Best of the MonthThe UnnamedYou Are Not a GadgetThe Sea Captain's WifeThe Value of NothingJust KidsThe Lock ArtistBloodroot

Best Books of the Month

Discover our editors' picks for the best of January

Spotlight Title: The Unnamed by Joshua Ferris
The UnnamedIt's back. With those words Tim and Jane Farnsworth reenter a nightmare they know so intimately it needs no other description. "It" may not be found among an insurance company's diagnostic codes, but the Farnsworths, a couple made wealthy by Tim's successful legal practice, know it too well: Tim's compulsion, at any random moment of the day or night, to set out walking for hours at a time until he collapses in exhaustion. They've survived two bouts of this inexplicable illness, which ended as mysteriously as they began, and now, as Joshua Ferris's second novel, The Unnamed, opens, they are beset by a third. Ferris's first book, Then We Came to the End, was one of the freshest, most acclaimed fiction debuts of the decade, but he's followed it not with an imitation or extension but with something thrillingly different. Like Tim possessed in one of his perambulatory vectors, Ferris follows his character's condition as far as it leads him, far beyond where logic and loyalty usually take our lives, but always treats it with empathy, grace, and imagination. His language is as exact and poetic as his premise is fantastic, and by the story's end you feel the title refers not only to his hero's strange and solitary disease but also to those elemental but equally inexplicable forces that bind us together through the most difficult turns of our fated lives. Learn more about The Unnamed


You Are Not a Gadget by Jaron LanierThe Sea Captain's Wife by Beth Powning
You Are Not a Gadget For the most part, Web 2.0--Internet technologies that encourage interactivity, customization, and participation--is hailed as an emerging Golden Age of information sharing and collaborative achievement, the strength of democratized wisdom. Jaron Lanier isn't buying it. In You Are Not a Gadget, the longtime tech guru/visionary/dreadlocked genius (and progenitor of virtual reality) argues the opposite: that unfettered--and anonymous--ability to comment results in cynical mob behavior, the shouting-down of reasoned argument, and the devaluation of individual accomplishment. Lanier traces the roots of today's Web 2.0 philosophies and architectures (e.g. he posits that Web anonymity is the result of '60s paranoia), persuasively documents their shortcomings, and provides alternate paths to "locked-in" paradigms. Though its strongly-stated opinions run against the bias of popular assumptions, You Are Not a Gadget is a manifesto, not a screed; Lanier seeks a useful, respectful dialogue about how we can shape technology to fit culture's needs, rather than the way technology currently shapes us. The Sea Captain's Wife A gripping story of love and obsession set in the 1860s, The Sea Captain's Wife, takes readers on an unforgettable voyage amidst breathtaking beauty. Azuba Galloway, daughter of a shipwright, sees ships leaving for foreign ports from the Bay of Fundy and dreams of seeing the world. She marries sea captain Nathaniel Bradstock believing she will sail at his side, but when she becomes pregnant, she's forced to stay behind. Their gabled house overlooking the bay can't shelter her from the loneliness of living without her husband. When Azuba becomes embroiled in scandal, Nathaniel takes her and their daughter aboard his ship and sets sail for London. Their voyage is ill-fated, beset with storms and obstacles that test Azuba's courage, compassion, and love. Alone in a male world, surrounded by the splendour and the terror of the open seas, she must face her fears and fight to keep her family together.
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The Value of Nothing by Raj PatelJust Kids by Patti Smith
The Value of Nothing As retirement funds shrink, savings disappear and houses are foreclosed on, now is a good time to ask a question for which every human civilization has had an answer: why do things cost what they do? The Value of Nothing tracks down the reasons through history, philosophy, neuroscience, and sociology, showing why prices are always at odds with the true value of the things that matter most to us. Damien Hirst's diamond-encrusted skull sold for a record $100 million at auction. But if we account for the possibility that blood diamonds were used (as many suspect), the human cost is even greater. A Big Mac might seem like the best deal in these economic times, but after analyzing the energy to produce each burger, from field to Happy Meal, Patel argues the real price tag is a whopping $200. But it is easiest to see the gap between price and value by looking at things that are so-called free. Examining everything from Google to TV, from love to thoughts, The Value of Nothing reveals the hidden social consequences of our global culture of "freedom." Just Kids Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe weren't always famous, but they always thought they would be. They found each other, adrift but determined, on the streets of New York City in the late '60s and made a pact to keep each other afloat until they found their voices--or the world was ready to hear them. Lovers first and then friends as Mapplethorpe discovered he was gay, they divided their dimes between art supplies and Coney Island hot dogs. Mapplethorpe was quicker to find his metier, with a Polaroid and then a Hasselblad, but Smith was the first to fame, transformed, to her friend's delight, from a poet into a rock star. (Mapplethorpe soon became famous too--and notorious--before his death from AIDS in 1989.) Smith's memoir of their friendship, Just Kids, is tender and artful, open-eyed but surprisingly decorous, with the oracular style familiar from her anthems like "Because the Night," "Gloria," and "Dancing Barefoot," balanced by her powers of observation and memory for everyday details like the price of automat sandwiches and the shabby, welcoming fellow bohemians of the Chelsea Hotel, among whose ranks these baby Rimbauds found their way.
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The Lock Artist by Steve HamiltonBloodroot by Amy Greene
The Lock Artist Mike Smith is a "boxman." He can open any safe, padlock, or locked door without a combination or a key--a talent that lands him in prison at the age of eighteen. He spends his time writing down the story of his life because that's the only way he can share it. He hasn't spoken in ten years. Not a single word since the tragic day he became known as the "Miracle Boy." Mike is one of those unreliable narrators you can't help rooting for--a traumatized soul fighting his way back from the brink--and the mystery of his silence will have you blazing through pages. A smart, inventive thriller, The Lock Artist is packed with a standout cast of characters, plus enough safe-cracking trade secrets to tempt you to dig up that old combination lock and test your newfound knowledge. BloodrootBloodroot is that rare sort of family saga that feels intimate instead of epic. Set in Tennessee's Smoky Mountains, it's told largely in tandem voices that keep watchful eyes on Myra Lamb. She is a child of the mountain, tied to the land in ways that mystify and enchant those around her. There's magic to Myra--perhaps because she has the remarkable blue eyes foretold by a nearly-forgotten family curse--but little fantasy to her life. Bloodroot is as much about the Lambs as it is about a place, one that becomes ever more vivid as generations form, break free, and knit back together. Its characters speak plainly but true, they are resilient and flawed and beautiful, and there's a near-instant empathy in reading their stories, which--even in their most visceral moments--are alluring and wonderful.
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More of January's Best New Books

CommittedEat, Pray, Love author Elizabeth Gilbert delves into marriage--both as an intimate relationship and a social institution--in Committed, her own unexpected story of love, fidelity, and figuring it all out.

Browse more of our January favourites:

Game Change by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin
Toby: A Man by Todd Babiak
Mindsight by Daniel J. Siegel
Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin
Where the God of Love Hangs Out by Amy Bloom
The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin
The Language of Life by Francis Collins



Notable Paperbacks This Month

Still AliceMany of the books we loved in hardcover are new in paperback this month, including Lisa Genova's debut novel, Still Alice, a heartbreaking, inspiring, and terrifying story of a woman's sudden descent into early onset Alzheimer's disease.

Browse more of this month's best new paperbacks:

Spark by John J. Ratey
American Rust by Philipp Meyer
The Unbearable Lightness of Scones by Alexander McCall Smith
The Lords of Finance by Liaquat Ahamed
See more new and upcoming paperbacks



January Pick for Young Readers


Only in the Movies by William Bell

Only in the Movies When Jake Blanchard gets a job as a student set designer at the York School of Arts, it's an exciting first step towards realizing his dream of making movies. But soon enough he finds himself starring in a drama of his own creation. Nothing in Jake's life is the same after Vanni, a whip-smart, wisecracking Indian-Irish-Canadian joins his class, and after Jake meets the unforgettable Alba, who is as stunning as she is unattainable. Jake is tongue-tied around Alba and enlists Vanni's help. All of a sudden--like the Shakespeare play Jake's school is putting on--Jake finds himself entwined in a love triangle, complete with secrets and suppressed passions, contrived plots, miscues and misunderstandings.

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