![]() Lorrie Moore, there’s nobody like her the way she plays with language, her kind of warm but absurdist view of life. “I Am Homeless If This Is Not My Home” by Lorrie Moore So we’re getting a Herman Wouk-type big history, but also with a lot of twists and turns and very affecting. … His mother followed Patton’s army behind the lines in Battle of the Bulge. She and another woman rode around in a truck delivering coffee and donuts to servicemen. She was a volunteer with the Red Cross, she was a so-called Donut Dolly. Usually is writing about issues of the U.S.-Mexican border, but here he’s drawing on a story that derives from his mother’s experiences during World War II. “Good Night, Irene” by Luis Alberto Urrea And if you know anything about New York in the 1970s, it was a grimy place, a dangerous place, but it was also a very exciting place. That novel was set in 1960s Harlem, and this one is set in 1970s Harlem. He’s won for very serious books about the Black experience in America, “Underground Railroad” and “The Nickel Boys.” But he’s worked across many genres, and he has written a heist novel, and this is a sequel to that heist novel, “Harlem Shuffle,” which came out a couple of years ago. This one involves a recently widowed food blogger who brings a bunch of friends together on Nantucket to sort of help her heal. This is an author who has written almost 30 books, most of which are set on Nantucket Island. “The Five-Star Weekend” by Elin Hilderbrand These answers have been lightly edited for brevity. Here’s a roundup of some of their favorites. Friday on the PBS NewsHour, NPR book critic Maureen Corrigan and New York Times books editor Gilbert Cruz join Jeffrey Brown to reveal their summer reading picks. For many, the longer, slower days of summer mean a little more time to get lost in an absorbing book.
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