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CJ Alberts
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Sunny's Book Truck

CJ

Sunny’s is an independent bookstore located in Yuma, Arizona. Our focus is on providing thoughtfully curated books and nourishing community along the way.

📚 2026 Book Club

📚 2025 Book Club

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Sunny's Book Truck

CJ Alberts

Sunny's Book Truck

CJ

Get a Rec

Sunny’s is an independent bookstore located in Yuma, Arizona. Our focus is on providing thoughtfully curated books and nourishing community along the way.

📚 2026 Book Club

📚 2025 Book Club

5 Star Reads

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Hi nerds

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you may have seen the New York Times latest interactive piece compiling the Top 100 Book of the 21st Century. I, along with some of my bookish peers, immediately noticed a few authors who were snubbed, so I got to work on compiling my personal top 100.

I gave myself a few restrictions, so the below list is made up of only women and queer authors. Translated works post 2001 count, but I also let a few books in that were repackaged recently (re: McNally Editions) that I would argue truly found their readership for the first time in the past 20 years, despite their earlier pub dates. I also limited myself to just one title per author, which was probably the hardest part of this list making.

I also want to note that this isn’t necessarily my favorite top 100 books, nor what I am deeming the ~greatest~. Some I’ve included simply for the cultural phenomenons they’ve become in my realm of the bookish internet.

Finally, I am not a genre or poetry reader unfortunately, so this list leans literary and is restricted to titles I’ve already read. All books have been compiled on Bookshop.org here if you’d like to purchase any of them. The below list is not ranked, I’m not doing that to myself! I’d love to see your own if you make one. Let me know what you think I left off in the comments, I’m ready to fight.

The Top 100

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  • Just Kids: the only romanticizing of 1970’s New York I can stand for.

  • Boy Parts: finally an American Psycho but for the girlie pops.

  • Dancing On My Own: a brand new essay collection I think everyone should read.

  • Hunger: my introduction to fat phobia and diet culture.

  • Commonwealth: this wouldn’t be a list by me without an Ann Patchett.

  • A Room Called Earth: neurodivergent rep at it’s finest.

  • The Night Circus: my carney ass loves this fantasy novel.

  • The New Me: satirical workplace culture, classic “women vs. the void”.

  • The Idiot: a perfect campus novel.

  • A Field Guide to Getting Lost: this broke my brain in college.

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  • Dept. of Speculation: vignette perfection!!!!

  • Circe: greek myths and witches for grown ups.

  • Little Weirds: a tender and perfect essay collection.

  • Assembly: a perfect execution of restraint.

  • Calypso: again, this wouldn’t be a list by me without Sedaris. I love him.

  • White Teeth: what can be said about Zadie Smith that hasn’t already been said?

  • The Doloriad: literally the most evil book I’ve read to date.

  • Nevada: trans roadtrip narrative, a queer cornerstone.

  • Birnam Wood: a perfect sprawling character driven thriller.

  • Beautyland: the most earnest novel on this list.

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  • No One Is Talk About This: perhaps the great Twitter novel?

  • Sisters: a modern gothic ghost story.

  • Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl: queer smut!!!

  • Detransition, Baby: queer questioning of what it means to make a family.

  • Infinite Country: border politics and big family dramas.

  • Bunny: do we think this was the first TikTok book for lit fic? Horror lite.

  • Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead: misanthrope representation.

  • Real Life: bad friends and bad sex in the Midwest!!!

  • The Undocumented Americans: I loved this personal exploration of citizenship.

  • Pond: one of a kind, shimmering.

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  • The Glass Castle: one of my favorite memoirs of all time.

  • The Friend: dog freaks unite.

  • Land of Milk and Honey: food writing!!!

  • Martyr!: sad sack artist, diaspora, hidden identities.

  • The Rabbit Hutch: Blandine is one of the most memorable narrators ever.

  • White on White: an excellent art novel.

  • I Love You But I’ve Chosen Darkness: maybe my favorite desert novel?

  • The Performance: climate change, a book in acts, I loved it.

  • Lapvona: this is my favorite Moshfegh, fight me!

  • The Life of the Mind: academia woes.

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  • The Wall: dystopian adventure novel excellence!

  • Cold Enough for Snow: what claim do we have to know another's inner world?

  • The English Understand Wool: I could have read 1000 pages more of this.

  • Hurricane Season: one of kind, relentless, harrowing.

  • A Little Life: some call it trauma porn, some call it the book of our generation.

  • Girl, Woman, Other: a polyphonic modern classic.

  • Convenience Store Woman: lonely and charming.

  • Freshwater: a completely effective depiction of dysphoria.

  • The Sluts: cursed!!!! I loved it.

  • No One Belongs Here More Than You: this changed my teenage brain chemistry.

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  • I Hold a Wolf by the Ears: surreal, eerie, perfect.

  • Luster: women on the verge, art, race, open marriages.

  • Indelicacy: I loved this tiny novel. Labor, class, women.

  • Pew: hysteria and mass psychosis build in this creepy little gothic story.

  • Open Throat: we need to be reading more about gay mountain lions.

  • Severance: our great apocalypse novel.

  • Motherhood: Heti went inside of my brain to write this.

  • Tonight I’m Someone Else: this book reminds me of a heatwave. Desire, youth!

  • The Employees: an incredibly singular look at work and consumption.

  • A Manual for Cleaning Women: this book smells like cigarettes and windex.

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  • The Body Is Not an Apology: an actually helpful guide to radical self-love.

  • Pachinko: an intergenerational family epic.

  • Burnt Sugar: THE mommy issues novel!

  • The Year of Magical Thinking: loss and charting the unknown waters of grief.

  • A Minor Chorus: queer Indigenous survival.

  • Strangers to Ourselves: I really loved this deep dive into mental health.

  • Second Place: my favorite Cusk. Art, marriage, family.

  • The Copenhagen Trilogy: a masterful piece of confessional writing.

  • Painting Time: for everyone with art school trauma.

  • Mona: the third act of this short novel is incredible.

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  • Monstrilio: literary horror with a monster metaphor.

  • In the Dream House: the most original memoir I’ve ever read.

  • Hot Milk: rage, myth, modernity!

  • Monarch: cryptic and weird, Jungian and eccentric.

  • Death by Landscape: an incredible essay collection about the age of extinction.

  • Vanishing Twins: marriage, queerness, LA.

  • The Shame: internet obsession and envy.

  • Braiding Sweetgrass: sacred Indigenous nature wisdom.

  • Sarahland: maybe my favorite short story collection ever.

  • The Pisces: classic Broder, still her most memorable to me.

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  • Bluets: there’s no one like Nelson, a genre busting legend.

  • The Days of Abandonment: unhinged Ferrante is my favorite Ferrante.

  • Boulder: motherhood, thankless identities, freedom.

  • Emergent Strategy: society-help to craft the collective future we deserve.

  • Paradise Rot: horror and wonder, hyper-sensual.

  • Dogs of Summer: 90’s queer girlhood expertly depicted.

  • The Book of Ayn: radical selfishness and ego-death in our modern age.

  • Y/N: the extremities of fan culture, a lucid fever dream.

  • Fake Accounts: a precise skewering of internet culture.

  • Brutes: girlhood is horror!!!

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  • Tender is the Flesh: we love a cannibalism plot.

  • Something New Under the Sun: a darkly satirical take on our ecological reality.

  • Normal People: it was a cultural reset.

  • The Hard Crowd: Kushner is one of my favorite thinkers, I love this collection.

  • Hamnet: transportive, the only book that could get me to care about Shakespeare.

  • Revenge of the Scapegoat: familial trauma, chronic illness, academic labor.

  • The Goodby People: post-Manson, pre-Disney Los Angeles.

  • The Seas: a perfect, sparkling coming of age novel.

  • They: an uncanny depiction of artistic suppression and its consequences.

  • The Deeper the Water the Uglier the Fish: sisters, abuse, mental illness.

    That's all for today! Love you, mean it!

Sunny's Top 100 Books of the 21st Century

Girls and gays edition


27 titles featured

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Jul 29, 2025

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Friends! Enemies! Everyone in between!

I hope you're all doing as best as you can be and taking care of yourselves. It's time to vote for the March book club!


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A woman’s desperate flight from an Apache raid unfolds into a sweeping tale of the Mexico–US border wars.

Orchestrated with a stunningly imagined cast of characters, both historical and purely fictional, Now I Surrender radically recasts the story of how the West was “won.” In the contested borderlands between Mexico and the United States, a woman flees into the desert after a devastating raid on her dead husband’s ranch. A lieutenant colonel in service to the fledgling Republic, sent in pursuit of cattle rustlers, discovers he’s on the trail of a more dramatic abduction. Decades later, with political ambitions on the line, the American and Mexican militaries try to maneuver Geronimo, the most legendary of Apache warriors, into surrender. In our own day, a family travels through the region in search of a truer version of the past.

Part epic, part alt-Western, Now I Surrender is Álvaro Enrigue’s most expansive and impassioned novel yet. It weaves past and present, myth and history into a searing elegy for a way of life that was an incarnation of true liberty—and an homage to the spark in us that still thrills to its memory.


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An award-winning international author’s stunning US debut about two estranged friends who are forced to reunite over one feverish weekend and reckon with the choices that tore them apart.

A decade has passed since Ava spoke to Aliya. During the years of silence, Ava's life has remained at a standstill, while Aliya got the one thing they both wanted more than anything: a book deal. Forced back together at a mutual friend’s bachelorette in London, Ava returns to Aliya’s doorstep, desperate to unpack the truth of their shared history—and what they meant to each other.

When the two first met in the halls of their historic campus, their connection was electric. Aliya and Ava created a world of their own through the stories they wrote, influencing and borrowing from each other’s work. But when the end of college loomed, the real world began to pull them in opposite directions. Was their bond ever truly as strong as Aliya thought? And what would become of the stories they told themselves about each other?

Weaving together the friends’ past and present, Strange Girls is an ingenious portrait of a fraught friendship, and an exploration of the ties forged in the intensity of the college experience, and the scars left when they break.


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A magnificent new novel from the bestselling, award-winning author of An American Marriage—Tayari Jones has written an unforgettable novel that sparkles with wit and intelligence and deep feeling about two lifelong friends whose worlds converge after many years apart in the face of a devastating tragedy.

Vernice and Annie, two motherless daughters raised in Honeysuckle, Louisiana, have been best friends and neighbors since earliest childhood but are fated to live starkly different lives. Raised by a fierce aunt determined to give her a stable home in the wake of her mother’s death, Vernice leaves Honeysuckle at eighteen for Spelman College, where she joins a sisterhood of powerfully connected Black women and discovers a world of affluence, manners, aspiration, and inequality. Annie, abandoned by her mother as a child and fixated on the idea of finding her and filling the bottomless hole left by her absence, sets off on a journey that will take her into a world of peril and adversity, as well as love and adventure, culminating in a battle for her life.

A novel about mothers and daughters, friendship and sisterhood, and the complexities of being a woman in the American South, Kin is an exuberant, emotionally rich, unforgettable work from one of the brightest and most irresistible voices in contemporary fiction.


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Set during a doom-fated vacation to the Oregon coast, The Disappointment follows a couple trying to hold close to one another while a bent reality—warped by personal losses and an ever-increasing drift toward the surreal—threatens to unravel them

It’s the night before a much-needed vacation, and Jack—a former playwright mourning his failed career—catches his husband, Randy, packing his mother’s urn. They had agreed: no mother on this trip. Parents, living or otherwise, aren’t the ideal guests for romantic getaways. But Randy has been carrying his mother’s remains everywhere since her death, and he isn’t ready to let go now.

Despite its natural beauty and kitschy charm, the Oregon coast does not provide the respite the couple seeks. Instead, their surroundings and encounters with locals grow increasingly surreal as the days pass. An overly -dedicated Method actor, tantra-obsessed neighbors, and a child environmentalist who may be able to communicate with the dead are but a few of the characters whose presence exposes long-simmering tensions that threaten to undo Jack and Randy’s marriage—to say nothing of their hold on reality.

Told with sly, irreverent humor, and shot through with dark currents of envy and longing for something other than what one has, The Disappointment explores the mutual exhilaration and terror of being placed center stage in one’'s own life.

Four very compelling choices! Happy voting and remember we are reading The White Hot by Quiara Alegría Hudes in February, today is your last day to sign up.

Love what we do? Become a paid subscriber for less than a cup of coffee a month. Your ongoing support helps us plan ahead, fund causes we care about, and create meaningful programming for our community.

Vote for the March book club! ☘️


4 titles featured

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On making lemonade

A new stupid sticker is born


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Friends! Enemies! Everyone in between!

It's time to vote for the February book club pick. I asked the Bindery Discord channel (a private channel if you're a free follower or paid member to Bindery, which if you're receiving this... you are lol) for some suggestions and this is where we landed.

I lowkey want to abuse my power as your fearless leader and make us all read The White Hot buuuuut no pressure during your voting. Unless... 🥸

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The story of a runaway mother’s ten days of freedom—and the pain, desire, longing, and wonder we find on the messy road to enlightenment—from Pulitzer Prize winner Quiara Alegría Hudes.

April is a young mother raising her daughter in an intergenerational house of unspoken secrets and loud arguments. Her only refuge is to hide away in a locked bathroom, her ears plugged into an ambient soundscape, and a mantra on her lips: dead inside. That is, until one day, as she finds herself spiraling toward the volcanic rage she calls the white hot, a voice inside her tells her to just . . . walk away. She wanders to a bus station and asks for a ticket to the furthest destination; she tells the clerk to make it one-way. That ticket takes her from her Philly home to the threshold of a wilderness and the beginning of a nameless quest—an accidental journey that shakes her awake, almost kills her, and brings her to the brink of an impossible choice.

The White Hot takes the form of a letter from mother to daughter about a moment of abandonment that would stretch from ten days to ten years—an explanation, but not an apology. Hudes narrates April’s story—spiritual and sexy, fierce and funny—with delicate lyricism and tough love. Just as April finds in her painful and absurd sojourn the key to freeing herself and her family from a cage of generational trauma, so Hudes turns April’s stumbling pursuit of herself into an unforgettable short epic of self-discovery.

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Fleabag meets Big Swiss in this bold debut about a charismatic misfit who livestreams her life for seven days and nights to raise money to save her comatose sister—a poignant and darkly funny exploration of grief, forgiveness, and redemption.

Dell Danvers is barely keeping it together. She’s behind on rent for her studio apartment (formerly a walk-in closet), she’s being plagued by perpetual stomach pain, and her younger sister, Daisy, is in a coma at a hospital that wants to pull the plug. Freshly unemployed and subsisting on selling plants to trust fund kids, Dell impulsively starts a 24-hour livestream under the username mademoiselle_dell to fundraise for private life support for Daisy.

Dell is her stream’s dungeon master, banishing those who don’t abide by her terms and steadily rising up the platform’s ranks with her sympathetic story and angry-funny screen presence. Once she discovers she has a talent for eating spicy food, her streaming fame explodes and her pepper consumption escalates from jalapeño to ghost to the hottest pepper on earth: the Carolina Reaper. Dell is finally good at something—but as her behavior becomes riskier and a shadowy troll threatens to expose her dark past, Dell must reckon with what her digital life ignores, and what real redemption means.

Narrated in seven taut chapters, one for each day of Dell’s livestream, Just Watch Me careens through a week in the life of this misguided striver with a heart of gold. Voyeuristic and visceral, audacious and outrageous, Lior Torenberg’s debut is both a razor-sharp tragicomedy about the internet economy and a surreptitiously moving tale about the desire to be watched, and the terror of being seen.

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An electric novel from the #1 New York Times bestselling, Booker Prize–winning author of Lincoln in the Bardo, taking place at the bedside of an oil company CEO in the twilight hours of his life as he is ferried from this world into the next.

Not for the first time, Jill “Doll” Blaine finds herself hurtling toward earth, reconstituting as she falls, right down to her favorite black pumps. She plummets towards her newest charge, yet another soul she must usher into the afterlife, and lands headfirst in the circular drive of his ornate mansion.

She has performed this sacred duty 343 times since her own death. Her charges, as a rule, have been greatly comforted in their final moments. But this charge, she soon discovers, isn’t like the others. The powerful K. J. Boone will not be consoled, because he has nothing to regret. He lived a big, bold, epic life, and the world is better for it. Isn’t it?

Vigil transports us, careening, through the wild final evening of a complicated man. Visitors begin to arrive (worldly and otherworldly, alive and dead), clamoring for a reckoning. Birds swarm the dying man’s room; a black calf grazes on the love seat; a man from a distant, drought-ravaged village materializes; two oil-business cronies from decades past show up with chilling plans for Boone’s postdeath future.

With the wisdom, playfulness, and explosive imagination we’ve come to expect, George Saunders takes on the gravest issues of our time—the menace of corporate greed, the toll of capitalism, the environmental perils of progress—and, in the process, spins a tale that encompasses life and death, good and evil, and the thorny question of absolution.

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A rollicking debut novel about a cautious daughter and her eccentric, estranged mother venturing west in search of buried treasure—and a way back to each other—before they run out of patience, money, and options.

After being fired for taking an uncharacteristic risk at her commodities trading job, Bea Macon sublets her New York apartment and books a one-way ticket to stay with her mother, Christy, a free spirit who has been living in Salt Lake City on Bea's dime. 

Usually the responsible one, Bea isn't about to admit exactly why she's suddenly decided to visit, but she isn’t the only one keeping secrets: Christy has a man. She has a map. She has . . . a username on a forum devoted to unearthing $1 million in buried treasure that an antiquities dealer claims to have hidden somewhere in the western U.S.?

Bea is convinced this is just another one of her mother’s wild larks, an elaborate way to refuse, as she has for Bea’s entire life, to finally grow up. But Christy believes she’s onto something—and she’s arranged a rendezvous in a rural town called Mercy with the guy she’s been obsessively trading theories with online to prove it. Out in the desert that one woman believes to be a promised land, the other a wasteland, they find themselves barreling toward a more high-stakes, transformative escapade than either of them could have imagined.

Populated with unforgettable characters and set against one of the world’s most oddly enrapturing landscapes, Scavengers is a funny and heartbreaking novel about old injuries, new beginnings, and the lengths to which we’ll go to find, escape, and reinvent ourselves.

Four very compelling choices! Happy voting and remember we are reading Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash in December, today is your last day to sign up.

Love what we do? Become a paid subscriber for less than a cup of coffee a month. Your ongoing support helps us plan ahead, fund causes we care about, and create meaningful programming for our community.

Vote for the February book club pick 💘


4 titles featured

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Friends! Enemies! Everyone in between!

It's time to vote for the January (2026?!?!?!) book club pick. I asked the Bindery Discord channel (a private channel if you're a free follower or paid member to Bindery, which if you're receiving this... you are lol) for some suggestions and this is where we landed. I like to keep Sunny's picks as new hardcover releases to account for the $30 book club sign up fee, so new releases are usually the focus.

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Rippling with humor, warmth, and style, Lost Lambs is a new vision of the charms and pitfalls of family dysfunction.

The Flynn family is coming undone. Catherine and Bud's open marriage has reached its breaking point as their daughters spiral in their own chaotic orbits: Abigail, the eldest, is dating a man in his twenties nicknamed War Crime Wes; Louise, the middle child, maintains a secret correspondence with an online terrorist; the brilliant youngest, Harper, is being sent to wilderness reform camp due to her insistence that someone―or something―is monitoring the town’s citizens.

Casting a shadow across their lives, and their small coastal town, is Paul Alabaster, a billionaire shipping magnate. Rumors of corruption circulate, but no one dares dig too deep. No one except Harper, whose obsession with a mysterious shipping container sends the family hurtling into a criminal conspiracy―one that may just bring them closer together.

Irreverent and addictive, pinging between the voices of the Flynn family and those of the panorama of characters around them, Madeline Cash’s Lost Lambs is a debut novel of quick-witted observation and surprising tenderness. With it, Cash has crafted a family saga for the twenty-first century, all held together with crazy glue.


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One woman, the performance of a lifetime. Or two. An exhilarating, destabilizing Möbius strip of a novel that asks whether we ever really know the people we love.

Two people meet for lunch in a Manhattan restaurant. She’s an accomplished actress in rehearsals for an upcoming premiere. He’s attractive, troubling, young—young enough to be her son. Who is he to her, and who is she to him? In this compulsively readable, brilliantly constructed novel, two competing narratives unspool, rewriting our understanding of the roles we play every day – partner, parent, creator, muse – and the truths every performance masks, especially from those who think they know us most intimately.

Taut and hypnotic, Audition is Katie Kitamura at her virtuosic best.


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From the New York Times bestselling author of Writers & Lovers comes a magnificent and intimate new novel of desire, friendship, and the lasting impact of first love

You knew I’d write a book about you someday.

Our narrator understands good love stories—their secrets and subtext, their highs and free falls. But her greatest love story, the one she lived, never followed the simple rules.

In the fall of her senior year of college, she meets two star students from her 17th-Century Lit class: Sam and Yash. Best friends living off campus in the elegant house of a professor on sabbatical, the boys invite her into their intoxicating world of academic fervor, rapid-fire banter and raucous card games. They nickname her Jordan, and she quickly discovers the pleasures of friendship, love and her own intellectual ambition. But youthful passion is unpredictable, and soon she finds herself at the center of a charged and intricate triangle. As graduation comes and goes, choices made will alter these three lives forever.

Decades later, the vulnerable days of Jordan's youth seem comfortably behind her. But when a surprise visit and unexpected news bring the past crashing into the present, she returns to a world she left behind and must confront the decisions and deceptions of her younger self.

Written with the superb wit and emotional sensitivity fans and critics of Lily King have come to adore, Heart the Lover is a deeply moving love story that celebrates literature, forgiveness, and the transformative bonds that shape our lives. Wise, unforgettable, and with a delightful connective thread to Writers & Lovers, this is King at her very best, affirming her as a masterful chronicler of the human experience and one of the finest novelists at work today.

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From “the shrewdest writer on contemporary masculinity we have” (Esquire), a “captivating...hypnotic...virtuosic” (The Baffler) novel about a man whose life veers off course due to a series of unforeseen circumstances.

Teenaged István lives with his mother in a quiet apartment complex in Hungary. Shy and new in town, he is a stranger to the social rituals practiced by his classmates and is soon isolated, drawn instead into a series of events that leave him forever a stranger to peers, his mother, and himself. In the years that follow, István is born along by the goodwill, or self-interest, of strangers, charting a rocky yet upward trajectory that lands him further from his childhood, and the defining events that abruptly ended it, than he could possibly have imagined.

A collection of intimate moments over the course of decades, Flesh chronicles a man at odds with himself—estranged from and by the circumstances and demands of a life not entirely under his control and the roles that he is asked to play. Shadowed by the specter of past tragedy and the apathy of modernity, the tension between István and all that alienates him hurtles forward until sudden tragedy again throws life as he knows it in jeopardy.

“Spare and detached on the page, lush in resonance beyond it” (NPR), Flesh traces the imperceptible but indelible contours of unresolved trauma and its aftermath amid the precarity and violence of an ever-globalizing Europe with incisive insight, unyielding pathos, and startling humanity.

Four very compelling choices! Happy voting and remember we are reading The House of Beauty by Arabelle Sicardi in December.

Vote for the January book club pick ❄️


4 titles featured

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