among the narrators of the eight stories collected here, by the author known for his novels “1Q84,” “The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle” and “Norwegian Wood.” You’ll find meditations on baseball and jazz, along with Murakami’s signature magical realist style.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12034 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Free-World-200x300.jpg alt=The Free World width=200 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-6ef83596 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Free World: Art and Thought in the Cold War,’ by Louis Menand (Farrar, Straus &amp; Giroux, April 20)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>In his Pulitzer Prize-winning 2001 book, “The Metaphysical Club,” Menand offered an intellectual history of America after the Civil War by looking at a group of men whose ideas and discussions helped shape American thought. Now, he focuses on the years after World War II through the Vietnam War, when American culture was exported more broadly to the world. “If you asked me when I was growing up what the most important good in life was, I would have said ‘freedom,’” he writes. “As I got older, I started to wonder just what freedom is, or what it can realistically mean. I wrote this book to help myself, and maybe help you, figure that out.”</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12035 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Good-Company-199x300.jpg alt=Good Company width=199 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-d70b50a class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Good Company,’ by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney (Ecco, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>“<a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/28/books/review-in-the-nest-a-family-pot-to-split-sets-sibling-relations-to-a-slow-boil.html>The Nest</a>,” D’Aprix Sweeney’s best-selling debut novel, followed four siblings bickering over an expected family inheritance. Now she tells the story of Flora, a voice actor in Los Angeles, who is upended after she finds her husband’s wedding ring — the one he claims he lost years earlier — tucked in an envelope. The lie about the ring is, perhaps unsurprisingly, a sign of betrayal, and as Flora considers how to respond, the narrative revisits their early courtship, the years spent raising their daughter and the jealousy Flora feels toward her best friend, Margot, an actress in a hospital soap.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12036 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Hard-Crowd-199x300.jpg alt=The Hard Crowd width=199 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-7b8a639b class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000-2020,’ by Rachel Kushner (Scribner, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>“I am the one who lived to tell,” Kushner writes in the title essay of this collection, which includes memoir, journalism and criticism from the past 20 years. As she moves from her rough-and-tumble adolescence in California to her musings on artists and writers like Jeff Koons and Marguerite Duras, the settings leap from a motorcycle race down the Baja Peninsula to a Palestinian refugee camp.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12037 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Man-Who-Lived-Underground-200x300.jpg alt=The Man Who Lived Underground, width=200 height=300 />

<strong>Must Read -</strong>

<a href=https://www.frontlist.in/top-10-novels-set-in-villages/>Top 10 novels set in villages</a>
<a href=https://www.frontlist.in/vice-president-of-india-m-venkaiah-naidu-launches-book-bringing-governments-and-people-closer/>Vice President of India M Venkaiah Naidu launches book “Bringing Governments and People Closer”</a>
<a href=https://www.frontlist.in/imogene-nixs-erotic-romance-novels-on-love-sex-and-aliens-to-make-moon-debut/>Imogene Nix’s erotic romance novels on love, sex and aliens to make Moon debut</a>
<h3 id=link-6dcd2dd5 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Man Who Lived Underground,’ by Richard Wright (Library of America, April 20)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>This previously unpublished novel from the author of “Black Boy” and “Native Son” follows a Black man who is tortured by the police until he confesses to a crime he did not commit. “I have never written anything in my life that stemmed more from sheer inspiration,” Wright said of the book.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12038 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/On-the-House-198x300.jpg alt=On the House width=198 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-3c9c4e3 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘On the House: A Washington Memoir,’ by John Boehner (St. Martin’s, April 13)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>In the folksy manner he honed over decades in Washington, the former speaker of the House shares memories from his time in government. Boehner opens with a golf-course anecdote about Donald Trump, years before he became president, and expresses dissatisfaction about the direction his party took.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12039 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Peaces-199x300.jpg alt=Peaces width=199 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-670fae45 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Peaces,’ by Helen Oyeyemi (Riverhead, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Two lovers, Otto and Xavier, set out on a train voyage with their pet mongoose — and that’s only the start of this vivid, magic-infused fairy tale. As the trip progresses, they realize their lives and histories are linked in ways they never could have imagined.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12040 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Philip-Roth-197x300.jpg alt=Philip Roth width=197 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-1a727dc3 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Philip Roth: The Biography,’ by Blake Bailey (Norton, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>“I don’t want you to rehabilitate me,” Roth told his biographer. “Just make me interesting.” Bailey obliged, and in this 900-page history, he delves into the artistic, intellectual and occasionally lurid private life of one of the country’s most famous writers, tracing his childhood and five-decade career.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12041 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Whereabouts-186x300.jpg alt=Whereabouts width=186 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-50b1f396 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Whereabouts,’ by Jhumpa Lahiri (Knopf, April 27)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Lahiri — the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “Interpreter of Maladies” and “<a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/28/books/out-of-the-overcoat.html>The Namesake</a>,” among other books — moved to Rome in 2012 and immersed herself in Italian. She wrote this new novel, which follows an unnamed woman throughout her solitary life, in Italian and translated it into English herself.</p>
<em>Source: nytimes.com</em>

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        <pubDate>Fri, 03 26, 2021 07:52 am</pubDate>
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                <![CDATA[ 15 New Books to Watch For in April ]]>
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                <![CDATA[ <p id=article-summary class=css-w6ymp8 e1wiw3jv0>Dive into a long-awaited biography of Philip Roth, an exposé of the Sackler family and novels from Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney, Jhumpa Lahiri and Katherine Heiny.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12026 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Antiquities-by-Cynthia-Ozick-205x300.jpg alt=Antiquities by Cynthia Ozick width=205 height=300 />
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<h3 id=link-4aa74dfc class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Antiquities,’ by Cynthia Ozick (Knopf, April 13)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>It’s 1949 and Lloyd Wilkinson Petrie has set out to write a memoir of his years at the Temple Academy for Boys. As he grapples with his fading memories, he focuses on a former classmate, Ben-Zion Elefantin, and on his own fascination with archaeology.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12027 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Antitrust-Taking-on-Monopoly-Power-From-the-Gilded-Age-to-the-Digital-Age-203x300.jpg alt=Antitrust Taking on Monopoly Power From the Gilded Age to the Digital Age width=203 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-20e26bca class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Antitrust: Taking on Monopoly Power From the Gilded Age to the Digital Age,’ by Amy Klobuchar (Knopf, April 27)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Klobuchar, the senior senator from Minnesota, is the chair of the Senate subcommittee overseeing antitrust enforcement. Here she gives a sweeping look at the history of antimonopoly laws in the U.S. and outlines a plan to better enforce the fight against monopolies, particularly those in the tech and pharmaceutical industries.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12028 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Beautiful-Things-A-Memoir-198x300.jpg alt=Beautiful Things A Memoir width=198 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-5c7295a7 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Beautiful Things: A Memoir,’ by Hunter Biden (Gallery Books, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Biden’s younger son tells his story of addiction and sobriety — and the relentless scrutiny of growing up in the public eye. He doesn’t hold back details of his family life, including his relationship with his older brother’s widow, is candid about his lowest lows and offers a peek at his life in Los Angeles, with a new wife and young child.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12029 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Bomber-Mafia-202x300.jpg alt=The Bomber Mafia width=202 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-7d5eeaf7 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War,’ by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown, April 27)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Readers of “The Tipping Point,” “Outliers,” “Blink” and Gladwell’s other books will recognize his approach in this account of the bombing of Tokyo in 1945. He focuses on two American generals — Haywood Hansell and Curtis LeMay — and how their differing approaches to air warfare left a profound military legacy. In his prologue, Gladwell mentions his personal connection — he lived in England as a child, surrounded by reminders of the war, which nurtured a lifelong obsession.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12030 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Early-Morning-Riser-205x300.jpg alt=Early Morning Riser width=205 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-56dda5f2 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Early Morning Riser,’ by Katherine Heiny (Knopf, April 13)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>It’s 2002 and Jane, who has moved to a small Michigan town to teach elementary school, falls for a local woodworker: Duncan looked “like the Brawny paper towel man, and no less handsome.” It feels like her new boyfriend has been involved with nearly every woman in town, and he’s still on very friendly terms with his ex-wife. The novel follows them for over a decade, as their lives become more entwined and Jane puts down roots.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12031 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Empire-of-Pain-197x300.jpg alt=Empire of Pain width=197 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-2b3113d2 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty,’ by Patrick Radden Keefe (Doubleday, April 13)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>The Sackler family and their company, Purdue Pharma, have played an outsize role in the opioid epidemic. Purdue, which recently pleaded guilty to charges related to the way it marketed OxyContin, will pay roughly $8.3 billion to settle the case; the Sacklers have agreed to pay civil penalties of $225 million. Keefe, a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of “Say Nothing,” a history of the Troubles in Ireland, examines the family’s impact on American society and health.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12032 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/First-Person-Singular-194x300.jpg alt=First Person Singular width=194 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-4d057f8e class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘First Person Singular: Stories,’ by Haruki Murakami. Translated by Philip Gabriel. (Knopf, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>A man recounting a one-night stand and a monkey who steals the names from Tokyo residents are among the narrators of the eight stories collected here, by the author known for his novels “1Q84,” “The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle” and “Norwegian Wood.” You’ll find meditations on baseball and jazz, along with Murakami’s signature magical realist style.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12034 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Free-World-200x300.jpg alt=The Free World width=200 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-6ef83596 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Free World: Art and Thought in the Cold War,’ by Louis Menand (Farrar, Straus &amp; Giroux, April 20)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>In his Pulitzer Prize-winning 2001 book, “The Metaphysical Club,” Menand offered an intellectual history of America after the Civil War by looking at a group of men whose ideas and discussions helped shape American thought. Now, he focuses on the years after World War II through the Vietnam War, when American culture was exported more broadly to the world. “If you asked me when I was growing up what the most important good in life was, I would have said ‘freedom,’” he writes. “As I got older, I started to wonder just what freedom is, or what it can realistically mean. I wrote this book to help myself, and maybe help you, figure that out.”</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12035 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Good-Company-199x300.jpg alt=Good Company width=199 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-d70b50a class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Good Company,’ by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney (Ecco, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>“<a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/28/books/review-in-the-nest-a-family-pot-to-split-sets-sibling-relations-to-a-slow-boil.html>The Nest</a>,” D’Aprix Sweeney’s best-selling debut novel, followed four siblings bickering over an expected family inheritance. Now she tells the story of Flora, a voice actor in Los Angeles, who is upended after she finds her husband’s wedding ring — the one he claims he lost years earlier — tucked in an envelope. The lie about the ring is, perhaps unsurprisingly, a sign of betrayal, and as Flora considers how to respond, the narrative revisits their early courtship, the years spent raising their daughter and the jealousy Flora feels toward her best friend, Margot, an actress in a hospital soap.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12036 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Hard-Crowd-199x300.jpg alt=The Hard Crowd width=199 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-7b8a639b class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000-2020,’ by Rachel Kushner (Scribner, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>“I am the one who lived to tell,” Kushner writes in the title essay of this collection, which includes memoir, journalism and criticism from the past 20 years. As she moves from her rough-and-tumble adolescence in California to her musings on artists and writers like Jeff Koons and Marguerite Duras, the settings leap from a motorcycle race down the Baja Peninsula to a Palestinian refugee camp.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12037 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/The-Man-Who-Lived-Underground-200x300.jpg alt=The Man Who Lived Underground, width=200 height=300 />

<strong>Must Read -</strong>

<a href=https://www.frontlist.in/top-10-novels-set-in-villages/>Top 10 novels set in villages</a>
<a href=https://www.frontlist.in/vice-president-of-india-m-venkaiah-naidu-launches-book-bringing-governments-and-people-closer/>Vice President of India M Venkaiah Naidu launches book “Bringing Governments and People Closer”</a>
<a href=https://www.frontlist.in/imogene-nixs-erotic-romance-novels-on-love-sex-and-aliens-to-make-moon-debut/>Imogene Nix’s erotic romance novels on love, sex and aliens to make Moon debut</a>
<h3 id=link-6dcd2dd5 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘The Man Who Lived Underground,’ by Richard Wright (Library of America, April 20)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>This previously unpublished novel from the author of “Black Boy” and “Native Son” follows a Black man who is tortured by the police until he confesses to a crime he did not commit. “I have never written anything in my life that stemmed more from sheer inspiration,” Wright said of the book.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12038 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/On-the-House-198x300.jpg alt=On the House width=198 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-3c9c4e3 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘On the House: A Washington Memoir,’ by John Boehner (St. Martin’s, April 13)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>In the folksy manner he honed over decades in Washington, the former speaker of the House shares memories from his time in government. Boehner opens with a golf-course anecdote about Donald Trump, years before he became president, and expresses dissatisfaction about the direction his party took.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12039 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Peaces-199x300.jpg alt=Peaces width=199 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-670fae45 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Peaces,’ by Helen Oyeyemi (Riverhead, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Two lovers, Otto and Xavier, set out on a train voyage with their pet mongoose — and that’s only the start of this vivid, magic-infused fairy tale. As the trip progresses, they realize their lives and histories are linked in ways they never could have imagined.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12040 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Philip-Roth-197x300.jpg alt=Philip Roth width=197 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-1a727dc3 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Philip Roth: The Biography,’ by Blake Bailey (Norton, April 6)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>“I don’t want you to rehabilitate me,” Roth told his biographer. “Just make me interesting.” Bailey obliged, and in this 900-page history, he delves into the artistic, intellectual and occasionally lurid private life of one of the country’s most famous writers, tracing his childhood and five-decade career.</p>
<img class=aligncenter size-medium wp-image-12041 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Whereabouts-186x300.jpg alt=Whereabouts width=186 height=300 />
<h3 id=link-50b1f396 class=css-e307km e1gnsphs0>‘Whereabouts,’ by Jhumpa Lahiri (Knopf, April 27)</h3>
<p class=css-axufdj evys1bk0>Lahiri — the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “Interpreter of Maladies” and “<a class=css-1g7m0tk title= href=https://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/28/books/out-of-the-overcoat.html>The Namesake</a>,” among other books — moved to Rome in 2012 and immersed herself in Italian. She wrote this new novel, which follows an unnamed woman throughout her solitary life, in Italian and translated it into English herself.</p>
<em>Source: nytimes.com</em>

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            <pubDate>Fri, 03 26, 2021 07:52 am</pubDate>
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