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SISI

EMPRESS ON HER OWN

A satisfying saga of the late Habsburg period.

Second and final installment of Pataki’s sympathetic fictional biography of Austro-Hungarian Empress Sisi.

When we last left Sisi, in the first volume, she was rebelling against the strictures of her life at the Viennese court as the consort of Emperor Franz Joseph. In particular, she was defying her mother-in-law, Archduchess Sophie, who had not only exacerbated Sisi’s estrangement from Franz, but appropriated the upbringing of her three children. Sisi embarks on a lifelong strategy for escaping the pressures of noblesse oblige: traveling. After going to Corfu to recuperate from a depression, she heads for the family estate in Hungary, where she can spend time horseback riding and enjoying the attentions of Count Andrássy, the former rebel who helped consolidate the two kingdoms. She gives birth to Valerie, the only child who will be raised free of Sophie’s interference, rumored by many to be Andrássy’s child. Too soon, however, duty calls and Sisi must return to court. After rescuing her son, Crown Prince Rudolf, from an abusive tutor, Sisi learns, as Sophie is on her deathbed, that the dragon lady meant well all the while. After enduring an interminable summer hosting other royals at the 1873 Viennese World Fair, Sisi is invited to England by the Earl of Spencer (ancestor of Princess Diana) to hone her fox hunting skills. While galloping over hill and dale she falls in love again, this time with dashing sportsman Bay Middleton, her only equal in horsemanship. Along the way we meet her deranged cousin King Ludwig of Bavaria, who bankrupts his kingdom building surreal castles and supporting his great love, Richard Wagner. Since this is a historical novel that strives for fidelity to the facts, Pataki draws a veil of privacy over Sisi’s rumored, but never definitively proven, infidelities. On the other hand, no such reticence downplays Franz’s rigidity or Prince Rudolf’s self-destructiveness.

A satisfying saga of the late Habsburg period.

Pub Date: March 8, 2016

ISBN: 978-0-8129-8905-2

Page Count: 464

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: Feb. 12, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2016

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  • Kirkus Reviews'
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LINCOLN IN THE BARDO

With this book, Saunders asserts a complex and disturbing vision in which society and cosmos blur.

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  • Kirkus Reviews'
    Best Books Of 2017


  • New York Times Bestseller


  • The Man Booker Prize Winner

Short-story virtuoso Saunders' (Tenth of December, 2013, etc.) first novel is an exhilarating change of pace.

The bardo is a key concept of Tibetan Buddhism: a middle, or liminal, spiritual landscape where we are sent between physical lives. It's also a fitting master metaphor for Saunders’ first novel, which is about suspension: historical, personal, familial, and otherwise. The Lincoln of the title is our 16th president, sort of, although he is not yet dead. Rather, he is in a despair so deep it cannot be called mere mourning over his 11-year-old son, Willie, who died of typhoid in 1862. Saunders deftly interweaves historical accounts with his own fragmentary, multivoiced narration as young Willie is visited in the netherworld by his father, who somehow manages to bridge the gap between the living and the dead, at least temporarily. But the sneaky brilliance of the book is in the way Saunders uses these encounters—not so much to excavate an individual’s sense of loss as to connect it to a more national state of disarray. 1862, after all, was the height of the Civil War, when the outcome was far from assured. Lincoln was widely seen as being out of his depth, “a person of very inferior cast of character, wholly unequal to the crisis.” Among Saunders’ most essential insights is that, in his grief over Willie, Lincoln began to develop a hard-edged empathy, out of which he decided that “the swiftest halt to the [war] (therefore the greatest mercy) might be the bloodiest.” This is a hard truth, insisting that brutality now might save lives later, and it gives this novel a bitter moral edge. For those familiar with Saunders’ astonishing short fiction, such complexity is hardly unexpected, although this book is a departure for him stylistically and formally; longer, yes, but also more of a collage, a convocation of voices that overlap and argue, enlarging the scope of the narrative. It is also ruthless and relentless in its evocation not only of Lincoln and his quandary, but also of the tenuous existential state shared by all of us. Lincoln, after all, has become a shade now, like all the ghosts who populate this book. “Strange, isn’t it?” one character reflects. “To have dedicated one’s life to a certain venture, neglecting other aspects of one’s life, only to have that venture, in the end, amount to nothing at all, the products of one’s labors utterly forgotten?”

With this book, Saunders asserts a complex and disturbing vision in which society and cosmos blur.

Pub Date: Feb. 14, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-8129-9534-3

Page Count: 342

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: May 2, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2016

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WHISTLING PAST THE GRAVEYARD

Young Starla is an endearing character whose spirited observations propel this nicely crafted story.

Crandall (Sleep No More, 2010, etc.) delivers big with a coming-of-age story set in Mississippi in 1963 and narrated by a precocious 9-year-old.

Due in part to tradition, intimidation and Jim Crow laws, segregation is very much ingrained into the Southern lifestyle in 1963. Few white children question these rules, least of all Starla Caudelle, a spunky young girl who lives with her stern, unbending grandmother in Cayuga Springs, Miss., and spends an inordinate amount of time on restriction for her impulsive actions and sassy mouth. Starla’s dad works on an oil rig in the Gulf; her mother abandoned the family to seek fame and fortune in Nashville when Starla was 3. In her youthful innocence, Starla’s convinced that her mother’s now a big singing star, and she dreams of living with her again one day, a day that seems to be coming more quickly than Starla’s anticipated. Convinced that her latest infraction is about to land her in reform school, Starla decides she has no recourse but to run away from home and head to Nashville to find her mom. Ill prepared for the long, hot walk and with little concept of time and distance, Starla becomes weak and dehydrated as she trudges along the hot, dusty road. She gladly accepts water and a ride from Eula, a black woman driving an old truck, and finds, to her surprise, that she’s not Eula’s only passenger. Inside a basket is a young white baby, an infant supposedly abandoned outside a church, whom Eula calls James. Although Eula doesn’t intend to drive all the way to Nashville, when she shows up at her home with the two white children, a confrontation with her husband forces her into becoming a part of Starla’s journey, and it’s this journey that creates strong bonds between the two: They help each other face fears as they each become stronger individuals. Starla learns firsthand about the abuse and scare tactics used to intimidate blacks and the skewed assumption of many whites that blacks are inferior beings. Assisted by a black schoolteacher who shows Eula and Starla unconditional acceptance and kindness, both ultimately learn that love and kinship transcend blood ties and skin color.

Young Starla is an endearing character whose spirited observations propel this nicely crafted story.

Pub Date: July 2, 2013

ISBN: 978-1-4767-0772-3

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: May 20, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2013

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