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10 best books of April: The courage to look under the surface

“It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye,” wrote Antoine de Saint-Exupéry in “The Little Prince.”

This month’s nonfiction selections delve into the extraordinary life of a man who was born on a slave ship but was determined to chart his own course in life, the unexpected courage of a banker determined to do what was right rather than what was authorized, and what Helen Keller chose to do “After the Miracle.”

Why We Wrote This

The reading life is an inspired one. And this month’s books bring empathy, courage, insight, and a new work highlighting an extraordinary life that should never have been forgotten.

Another author looks at the real price – often paid in pain – of luxury goods, while two writers argue that in America, to achieve lasting change, you might want to start gradually.

Our fiction reviewers, meanwhile, have selected a multigenerational family saga about restaurant owners in Minnesota, a sprightly second-chance rom-com, a mystery set during Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation, and a profound novel about creating art and finding home through a West Bank production of “Hamlet.”

It can, and should, be argued that every life is extraordinary. But April’s best books offer another one of those biographies of a life so compelling you cannot believe it was ever forgotten.

1. Saturday Night at the Lakeside Supper Club, by J. Ryan Stradal

This gratifying multi-generational story of two families who own restaurants in northern Minnesota serves up a bounty of humor, heartache, and affection. J. Ryan Stradal’s novel celebrates community, forgiveness, progress, and finding one’s own way.

Why We Wrote This

The reading life is an inspired one. And this month’s books bring empathy, courage, insight, and a new work highlighting an extraordinary life that should never have been forgotten.

2. Enter Ghost, by Isabella Hammad

An actor living in London returns to Israel to visit her sister and join a West Bank production of “Hamlet.” As she warms to the rhythm of rehearsals, the charged political landscape, plus long-ignored tensions with her Palestinian family, tug and test. It’s a patient, emotionally honest novel about creating art – and finding home – amid resistance.

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