It’s always exciting to have a month when I have a hard time narrowing down my list of books to watch list to a reasonable post size. This was definitely one of those months when the list of potential books to talk about was whittled down until only a few remained. These ones look like gems in a month packed with exciting releases: pick up one of these, or tell us the February Fiction release you’re excited about in the comments below.
Dancing to the Flute (M)
by Manisha Jolie Amin (Feb 5).
“Abandoned as a young child, Kalu, a cheeky street kid, has carved out a life for himself in rural India. In the quiet village of Hastinapore, Kalu has also found friends: Bal, the solitary boy who tends the local buffaloes, and Malti, a gentle servant girl, who with her mistress, Ganga Ba, has watched over Kalu since he first wandered into the small town. One day, perched high in the branches of a banyan tree, Kalu chooses a leaf, rolls it tightly, and as he’s done for as long as he can remember, blows through it. His pure, simple notes dance through the air and attract a traveling healer, whose interest will change Kalu’s life forever, setting him on a path he would never have dreamt possible and testing his belief in himself and his sense of identity.”
Frances and Bernard (M)
by Carlene Bauer (Feb 5).
“In the summer of 1957, Frances and Bernard meet at an artists’ colony. She finds him faintly ridiculous, but talented. He sees her as aloof, but intriguing. Afterward, he writes her a letter. Soon they are immersed in the kind of fast, deep friendship that can take over—and change the course of—our lives.”
Vampires in the Lemon Grove (M)
by Karen Russell (Feb 12).
Ghostman (M)
by Roger Hobbs (Feb 12).
For fans of thrillers, this first novel was the source of much excitement when it debuted at the Frankfurt Book Fair in 2011.
“Stunningly dark, hugely intelligent and thoroughly addictive, Ghostman announces the arrival of an exciting and highly distinctive novelist” Expect to hear more about this one.
Office of Mercy (M)
by Ariel Djanikian (Feb 26).
Few reviews of this forthcoming first novel get beyond the first sentence without making a comparison to The Hunger Games (me too it seems!). And with many of the original teen readers of that series now in adulthood (not to mention the adults who read the books too), it seems smart that publishers are reaching out with a novel for them.
“Twenty-four-year-old Natasha Wiley lives in America-Five—a high-tech, underground, utopian settlement where hunger and money do not exist, everyone has a job, and all basic needs are met. But when her mentor and colleague, Jeffrey, selects her to join a special team to venture Outside for the first time, Natasha’s allegiances to home, society, and above all to Jeffrey are tested. She is forced to make a choice that may put the people she loves most in grave danger and change the world as she knows it.” Lots of big names being thrown around as readalikes for this one, the publisher says it will “will thrill fans of Suzanne Collins, Margaret Atwood, Justin Cronin, and Kazuo Ishiguro”.
Source: http://www.thereader.ca/2013/02/5-fiction-titles-to-watch-for-in.html