30 books we can't wait to read this fall

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SEPT. 5 WEDNESDAY’S CHILD By Yiyun Li FSG: 256 pages, $27 From the award-winning author of “The Book of Goose” comes a collection of short fiction with unexpected power, though its economy
is no surprise: Li’s elegant prose gives no quarter to the superfluous. We meet a woman helping to deliver a baby on a train to Brussels, a heartsick divorcée visiting China and several
others on unusual missions, all achingly real and needy and yet mysterious in the ways we humans always are to each other. (BP) THE FRAUD By Zadie Smith Penguin: 464 pages, $29 Smith’s first
historical novel, set in 19th-century London, focuses on the real-life “Tichborne Trial,” during which an Australian butcher claimed to be heir to an English estate. The author, never
afraid to display — or debate — her influences, gives Charles Dickens a cameo even as she demonstrates how many people at the margins were ignored in the works of literature we regard as
classic. (BP) SEPT. 12 GANGSTERS DON’T DIE By Tod Goldberg Counterpoint: 384 pages, $28 The final book of Goldberg’s trilogy finds David Cohen, a Chicago gangster masquerading as a Las Vegas
rabbi, contemplating the imminent collapse of his empire. As ever, Goldberg is adept at writing about mob hits, explosions, corpses and other cases of criminal bad news with a smirking,
noirish tone. But he writes with sensitivity too, from painterly depictions of the Palm Desert and Salton Sea to riffs on the Talmud that suggest Cohen’s faith isn’t entirely a put-on. (MA)
HOW I WON A NOBEL PRIZE By Julius Taranto Little, Brown: 304 pages, $27 Taranto’s sharp debut is set at the Rubin Institute, an East Coast think tank that’s one part MIT, two parts Elon
Musk’s Twitter feed: Its faculty of cancelees crows about finding a safe haven from woke culture. Helen, the narrator, is a brilliant scientist who’s grudgingly followed her advisor there,
generating all manner of crises for her marriage, research and sense of ethics. It’s a fine launchpad for a satire of the culture wars. (MA) SEPT. 19 THE WOLVES OF ETERNITY By Karl Ove
Knausgaard, translated by Martin Aitken Penguin: 800 pages, $35 In his second epic novel since his autobiographical blockbuster, “My Struggle,” Knausgaard tells the story of two long-lost
half-siblings, one a Norwegian man stumbling into adulthood in the ’80s and the other an accomplished biologist in present-day Russia. The nature and possibility of immortality is a
recurring theme, and digressions abound — communicating trees, broken families, Chernobyl, death, etc. But by sticking close to his characters, Knausgaard addresses those heady topics with
an easy-going grace. (MA) BEYOND THE DOOR OF NO RETURN By David Diop, translated by Sam Taylor FSG: 256 pages, $27 The French author’s follow-up to 2021’s “At Night All Blood Is Black,”
which won the International Booker Prize, is set in 18th-century colonial Senegal and Paris. French botanist Michel Adanson records his journey to Senegal to gather specimens, also
documenting his obsession with a young woman born into royalty who returned from the sea after being kidnapped into slavery. In poetic prose, Diop explores fantastical fables and the brutal
history of French imperialism. (LB) SEPT. 26 LAND OF MILK AND HONEY By C Pam Zhang Riverhead: 240 pages, $28 Earth’s living resources have all but died out, so when a 29-year-old American
chef, exiled in London, gets the chance to hole up in an Italian mountain filled with vanished flora and fauna (from semolina flour to strawberries), she can’t resist. Of course, what she
finds there is not just thrilling but also deeply chilling. The questions she asks herself will soon be on all our lips. (BP) OCT. 3 THE MANIAC By Benjamin Labatut Penguin: 368 pages, $28
Labatut’s 2021 debut, “When We Cease to Understand the World,” was a surprise critical and commercial success; who knew so many readers would be game for melancholy fictional studies of
quantum scientists? This time, Labatut explores the genius and pathos of the likes of John von Neumann, a polymath who worked on the Manhattan Project, and the creators of an AI bot that in
2016 bested the world champion of the board game Go. Intellectual nightmare fuel for those who fear the machines coming for us all. (MA) OCT. 10 FAMILY MEAL By Bryan Washington Riverhead:
320 pages, $28 In this sequel of sorts to 2020’s “Memorial,” Cam returns from Los Angeles to Houston after the death of his partner, Kai; he runs into his estranged longtime friend TJ, and
they consider a new relationship. But Kai’s ghost keeps visiting Cam, who wonders if he even knows how to love in any way after such a loss. Full of hauntings and other returns, “Family
Meal” closes the circle between loved ones beautifully, and draws it wide. (BP) OCT. 17 VENGEANCE IS MINE By Marie Ndiaye, translated by Jordan Stump Knopf: 240 pages, $28 Maître Susane, an
attorney in Bordeaux, finds her uneventful life disturbed after a man named Gilles Principaux asks her to defend his wife against charges of a horrendous crime. M. Susane begins to break
down over recovered memories of Principaux, shown through her strained relationship with her Mauritian housekeeper, Sharon. As Ndiaye has done before (in “The Cheffe,” for example), she sets
a slow burn going and watches it almost disinterestedly until a final explosion that demonstrates the long aftereffects of childhood damage. (BP) TREMOR By Teju Cole Random House: 256
pages, $28 No other writer walks a high-wire act the way Cole does. His 2011 novel, “Open City,” made many readers hungry for his next, and “Tremor” is worth the wait. Once again, ephemeral
discoveries (in this case, a young professor’s find of a Nigerian chi wara mask in an antiques store) lead to gorgeous fractals of thought on culture, race and history, revealing inner
currents of anger, memory and hope. (BP) OCT. 24 LET US DESCEND By Jesmyn Ward Scribner: 320 pages, $28 Two-time National Book Award-winner Jesmyn Ward (the first woman and the first Black
American to achieve that feat) follows her fierce and tender novel “Sing, Unburied, Sing” with a historical narrative about survival, iron will and spiritual rebirth. Taking its title from
Dante’s “Inferno,” the story follows Annis through the hell of enslavement and the saving grace of ancestral memories. (BP) OCT. 31 ABSOLUTION By Alice McDermott FSG: 336 pages, $28 Across
her four-decade career, McDermott has specialized in well-mannered people thrust into tight ethical spots. Here, that’s Tricia, the wife of an attorney stationed in Vietnam in 1963 as the
war there intensifies. McDermott’s writing is often called “gemlike,” but that speaks to pressure as much as prettiness, as Tricia navigates war, marital strife and the increasing
oppressiveness of the crowd of military wives that surrounds her. (MA) DEC. 5 SONGS ON ENDLESS REPEAT: ESSAYS AND OUTTAKES By Anthony Veasna So Ecco: 240 pages, $28.99 Before his death in
2020 at 28, Cambodian American writer So was poised for greatness on a number of fronts: He was an irreverent writer about immigrant enclaves, queer life and the Bay Area’s nether reaches.
This book, the follow-up to his posthumous story collection, “Afterparties,” collects excerpts from his unfinished novel, “Straight Thru Cambotown,” and a clutch of essays on “Queer Eye,”
“Crazy Rich Asians” and more that demonstrate he was also a stellar cultural critic in the making. (MA) ORBITAL By Samantha Harvey Atlantic Monthly Press: 193 pages, $24 Harvey’s last novel,
“The Western Wind,” was an ingenious murder mystery set in the 15th century. In “Orbital,” she zips ahead to a very near future in which six people from different countries work together on
a space station. Their otherworldly environs only serve to heighten their essential and shared humanity as they contemplate six days’ worth of trips around the earth. (BP)