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Shake off the chill with the best books of February

These are the fiction titles our reviewers liked best this month.

Mule Boy, by Andrew Krivak

Ondro Prach, the 13-year-old sole survivor of a mine collapse in Pennsylvania’s Blue Mountain hills, mulls his life’s many imprisonments – guilt, fear, regret – in the decades since the 1929 disaster. Written in a flowing oral style in which “every clause is a thought and every comma is a breath,” Andrew Krivak’s novel is an extraordinary work of rescue, witnessing, and redemption. – Erin Douglass

Why We Wrote This

Our reviewers’ picks for this month include an action-adventure thriller set in the Arctic, a locked-taxicab mystery in New York, and a group biography of three intrepid women journalists who covered the globe.

Kin, by Tayari Jones

Tayari Jones follows up “An American Marriage” with the vibrant tale of Annie and Vernice, “motherless girls that everyone felt sorry for” from Honeysuckle, Louisiana. As the best friends grow up and move away – Vernice to the privileged world of Spelman College, Annie to Memphis, Tennessee, and the school of hard knocks – they flourish, yearn, and struggle. Jones’ prose rings with truth, delights in detail, casts some side-eye, and provides rich ground for the novel’s vivid cast. The hurts and consequences keep coming, but Jones wraps both her characters – and readers – in a generous embrace. – Erin Douglass

Cold Zero, by Brad Thor, with Ward Larsen

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