What We’re Reading This Week

MOLLY Missing Person by Patrick Modiano "I'm reading this one for the Murder in the Afternoon book club, meeting at BookPeople this upcoming Tuesday. Ever since I found out that Modiano had won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2014, wrote the screenplay for Lacombe, Lucien,and primarily wrote detective novels, I've been anticipating reading his … Continue reading What We’re Reading This Week

The Magical Realism of Tea Obreht

Spurred by her recent appearance in the New Yorker's 20 Under 40 anthology, and a general buzz among my co-workers, I picked up an advanced copy of Tea Obreht's The Tiger's Wife. I finally finished it late last night, purposefully reading slower as the last pages approached and the back half of the book grew thinner and thinner. I turned off the lamp and just sat in the dark, thinking about it, re-working each plot point and trying to remember the last time a book really got at me so intensely. The Tiger's Wife is the finest work of magical realism I have read since I greedily poured over Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude in high school. Like Marquez, Obreht packs an embarrassment of riches into her work. Each chapter of the book is like a Russian nesting doll, revealing smaller and more wondrous stories, each character contains multitudes. Esoterica abounds, and every flashback is full of old-world mysticism and ancient rites largely forgotten in our modern times.