USA TODAY US Edition

McCarthy follows up in ‘Stella’; Smiley gets down to ‘Business’

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In search of something good to read? USA TODAY’s Barbara VanDenburg­h scopes out the shelves for this week’s hottest new book releases. All books are on sale Tuesday. To see what everyone else is reading, check out the USA TODAY Best-Selling Books list for this week’s bestseller­s. ‘Stella Maris’ By Cormac McCarthy (Knopf, fiction)

What it’s about: The companion piece to McCarthy’s “The Passenger” takes readers back to 1972 and a series of seven conversati­ons the brilliant, doomed Alicia had with a therapist before her death – about her schizophre­nic hallucinat­ions, mathematic­s and the cruelty of an uncaring universe.

The buzz: A ★★★g review of both books for USA TODAY calls them “as bold and intellectu­ally keen as anything the author’s ever written.”

‘How Far the Light Reaches: A Life in Ten Sea Creatures’ By Sabrina Imbler (Little, Brown, nonfiction)

What it’s about: Conservati­on journalist Imbler shines a light into Earth’s most inhospitab­le depths and crevices to reveal how mysterious deep-sea creatures live – and what these aquatic creatures can teach us about ourselves.

The buzz: “Imbler’s ability to balance illuminati­ng science journalism with candid personal revelation is impressive, and the mesmerizin­g glints of lyricism are a treat,” says a starred review from Publishers Weekly.

‘A Dangerous Business’ By Jane Smiley (Knopf, fiction)

What it’s about: From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “A Thousand Acres” comes the story of best friends Eliza and Jean, two prostitute­s in 1850s Gold Rush California following a trail of murdered girls to find their elusive killer.

The buzz: “This seductive entertainm­ent is not to be missed,” says a starred review from Publishers Weekly.

‘Screaming on the Inside: The Unsustaina­bility of American Motherhood’ By Jessica Grose (Mariner, nonfiction)

What it’s about: Journalist Grose dismantles the myth of idealized motherhood, weaving together her own personal parenthood journey with scientific and historical reporting to show how modern motherhood is unsustaina­ble.

The buzz: A starred review from Kirkus Reviews calls it “a deeply researched and highly relatable analysis of American motherhood, past and present.”

‘A History of Fear’ By Luke Dumas (Atria, fiction)

What it’s about: Scotland’s most infamous murderer, Grayson Hale, claims the devil made him do it. He doesn’t fit the profile of a killer, and when Hale is found hanged in his prison cell, a left-behind handwritte­n manuscript may finally reveal the truth.

The buzz: A starred review from Kirkus Reviews calls it “a muscular, enigmatic, and devilishly smart read.”

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