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Add the Monitor’s 10 best books of May to your reading list

“You must trust and believe in people or life becomes impossible,” wrote Anton Chekhov. His words could describe many of the characters in the books highlighted by Monitor reviewers this month. 

Among the novels are the story of a woman attempting a fresh start after her release from prison, and the saga of a World War I veteran seeking redemption from an act of betrayal during the war.

Why We Wrote This

Looking for a great new book to kick off the summer? We have 10 of them. From tales of redemption to explorations of nature, our reviewers have your summer reading covered.

Another fiction title follows a woman abandoned by her husband at the start of the 1949 Chinese Revolution. Determined to follow him to Taiwan, she learns to trust in herself and in her daughters.

Among the nonfiction selections are Erik Larson’s vivid account of the period after Abraham Lincoln became president and before the start of the Civil War; a deep dive into the remarkable communication among plants; and a biography of Knopf editor Judith Jones, who mentored Julia Child, John Updike, and Anne Tyler. 

How To Read a Book, by Monica Wood

Monica Wood’s engaging novel of fresh starts follows Violet, a 20-something woman fresh out of prison; Harriet, a retiree who leads a book club inside the women’s prison; and Frank, the retired machinist whose wife was killed in the hit-and-run for which Violet served time. Shot through with clever asides and spiky feelings, the story ponders trust, reformation, and forgiveness.

Daughters of Shandong, by Eve J. Chung

Why We Wrote This

Looking for a great new book to kick off the summer? We have 10 of them. From tales of redemption to explorations of nature, our reviewers have your summer reading covered.

Eve J. Chung strikes historical-fiction gold, inspired by her own family’s story. During the 1949 Chinese Revolution, a father abandons his wife and daughters to seek safety in Taiwan. The women follow on their own harrowing journey, ultimately breaking through gender barriers to find freedom.

Long Island, by Colm Tóibín

Moral quandaries abound in Colm Tóibín’s compelling follow-up to “Brooklyn.” Irish immigrant Eilis learns that her husband has impregnated another woman; worse, his family expects Eilis to raise the child. Returning to Ireland for solace, Eilis encounters inertia, judgment – and her former flame. Tóibín’s portrayal of his characters’ wrestling is a sobering story of dishonesty’s toll.

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