Review by New York Times Review
NINETY-NINE GLIMPSES OF PRINCESS MARGARET, by Craig Brown. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $16.) A British journalist dishes out gossipy tales of Margaret, who reveled in her role as her sister Queen Elizabeth's disobedient foil. Detailing everything from her disastrous romantic relationships to her bohemian friends, Brown turns the biography genre on its head, even imagining a marriage between Margaret and Picasso. THE CHANDELIER, by Clarice Lispector. Translated by Benjamin Moser and Magdalena Edwards. (New Directions, $16.95.) The Brazilian writer's second novel is a laboratory for the themes that occupy her later work: philosophical restiveness, the limits of language. The story follows Virgínia, a deeply dissatisfied young woman who struggles to articulate herself in a male-dominated culture. SHE HAS HER MOTHER'S LAUGH: The Powers, Perversions, and Potential of Heredity, by Carl Zimmer. (Dutton, $20.) Zimmer, a science columnist for The Times, explores inheritance in all its varied dimensions - from genetic ancestry to biological definitions of race. Zimmer dispels longstanding scientific misconceptions, introduces facts that may surprise you and brings readers on a delightful journey of genetic discovery. PROVIDENCE, by Caroline Kepnes. (Random House, $17.) Jon and Chloe are best friends in New Hampshire, growing ever closer until he's kidnapped. He returns home years later - seemingly healthy but without any memory - and becomes a news media sensation. Sadly, more troubles arise as he and Chloe try to restore their closeness. The story promises the "kind of star-crossed, decade-hopping, supernatural crime romance that bursts at all the right seams," our reviewer, Charles Finch, wrote. ROOM TO DREAM, by David Lynch and Kristine McKenna. (Random House, $22.) The authors offer an impressionistic hybrid memoir of Lynch, from McKenna's biographical sections and Lynch's emotional recollections. "The portrait that emerges is that of a protean talent who has pungently projected the nightmares of his unconscious into his creative work but who is impressively at peace with his personal demons," our reviewer, Ben Dickinson, said. WHAT YOU DON'T KNOW ABOUT CHARLIE OUTLAW, by Leah Stewart. (Putnam, $16.) After his romance with Josie, a ?-list actress in her 40s, goes sour, the title character, an actor quickly gaining fame, heads off to a remote island in search of anonymity and peace of mind. The trip takes some unexpected turns, and the novel offers satisfying insights into the difficulty of letting go of a romance.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 30, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review
Kepnes' third genre-bending book tells the story of New England young adults Jon and Chloe, best friends in middle school despite Jon being a bullied outsider. When Jon disappears one day in the woods, Chloe falls apart. Four years pass, and with high-school graduation on the horizon, she's almost over him. Then he reappears as mysteriously as he vanished. Jon wakes up hidden in the basement of the local mall, with a note from his captor explaining that Jon had been in an induced coma but is now perfectly fine . . . except for some special powers. Turns out Jon now has the ability to give people heart attacks just from being in their presence. The story takes off from there, with a detective determined to figure out why seemingly healthy people are dropping dead, and with Jon trying to keep away from Chloe while trying to convince her he's not evil by pushing her to read a Lovecraft story that mirrors his own situation. This complicated and intriguing tale is a strange blend of Lovecraftian horror, love story, and detective novel.--Vnuk, Rebecca Copyright 2018 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
The three leads in Kepnes's dark romantic thriller-Jon, the shy middle-schooler kidnapped and unwittingly transformed into a toxic superman; Chloe, the unattainable love of his life; and "Eggs" DeBenedictus, the seriously ill but relentless police detective investigating a series of suspicious deaths in Providence, R.I.-are brought to vivid life by a trio of talented performers. Reader Andrews voices Jon as a soft-spoken, bullied teenager infatuated with his only friend, Chloe. Years later, Jon returns, mysteriously changed into a powerful man whose emotions can have fatal results, and his self-disgust and frustration are obvious in every word he speaks. Actor Rankin's performance as Chloe, Jon's childhood friend, tracks the character's evolution from a giddy teen to a woman in love. As Eggs, actor Michael smartly conveys the relentless sleuth's determination to find the truth behind the series of deaths despite a debilitating illness. Kepnes's plot may be built around Jon's supernatural transformation, but the audiobook's success is based on the novel's more human elements: obsession, longing, love, and the possibility of a better tomorrow, all brilliantly conveyed by its three narrators. A Lenny hardcover. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Jon was the oddball kid bullied by the jocks in his small New Hampshire town: there is nothing particularly special about his life, except for his friendship with Chloe. She is the only one he can trust and the only one, outside of his parents, who cares when he disappears one day on his way to school. For a while, Chloe tries to keep the faith that Jon will return. But as time goes on, so does Chloe's life. Until the day four years later when Jon is awoken in a room by himself with no memories past the moment when former teacher Roger Blair kidnapped him. The only thing he has to help him understand what's happened to him is a book by H.P. Lovecraft with a note from Roger telling him he's now stronger then he will know. Jon is eager to see Chloe, but his arrival home sparks -unexpected health problems for those nearest to him. When someone dies after coming into contact with his new powers, Jon disappears once again, this time to a life of isolation in Providence, RI. There a detective named Eggs becomes determined to find the person responsible for the sudden deaths of several innocent people. Jon, Chloe, and Eggs all struggle to discover answers. VERDICT Once again, Kepnes (You) explores love and devotion on the fringes and does so to great effect in a novel with no easy answers or happy endings for anyone. [See Prepub Alert, 12/11/17.]-Jane Jorgenson, Madison P.L., WI © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
The mysterious return of a kidnapped boy is more curse than blessing in this novelwhich is equal parts love story, thriller, and horror tale.In Nashua, New Hampshire, young teen Jon Bronson is the sort of boy who loves newspapers and hamsters and takes the long way to school to avoid bullies. He also loves fellow teen and popular budding artist Chloe Sayers, though he never admits as much. Kepnes (Hidden Bodies, 2016, etc.) nails the tentative feelings that develop between kids from different middle school social strata. When Jon vanishes one morningit's revealed early on that his kidnapper is local substitute teacher Roger Blairthe relative speed with which the town's interest wanes is nearly as devastating as his disappearance, a narrative trick Kepnes pulls off seamlessly. Four years later, a more muscular Jon emerges from the local mall with no memory of his captivity and a new obsession with the work of H.P. Lovecraft, particularly the novel The Dunwich Horror, which features a man named Wilbur Whateley, with whom Jon begins to identify. Soon after Jon's return, strange things begin happening to the people around him, from getting nosebleeds to fainting and even having a fatal heart attack. Jon disappears again, voluntarily this time, fearing that, like Wilbur, he's the monster whose mere presence causes sickness and death. Kepnes follows Jon, Chloe, and Charles "Eggs" DeBenedictus, a detective from Providence, Rhode Island, over the years as they live their separate but interconnected lives: Jon in Providence under two assumed names; Chloe in New York City as an artist who shot to fame with her initial paintings of Jon during his disappearance; and Eggs as he investigates a series of seemingly unlinked heart-attack deaths of young people. As the three come closer to one another and are repelled by either choice or circumstances, the question of sacrificing love for safety becomes painfully clear to everyone.Kepnes, whose previous novels deftly dealt with obsessive love, changes gears here and injects into this "Beauty and the Beast"-like story a deeper allegory about how far we'll go to protect the things we love the most. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.