It has been an unbearable winter in some pockets of the country, with people ready for spring. Along with somewhat warmer weather this month, some highly anticipated book releases are arriving to brighten or enlighten your day.
‘Now I Surrender’ Described as “part epic, part alt-Western,” Álvaro Enrigue’s latest novel reimagines a 19th-century war between the Apaches, Mexico and the U.S. Enrigue’s approach to the story “isn’t so much to lament the end of Apachería” so much as to “admire the steeliness of a tribe that survived centuries-long attempts to subdue it,” said Kirkus Reviews. (March 3, $30, Penguin Random House)
‘Chain of Ideas: The Origins of Our Authoritarian Age’ The author of “Stamped from the Beginning” and “How to Be an Antiracist,” Ibram X. Kendi is back with another book about the “state of Western bigotry,” said The New York Times. This time, he focuses on the “great replacement theory,” the concept of an “elite conspiracy to nudge white people in Europe and the United States off the map” by encouraging “low birthrates and promoting an influx of Black and brown immigrants.” (March 17, $35, Penguin Random House)
‘Seasons of Glass & Iron: Stories’ The acclaimed science fiction writer Amal El-Mohtar presents a collection of previously published short stories and poetry. The book features a variety of formats, such as letters, diary entries and folktales and blends “fantasy, magical realism and speculative fiction” rooted in “history, myth or legend,” said Publishers’ Weekly. (March 24, $25, Macmillan) |