Guilt-Free Pulp
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The Turnaround
by George Pelecanos, (Little, Brown, August 1, $24.99)
A detective writer’s detective writer, Pelecanos isn’t the crime-fiction world’s best-kept secret anymore, much to the chagrin of his devotees.
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Alive in Necropolis
by Doug Dorst, (Riverheard, July 17, $25.95)
This playful debut follows a first-year cop trying to police the citizens, and perhaps ghosts, of Colma, California, the tiny town where San Francisco buries its dead.
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The Legal Limit
by Martin Clark, (Knopf, July 8, $24.95)
Once called “the drinking man’s John Grisham,” Clark puts his experiences as a Virginia circuit-court judge into his latest thriller, about brothers caught up in a murder case.
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Red Lights
by Georges Simenon, (NYRB Classics, $14)
Just the thing to take your mind off $4 gas: a truly chilling road-trip novel about a couple on their way to Maine to collect the kids from camp—and the escaped con who joins them.
Armchair Tourism
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First Stop in the New World
by David Lida, (Riverhead, $25.95)
A wonderful trip through Mexico City, from its last cabaret to puerco profundo tacos to Ooorale!, a magazine that makes Star look downright prudish.
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Ghost Train to the Eastern Star
by Paul Theroux, (Houghton Mifflin, August 18, $28)
The world-weary traveler revisits the near-endless pan-Eurasian journey he immortalized in 1975’s The Great Railway Bazaar.
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The Anglo Files
by Sarah Lyall, (Norton, August 18, $24.95)
The opening anecdote (about an earl who drives a decrepit Jeep around his estate) sets the tone for this mischievous inquiry into why the British are different.
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The Dud Avocado
by Elaine Dundy, (NYRB Classics, $14.95)
It’s almost 1960 when Sally Jay Gorce, our irrepressible heroine, lands in Paris, where she has her first affairs, learns how to lie, and survives a run-in with white-slavers.
Respectable Flings
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Train to Trieste
by Domnica Radulescu, (Knopf, August 5, $23.95)
Mona Manoliu flees Eastern Bloc Romania and her shady love interest for Chicago, only to return decades later, in this geopolitical romance.
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Whacked
by Jules Asner, (Weinstein, $23.95)
Asner, the wife of director Steven Soderbergh and a former E! host, delivers a crowd-pleaser novel complete with celebrity gossip, conspiracy theories, and necrophilia.
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The Summer of Naked Swim Parties
by Jessica Anya Blau, (Harper Perennial, $13.95)
Sadly, not a photo essay, but rather a witty account of the agonies and ecstasies of a girl coming of age in late-seventies California.
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Peyton Place
by Grace Metalious, (Northeastern University, $17.95)
This 1956 hit about the underside of a New England town is mild stuff today, but it’s fun to spend the weekend with the book your mom hid from her parents.
The Smart Stuff
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The People on Privilege Hill
by Jane Gardam, (Europa, July 29, $15.95)
Subway-ride-length stories examine the turmoil below the surface in the lives of lonely, eccentric Brits. Flannery O’Connor without the menace.
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Alfred and Emily
by Doris Lessing, (HarperCollins, August 5, $25.95)
Lessing, who’s pushing 90, first reimagines the paths her parents’ lives might have taken if World War I hadn’t happened, then unveils the sad reality.
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America America
by Ethan Canin, (Random House, June 24, $27)
Finally, a meaty novel from the short-story writer: a scandal featuring a fictional candidate for the 1972 presidency, as witnessed by a rags-to-riches protégé out of Dickens.
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Death in Venice
by Thomas Mann, (Harper Perennial, $12.95)
The euro is making Continental journeys full of erotic yearning less of a sure thing than they used to be. So live vicariously, yet again.
Political Primers
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The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America
by Thurston Clarke, (Henry Holt, $25)
Piercing and painstakingly researched, it’s political history written right.
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Nixonland
by Rick Perlstein, (Scribner, $37.50)
The title might make bleeding hearts skip a beat; Perlstein looks at how Tricky Dick fashioned his Silent Majority and how it still hasn’t gone away.
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Kafka Comes to America
by Steven Wax, (Other Press, $25.95)
Wax was the lawyer for two modern-day Joseph K.’s—an attorney and a Sudanese relief worker arrested as suspected terrorists—and his twisted courtroom drama is long overdue.
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The Making of the President 1960
by Theodore H. White, (Barnes & Noble)
White has been accused of “mythmaking” (the Camelot analogy, for one), but his account of Kennedy versus Nixon is beyond engaging.





















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