The sunlit night
Available Copies by Location
Location | |
---|---|
Community Centre | Available |
Victoria | Available |
Browse Related Items
Subject |
Young adults > Fiction. Artists > Fiction. Families > Fiction. Man-woman relationships > Fiction. Lofoten (Norway) > Fiction. |
Genre |
Romance fiction. Fiction. |
- ISBN: 1408863049
- ISBN: 9781408863046
- Physical Description 255 pages ; 22 cm
- Publisher London : Bloomsbury, 2015.
Content descriptions
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note: | LSC 24.99 |
Additional Information
New York Times Review
The Sunlit Night
New York Times
June 19, 2016
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company
THE FULL CATASTROPHE: Travels Among the New Greek Ruins, by James Angelos, (Broadway, $16.) To understand Greece's current financial crisis, look to its full history, not just reports of endemic corruption and dysfunction, Angelos argues here. Competing images of Greece - as both a birthplace of Western culture and modern floundering state - have exacerbated tensions between the country and the rest of Europe. THE ARCHITECT'S APPRENTICE, by Elif Shafak. (Penguin, $17.) During the Ottoman Empire, a young boy from India studies under the sultan's chief architect and helps to construct some of the region's most magnificent structures: the Suleimaniye and Selimiye mosques. Shafak's novel captures the era's richly textured social fabric and functions as "a love poem to the cosmopolitan beauty of Istanbul," our reviewer, Christopher Atamian, said here. YOUNG ELIOT: From St. Louis to "The Waste Land," by Robert Crawford. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $18.) This biography traces the influences of Eliot's Midwestern upbringing on his writing years after he moved to his adopted home, England. Crawford "has done exceptional spadework in turning up clues that take us deeper into Eliot's symbolic landscapes, often rooted in childhood," David Yezzi wrote here. THE ANCHORESS, by Robyn Cadwallader. (Picador, $16.) In this novel, it's 1255 England and 17-year-old Sarah, fleeing indignities and violence in the secular world, has chosen to cloister herself in a small cell in her village's church. From her room, she learns to balance the outside world's influence with her interior life as she deepens her relationship with God, and wrestles with the fraught relationship between piety and gender. I AM SORRY TO THINK I HAVE RAISED A TIMID SON, by Kent Russell. (Vintage, $16.) Russell's essay collection forms a pointillistic portrait of American masculinity, including dispatches from its extremes - Russell writes about Juggalos, Amish people who love baseball and a snake handler - and his own experience. As an outlier in a military family, Russell is often at odds with his father as they spar over competing ideas of what it means to be a man. THE SUNLIT NIGHT, by Rebecca Dinerstein. (Bloomsbury, $16.) Both Yasha and Frances have fled to the far reaches of an Arctic archipelago: He, a Russian immigrant living in Brighton Beach, came to bury his father, while Frances sought refuge from her family and ex-boyfriend, armed with a desire to paint. The novel follows them as they forge a bond while grappling with their losses. INDEPENDENCE LOST: Lives on the Edge of the American Revolution, by Kathleen DuVal. (Random House, $18.) Eight representative historical figures shed light on the American battle for independence on the Gulf Coast. African-Americans, Native Americans, Irish immigrants and Cajuns all contributed to the area's fight, which was the site of some important British defeats.
Library Journal Review
The Sunlit Night
Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Escaping a family crisis and a humiliating breakup, Frances accepts an art fellowship in the northern reaches of Norway, working as an apprentice to an uncommunicative painter. Meanwhile, high school student -Yasha returns from America to Russia with his father, who hopes to reunite with the wife who stayed behind ten years earlier. The two story lines converge midway through the novel, as Yasha and his family turn up in the remote coastal town where Frances is staying. The disorienting "midnight sun" of summer near the Arctic Circle creates a mystical setting as the characters work out their personal and family dilemmas. New Yorkers Frances and Yasha (both immensely likable characters) experience profound culture shock in the sparsely populated town and yearn to connect with each other. The "will they/won't they" tension keeps the pages moving, and readers will delight in the often surprising turns of phrase offered by debut novelist -Dinerstein (also a published poet): a first view of mountains is described as "horrifying," and a character's body is said to be "tonguing the wind that blew around it." VERDICT The unusual setting and evocative language will appeal to those looking for a summer read with a bit more depth.-Christine DeZelar--Tiedman, Univ. of Minnesota Libs., Minneapolis © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.