by Ernst Fischer ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
An engrossing, satisfying account of the development and disintegration of a lesser-known immigrant community.
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Two 18th-century German families risk everything to join a pioneer movement in hopes of forging a better future.
It’s the late 1700s, and 12-year-old Karl Schuler lives in a small town in what is now southwestern Germany. He’s orphaned and sent to a local miller, where he learns a trade and grows up. As he begins to plan his own family, he learns of a government program sponsoring migration to the frontier territory along the Danube River—almost 1,000 miles away. With new wife Inge, he begins the long journey to a new life. Miles away in Eastern Bavaria, Peter Mueller, a farmer and cabinetmaker, struggles to support his family in the face of failed crops and high rents. He also hears that the government is offering free land to those willing to work hard for a fresh start. Leaving in the dead of night to avoid his nobleman landlord, Peter; his wife, Katherine; and their four children set out for the Danube. The two families only intersect briefly on the arduous journey to their new homes, but both show determination and deep humanity as they become part of an extensive German immigrant community on the Serbian border. Six generations later, this community finds itself facing daunting, life-changing challenges as the rise of German fascism creates deep divisions in their new homeland. Fischer’s plain writing style ably animates the various ethnic groups of the Serbian frontier. He skillfully weaves together social history, historical events, and details of day-to-day life, from the workings of an 18th-century grain mill to the construction of a feather mattress in the 1930s. Tender stories of familial love and the joys and losses of pioneer life yield greater themes of belonging and alienation, the atrocities of war, and the complexity of ethnic and national loyalties. If the central characters seem sometimes too upright and decent to be absolutely believable, it’s easily forgiven against the backdrop of the challenges they face.
An engrossing, satisfying account of the development and disintegration of a lesser-known immigrant community.Pub Date: N/A
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: 678
Publisher: Manuscript
Review Posted Online: Jan. 24, 2022
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2022
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Arlene Heyman ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 7, 2020
Like its heroine, intelligent and lusty; full of real joys and sorrows.
The making of a woman scientist over four decades of change in the middle of the 20th century.
“So what do you actually do?” Dr. Lottie Kristin Hart Levinson—aka Dr. Rat Westheimer—is asked at a cocktail party in 1984. “This may sound odd to you,” she replies, “but I study rat salivary glands. They’re more important than people think.” Her subsequent explanation details the role of cunnilingus in rat sex. Neither Lottie nor her creator is squeamish in any way—not about rat sex, or rat dissection, or human sex, all described with brio in these pages. As Lottie tells her football-star high school boyfriend, who becomes her first husband, “I want to know everything about my body, about your body, I want to try everything there is in the world, I want to try it all with you.” Actually, she saves some for her intrepid second husband 30-odd years later; there hasn’t been a menstruation sex scene like this since Scott Spencer’s Endless Love. Heyman’s debut novel after a successful story collection, Scary Old Sex (2016), also brings to mind Marge Piercy’s domestic dramas of the 1980s, which told the stories of women whose consciousness and lives were changed by the feminist movement and the new options it created in American life. From Lottie’s childhood in Michigan in the early 1940s through her struggles in the Vietnam War era to her maturity as a scientist, mother, and stepmother in the mid-1980s, her curiosity and intellect drive her as strongly as her hormones. It takes decades to tunnel her way through the walls sexism builds around her potential and find her way to the career in science she was made for. Caring as much about her work as she does about domestic life is a constant issue in Lottie’s adulthood; tragic consequences threaten and are not always averted.
Like its heroine, intelligent and lusty; full of real joys and sorrows.Pub Date: July 7, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-63557-471-5
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Review Posted Online: May 3, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2020
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by Tiffany Crum ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 10, 2026
This mystery’s foremost puzzle? The human heart.
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New York Times Bestseller
A Los Angeles–based podcaster is AWOL in Crum’s debut, a thriller-romance mashup.
Joy Moore, one half of the chart-topping “comedy survival podcast” This Story Might Save Your Life, is acting strange. She privately tells her co-podcaster and best friend, Benny Abbott, that she wants to take a break from podcasting and will explain why later. The next day, when Benny arrives to record at the home Joy shares with her husband, Xander, who handles podcast business, the couple isn’t there and the house appears vandalized. Benny phones Joy and Xander, but they don’t pick up. He summons the cops and reminds them that Joy is being stalked by someone who “claims to be our biggest fan” and demonstrates this by secretly snapping her picture and posting the images on social media. When it comes to Joy’s stalker, the police have been useless—“They say it doesn’t fit the definition of harassment or something,” Benny grouses—so what’s a podcaster to do but ask his listeners for help? Crum has a smart solution to the problem of how to maintain the mystery of Joy’s whereabouts without sacrificing the character’s viewpoint: The novel’s first half largely alternates between Benny’s present-day narration and Joy-authored chapters pulled from the memoir she and Benny are cowriting. This way, the novel’s readers hear from both parties on the matter consuming Joy’s and Benny’s listeners: As Joy puts it, “Everyone, literally everyone, asks if we were ever romantically involved.” The novel’s did-they-or-didn’t-they/will-they-or-won’t-they tease goes down like a fizzy drink until the story takes a surprising turn at the midpoint. Here the plot sheds much of its mystery and a bit of its allure, although by book’s end, Crum has reconstituted that initial sizzle.
This mystery’s foremost puzzle? The human heart.Pub Date: March 10, 2026
ISBN: 9781250395238
Page Count: 368
Publisher: Pine & Cedar/Flatiron Books
Review Posted Online: Dec. 6, 2025
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2026
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