8 Paperbacks to Pick Up—and Pass On
You can't take an e-reader on a pool raft and you don't want
to lug a hardcover around in your beach bag—which is why we love
paperbacks. Here's the best of the crop to kick off summer 2014.
5 of 8
The Movement of Stars
By Amy Brill
448 pages;
Riverhead Trade
Read three sentences of Amy Brill's gorgeous The Movement of Stars
and you're swiftly transported to the lantern-lit past of 1840s Quaker
Nantucket. Twenty-four-year-old Hannah Price is a woman on a
mission—ostensibly to discover a comet ("wanderers," as they are known
in her world) but also to find a place for herself as a respected
contributor in the field of astronomy. Then she meets Isaac Martin, a
black whaler from the distant Azores islands, who wants to learn
navigation from her, only to end up teaching her that "the future,
shining, is calling our attention." When their lessons evolve into
moonlit strolls on the beach, Hannah's repressive religious community
takes notice, forcing her to reassess what she knows about her family
and home, and to tackle the question of who gets to decide her spiritual
beliefs. This book sings with insights about love, work and how we
create our own families. (Hannah asks her new sister-in-law, "Is this
going to require a show of sentiment or some sort of feminine ritual?
I'm afraid I'll be a total failure at either.") And despite the richness
of historical and astronomical detail, ultimately this is a story about
the question pulsing through every woman alive, brilliant scientist or
not: How do you make a contribution to the world without "forsaking
feeling for fact?"
— Amy Shearn
Published 05/28/2014