Tender is the Night

Tender Is the Night from 1934 was Fitzgerald’s fourth and final novel. It chronicles the turbulent life of a once-revered doctor, Dick Diver, and his wife Nicole, who was initially his patient. Set in glamorous locales like the French Riviera, the book can feel like a tragic coda to the heady artistic atmosphere of the 1920s […]

Outline

I remember being mesmerized by Cusk’s prose from page one of this novel when I first read it years back. It’s no surprise that one of its reviewers described it as “lethally intelligent,” for indeed the depth of the insights and the hum of original thought permeate each page of Outline, which was published in […]

Love in the Time of Cholera

I’ve been wanting to feature a book by García Márquez for some time. After the publication of his legendary novel One Hundred Years of Solitude in 1967, he become one of the most influential and admired writers in the world, attaining a rare mix of commercial success and critical acclaim. His endless list of honors […]

The Unbearable Lightness of Being

Published in 1984 and set in the Prague Spring of 1968, Kundera’s novel is a work that “wears many hats” (which, as you will discover, is quite literally an important motif in the book!). On the one hand, it is a brilliant philosophical novel that explores the metaphysical tension between “lightness” and “weight” in our […]

American Pastoral

I’ve been thinking about this novel for a long time, ever since I first fell under its spell decades ago, not long after it was published in 1997. I sensed then that there was something quintessentially “American” about the dramatic rise and fall of the protagonist, Seymour “the Swede” Levov. Even the title of the […]