Chattanooga Times Free Press

More books to check out for fall

- BY CAROLYN KELLOGG LOS ANGELES TIMES

Need more books for the bedside table? Here’s a selection of can’t-miss titles coming out this fall.

SEPTEMBER

› “Lethal White” by Robert Galbraith

In the fourth book in the Cormoran Strike series, Strike and Robin Ellacott, now his partner, pursue a twisting through London and Parliament. The best-selling Galbraith is the mystery-writing alter ego of J.K. Rowling. (Little, Brown)

› “Who Is Michael Ovitz?” by Michael Ovitz

Ovitz tells the story of his rise from the mail room to top Hollywood power broker as head of Creative Artists Agency, then president of the Walt Disney Co. He tells his own story in this no-holdsbarre­d memoir. (Portfolio)

OCTOBER

› “Good and Mad: The Revolution­ary Power of Women’s Anger” by Rebecca Traister

From the suffragett­es to Anita Hill and beyond, Traister explores the history of female anger as political force in America. She points out how differentl­y anger is read when it comes from men and women. (Simon & Schuster)

› “Killing Commandato­re” by Haruki Murakami

Murakami’s new 700page epic is about a painter drawn into a surreal world that encompasse­s Nazis, a mysterious bell, an adolescent girl and a businessma­n across the way, in homage to “The Great Gatsby.” (Knopf)

› “The Portraits of Beowulf Sheehan” by Beowulf Sheehan

Sheehan has breathed new life into literary photograph­y. His first book has an introducti­on by Salman Rushdie and portraits of Roxane Gay, Donna Tartt, Zadie Smith, Toni Morrison and 200 additional writers. (Black Dog and Leventhal)

› “Riddance: Or: The Sybil Joines Vocational School of Ghost Speakers and Hearing-Mouth Children” by Shelley Jackson

The wildly creative Jackson, known for her story-in-tattoos “Skin,” spins a fragmented, Gothic murder mystery in which a girl who hopes to cure her speech impediment may communicat­e with the dead. (Black Balloon)

› “Red Moon” by Kim Stanley Robinson

The science-fiction writer imagines a future 30 years hence when we have colonized the moon. But all is not well, as the daughter of a Chinese official, a celebrity journalist and the witness to a killing soon discover. (Orbit)

› “Dark Sacred Night” by Michael Connelly For the first time, Connelly puts the retired Harry Bosch together with young LAPD Detective Renee Ballard. They investigat­e the cold case of a 15-year-old runaway who was killed in Hollywood. (Little, Brown)

› “Well-Read Black Girl: Finding Our Stories, Discoverin­g Ourselves,” Glory Edim, editor

This essay collection is the first book from Edim, the recipient of the 2018 L.A. Times Book Prize Innovator’s Award; it celebrates black female readers and writers. (Ballantine)

› “Elevation” by Stephen King

The master of horror has looked deep into our nation’s heart and come up with a story in which the people of Castle Rock hold prejudices against a married lesbian couple in town — until a mysterious ailment draws them together. (Scribner)

NOVEMBER

› “The Feral Detective” by Jonathan Lethem

The former New Yorker’s first detective novel since “Motherless Brooklyn” is set in the desert communitie­s east of Los Angeles, as an unlikely duo search for a missing young woman. (Ecco)

› “Becoming: A Memoir” by Michelle Obama

The former first lady writes of her youth in Chicago, her career, the journey with Barack Obama to the White House and what she did there — raise two daughters, advocate for women and girls and bust the occasional move. (Crown)

› “The End of the Earth: Essays” by Jonathan Franzen

The best-selling novelist’s recent nonfiction essays — about birds, Edith Wharton, traveling to Antarctica, rules for writing and more birds — are collected for the first time. (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

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