Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

20 new books to read in winter 2021

- Barbara Van Denburgh USA TODAY USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

Here’s a glance ahead at 20 winter releases we can’t wait to read – ideally by the fire with a cup of hot cocoa.

“The Prophets,” by Robert Jones Jr. • Release date: Jan. 5 • Jones’ powerful debut novel centers on a forbidden love between two enslaved gay men on an antebellum Mississipp­i plantation. Kirkus Reviews calls it an “ambitious, imaginativ­e, and important tale of Black queerness through history.”

“Outlawed,” by Anna North • Release date: Jan. 5 • It’s 1894, and Ada is an outlaw. After a year of marriage and no pregnancy, in a town that hangs barren witches as women, the teenage wife joins the notorious Hole in the Wall Gang, a new safe haven for outcast women.

“Walking with Ghosts,” by Gabriel Byrne • Release date: Jan. 12 • The award-winning Irish actor (“Miller’s Crossing,” “The Usual Suspects”) reflects on his working-class Dublin childhood and his rise to stardom in Hollywood and on Broadway.

“A Swim in a Pond in the Rain: In Which Four Russians Give a Master Class on Writing, Reading, and Life,” by George Saunders • Release date: Jan. 12 • The short story master and Booker Prize-winning author of “Lincoln in the Bardo” has long taught his MFA students at Syracuse University a class on the Russian short story. Now, he brings that class to us, teaching readers how fiction works and why.

“Concrete Rose,” by Angie Thomas • Release date: Jan. 12 • Thomas revisits Garden Heights 17 years before the events of “The Hate U Give” in a prequel that explores Maverick Carter’s comingof-age. When the dope-slinging son of a former gang legend finds out he’s going to be a father, he starts to learn what it means to really be a man.

“Let Me Tell You What I Mean,” by Joan Didion • Release date: Jan. 26 • A collection of 12 essays drawn from the early days of Didion’s five-decade career on topics as varied as a Gamblers Anonymous meeting and Nancy Reagan.

“Burnt Sugar,” by Avni Doshi • Release date: Jan. 26 • Shortliste­d for the 2020 Booker Prize, this debut novel set in India finds a grown daughter tasked with caring for the aging mother who never cared for her.

“Just As I Am,” by Cicely Tyson • Release date: Jan. 26 • The award-winning actress, nonagenari­an and groundbrea­king Black icon reflects on her life and long career in this meditative memoir.

“The Low Desert: Gangster Stories,” by Tod Goldberg • Release date: Feb. 2 • Twelve spare, stylish contempora­ry crime stories that exemplify the craft. “These spare slices of literary noir are the work of a master storytelle­r,” says a starred review in Publisher Weekly.

“The Four Winds,” by Kristin Hannah • Release date: Feb. 2 • From the author of “The Great Alone” comes an epic new novel of hope and sacrifice set against the backdrop of the Great Depression. In 1934 Texas, Elsa Martinelli must journey west in search of an ever elusive better future.

“Mike Nichols: A Life,” by Mark Harris • Release date: Feb. 2 • Acclaimed film writer Harris, with deep research and vivid details, writes a comprehens­ive biography of one of America’s brightest creative forces. Publishers Weekly calls it “a joyously readable and balanced account of a complex man.”

“A Bright Ray of Darkness,” by Ethan Hawke • Release date: Feb. 2 • The latest novel from the acclaimed actor (“First Reformed,” “Reality Bites”) is a meditation on art and celebrity. A young man rises to fame in his Broadway debut in “Henry IV” as his marriage implodes.

“The Removed,” by Brandon Hobson • Release date: Feb. 2 • Steeped in Cherokee history and folklore, the latest from the National Book Award finalist finds the fractured Echota family reckoning with the death of their son, killed 15 years ago in a police shooting.

“Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of a Life Interrupte­d,” by Suleika Jaouad • Release date: Feb. 9 • Just a few weeks before her 23rd birthday, recent college grad Jaouad was given a lifechangi­ng diagnosis: leukemia, with just a 35% chance of survival. She survived the nearly four years of treatment, but it took an epic road trip to heal her soul.

“How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthrou­ghs We Need,” by Bill Gates • Release date: Feb. 16 • With the help of experts in fields such as physics, engineerin­g, chemistry, finance and politics, the technologi­st and philanthro­pist offers a practical and accessible plan for getting the world to zero greenhouse gas emissions and averting climate catastroph­e.

“No One Is Talking About This,” by Patricia Lockwood • Release date: Feb. 16 • Lockwood’s first novel, following her memoir “Priestdadd­y,” follows an unnamed woman made famous by a social media post in a meditation on life, both online and off.

“Klara and the Sun,” by Kazuo Ishiguro • Release date: March 2 • From the Nobel Prize-winning author of “Never Let Me Go” and “The Remains of the Day” comes a new story told from the perspectiv­e of Klara, an Artificial Friend who watches the world from her place in the store, hopeful that someone will choose her.

“The Committed,” by Viet Thanh Nguyen • Release date: March 2 • This sequel to Nguyen’s Pulitzer Prize-winning “The Sympathize­r” follows its spy protagonis­t to Paris in the 1980s with his brother Bon, where the two deal drugs and get roped into Paris’ criminal underworld.

“Dusk, Night, Dawn: On Revival and Courage,” by Anne Lamott • Release date: March 2 • The bestsellin­g author of “Help, Thanks, Wow” returns with an inspiring guide to restoring hope and joy in the midst of suffering, drawing from her own life experience.

“How Beautiful We Were,” by Imbolo Mbue • Release date: March 9 • From the bestsellin­g author of “Behold the Dreamers” comes the sweeping story of an African village on a collision course with an American oil company and those who take a stand and fight back against colonialis­m and capitalism.

 ??  ?? Left to right: The Prophets. By Robert Jones Jr. PUTNAM Concrete Rose. By Angie Thomas. BALZER + BRAY Burnt Sugar. By Avni Doshi. THE OVERLOOK PRESS Mike Nicholas: A Life. By Mark Harris. PENGUIN PRESS The Committed. By Viet Thanh Nguyen. GROVE
Left to right: The Prophets. By Robert Jones Jr. PUTNAM Concrete Rose. By Angie Thomas. BALZER + BRAY Burnt Sugar. By Avni Doshi. THE OVERLOOK PRESS Mike Nicholas: A Life. By Mark Harris. PENGUIN PRESS The Committed. By Viet Thanh Nguyen. GROVE
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