In The Library: Chloe Schama
One of the major perks of being an editor is getting to grab books before they come out. I’ve been a fan of British author Kate Atkinson ever since I found the excellent TV adaptation of her book Case Histories, and so I grabbed her newest, Life After Life, as soon as I spotted it. (It’s not out ‘til April—sorry, folks.) I had thought of Atkinson as something of a genre writer—Case Histories and her most recent, Started Early, Took My Dog,are crime-thriller-type books—but the new one is much more experimental: it follows a single life to many different divergent fates, re-setting each time the central character dies. Yes, it’s a bit confusing, but it’s also very compelling as a contemporary take on Modernism. Life After Life sent me back to Atkinson’s first novel, Behind the Scenes at the Museum, which I’m reading now. But fifty pages in, I’m feeling a bit over-Atkinsoned, so I’ve dipped into Jess Walter’s forthcoming collection of short stories, We Live in Water. People have been buzzing about Walter’s recent novel, Beautiful Ruins (most recently, Francine Prose, in The New York Times Book Review), but I was turned on to Walter by his story “Anything Helps,” which was the most shocking, surprising, and moving thing I read in The Best American Short Stories 2012. I feel a Walter phase coming on … 
Chloe Schama is the Executive Editor of The Book: An Online Review at The New Republic.
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In The Library: Chloe Schama
One of the major perks of being an editor is getting to grab books before they come out. I’ve been a fan of British author Kate Atkinson ever since I found the excellent TV adaptation of her book Case Histories, and so I grabbed her newest, Life After Life, as soon as I spotted it. (It’s not out ‘til April—sorry, folks.) I had thought of Atkinson as something of a genre writer—Case Histories and her most recent, Started Early, Took My Dog,are crime-thriller-type books—but the new one is much more experimental: it follows a single life to many different divergent fates, re-setting each time the central character dies. Yes, it’s a bit confusing, but it’s also very compelling as a contemporary take on Modernism. Life After Life sent me back to Atkinson’s first novel, Behind the Scenes at the Museum, which I’m reading now. But fifty pages in, I’m feeling a bit over-Atkinsoned, so I’ve dipped into Jess Walter’s forthcoming collection of short stories, We Live in Water. People have been buzzing about Walter’s recent novel, Beautiful Ruins (most recently, Francine Prose, in The New York Times Book Review), but I was turned on to Walter by his story “Anything Helps,” which was the most shocking, surprising, and moving thing I read in The Best American Short Stories 2012. I feel a Walter phase coming on … 
Chloe Schama is the Executive Editor of The Book: An Online Review at The New Republic.
Zoom Info

In The Library: Chloe Schama

One of the major perks of being an editor is getting to grab books before they come out. I’ve been a fan of British author Kate Atkinson ever since I found the excellent TV adaptation of her book Case Histories, and so I grabbed her newest, Life After Life, as soon as I spotted it. (It’s not out ‘til April—sorry, folks.) I had thought of Atkinson as something of a genre writer—Case Histories and her most recent, Started Early, Took My Dog,are crime-thriller-type books—but the new one is much more experimental: it follows a single life to many different divergent fates, re-setting each time the central character dies. Yes, it’s a bit confusing, but it’s also very compelling as a contemporary take on Modernism. Life After Life sent me back to Atkinson’s first novel, Behind the Scenes at the Museum, which I’m reading now. But fifty pages in, I’m feeling a bit over-Atkinsoned, so I’ve dipped into Jess Walter’s forthcoming collection of short stories, We Live in Water. People have been buzzing about Walter’s recent novel, Beautiful Ruins (most recently, Francine Prose, in The New York Times Book Review), but I was turned on to Walter by his story “Anything Helps,” which was the most shocking, surprising, and moving thing I read in The Best American Short Stories 2012. I feel a Walter phase coming on … 

Chloe Schama is the Executive Editor of The Book: An Online Review at The New Republic.

V.S. Naipaul hates Jane Austen, loves his dead cat. 
Read his interview with Isaac Chotiner here.
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V.S. Naipaul hates Jane Austen, loves his dead cat. 

Read his interview with Isaac Chotiner here.

ICYMI Tumblr Fans: The New Republic’s post-election issue features Timothy Noah on obstacles to the Obama agenda, Alex Pareene on jokes and the political class, John B. Judis on permanent majorities, and David Greenberg on the myth of second term failure. Also, don’t miss Joshua Cohen on the ghosts of Atlantic City, Will Blythe on how to save college basketball, Jed Perl on Andy Warhol’s legacy, and Leon Wieseltier’s lessons from Hurricane Sandy

Tumblr fans, ICYMI: the newest issue of TNR hit newsstands this week. Be sure to check out Noam Scheiber’s cover profile of Tagg Romney, Timothy Noah on Erskine Bowles, Alec MacGillis on a washed up punk rocker and the campaign to steal Ohio, Eliza Griswold on the terrifying rise of Greece’s Nazi party, Max Boot on Bin Laden, and Jackson Lears on the Mormon ethic and the spirit of capitalism. Check it out and subscribe here: http://bit.ly/R9TWOZ

Tumblr fans, in case you’ve missed it, TNR’s latest issue is here!

In this issue, Alec MacGillis explains how Paul Ryan convinced Washington of his genius, Timothy Noah describes how Mitt Romney would squash the recovery, Molly Redden confronts the perils of running against Todd Akin, T.A. Frank rides out the recession at Disneyland, Ken Silverstein buckrakes around the world with Tony Blair, and Nathan Heller reflects on the cranky wisdom of Peter Kaplan.

PLUS, David Denby laments the profit motive in American movies, David Thomson wonders why American movies don’t aspire to greatness, Mark Lilla recounts how a religious revolution secularized society, and Ruth Franklin tackles Zadie Smith’s identity crisis. Also, don’t miss Robert Alter on the King James Bible, and Leon Wieseltier on U.S. foreign policy.

Click here to access the October 4th issue and much more!

Tumblr fans, TNR’s convention double issue is here!

In this special issue, Leon Wieseltier examines Paul Ryan’s nasty ideal of self-reliance, Noam Scheiber outlines Joe Biden’s presidential ambitions for 2016, Marc Tracy reveals how BuzzFeed is remaking campaign coverage, and Walter Kirn explains why this is the most compelling election in years.

In addition, Jed Perl pays a visit to the Barnes Foundation, Noreen Malone examines the political philosophy of Anna Wintour, and Seth Stevenson explores the effects of campaign ads on the mind. Also, don’t miss Timothy Snyder on military trials, Mark Noll on American evangelicals, Judge Richard A. Posner on the incoherence of Antonin Scalia, and Paul Starr on politics in the orbit of money.

Click here to access the September 13th issue and much more!