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Fully booked: January titles to take you to faraway places

Walking miles in others’ shoes is one of the joys of literature. The books our reviewers liked best this month immerse readers in  unexpected situations, locations, and historical periods. 

Many of our choices for fiction center on the experiences of Black people, immigrants, and Indigenous people, demonstrating a welcome, though still gradual, diversification within the publishing industry. 

Why We Wrote This

Our 10 picks for this month convey courage in the midst of profound change, compassion for family struggles, and the excitement (and confusion) of overlapping cultures.

The novels include the story of a teenage poet from China as he navigates his new turf in San Francisco, a murder mystery set in New Zealand featuring a Maori police detective, and the tale of a 19th-century Lutheran clergyman who clashes with the Indigenous herding community he is trying to convert.  

Among the nonfiction titles is a lively retelling of the story of an enslaved husband and wife in the antebellum South who concoct an elaborate and risky escape plan. And a biography of Shirley Chisholm, the first Black U.S. congresswoman, paints an indelible portrait of the path-breaking politician.  

1. The Chinese Groove, by Kathryn Ma

It’s 2015, and 18-year-old budding poet Xue Li – call him Shelley – has bid China farewell for a new life in fog-shrouded San Francisco at the home of his “rich uncle.” Reality quickly reveals an extended family under financial and emotional strain, plus a city far different from his expectations.

Shelley narrates his newcomer experience with optimism, generosity, and humor. Kathryn Ma’s deftly written novel soars.

Why We Wrote This

Our 10 picks for this month convey courage in the midst of profound change, compassion for family struggles, and the excitement (and confusion) of overlapping cultures.

2. In the Upper Country, by Kai Thomas

In 1859 in Dunmore, Alberta – a stop on the Underground Railroad – a young Black journalist meets with an older woman in jail for killing a white slave catcher. Tales of brutality, escape, survival, and grit are volleyed in their story-for-a-story pact. Kai Thomas’ first novel, lyrical and layered, illumines the complex ties among Indigenous, Black, and white individuals of the era.

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