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From Family Drama To Global Apocalypse, These Two Novels Keep You Riveted

Our book critic Maureen Corrigan says it's never too early to get a jump on summer reading. She has two good books she wants to recommend.

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Other segments from the episode on May 3, 2019

Fresh Air with Terry Gross, May 3, 2019: Obituary for John Singleton; Review of memoir 'What Doesn't Kill You Makes You Blacker; Obituary for Jo Sullivan Loesser; Review of two summer reading novels.

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DAVID BIANCULLI, HOST:

This is FRESH AIR. Our book critic Maureen Corrigan says it's never too early to get a jump on summer reading. She has two good books she wants to recommend.

MAUREEN CORRIGAN, BYLINE: Save the experimental fiction for fall. Summertime reading is all about storytelling. As a preseason teaser, I'm recommending two new, very different novels that tell the kind of stories readers can get lost in. Sarah Blake writes in the historical fiction tradition of a Herman Wouk. In her 2009 bestseller "The Postmistress" and her latest door stopper "The Guest Book," multi-family dramas intersect with the larger forces of war and social upheaval.

"The Guest Book" opens with a domestic shocker. The year is 1935. The place is New York City. Kitty Milton and her husband Ogden are insulated from the anxieties of the Great Depression by a rock-solid fortification of old money. One afternoon, Kitty enters her family's hushed Upper East Side apartment after a pleasant interlude at the Philharmonic. She flings open a window in the master bedroom - remember, this is the pre-air conditioning era - and proceeds to freshen up. When Kitty looks in her mirror, she sees that her two sons have entered the room. And the rowdy older one, Neddy, age 5, has climbed onto the window seat, stood up and is about to toss his teddy bear out onto the street 14 stories below. Kitty calls his name, and Neddy falls out the open window.

That moment warps the fate of the Milton family for generations. But in the immediate aftermath, Ogden makes a desperate gesture to lift Kitty out of depression. He buys a mansion on a tiny island in Maine. It's there the Miltons and their descendants will summer for decades to come. And it's there that most but not all of the Miltons will fine-tune the WASP practice of shrouding tragedy and secrets in silence.

Blake is an accomplished storyteller, braiding in a large cast of characters and colorful excursions to places like pre-World War II Germany and 1950s Greenwich Village. She's also hip to the fact that this kind of lush historical novel, tied to the annual visits of a wealthy clan gathering to crack lobster tails by the sea, absolutely reeks of off-putting privilege and literary mothballs. No matter - "The Guest Book" proudly owns the appeal of an old-fashioned, sweeping storyline and in so doing complicates many of its characters beyond the shallow first impressions they make.

In fact, one of the most engaging characters here defends the essential human yearning for a good story. Kitty's granddaughter, Evie, is a professor of feminist medieval history. A postmodernist, Evie knows better than to believe that the past has a plot. And yet, she admits to herself that she longs against reason for the promise of a pattern, for the relief, the unbearable relief of an omniscient narrator. "The Guest Book" offers that relief and much more.

If "The Guest Book" is a kind of Victorian novel with a gloss of contemporary self-consciousness, "The Last" by British author Hanna Jameson is an unusual thriller in which Agatha Christie's "And Then There Were None" collides with Stephen King's "The Shining" and Nevil Shute's apocalyptic chestnut "On The Beach."

The premise alone is golden. An historian named Jon Keller is attending a conference at a grand, but remote, hotel in Switzerland when the world ends. According to news reports that quickly peter out, a nuclear holocaust has wiped out Washington, New York, Berlin and on and on. The 20 survivors left in the hotel after others have taken off debate the wisdom of walking to faraway Zurich or staying put and waiting for the nuclear cloud.

When the water in the hotel begins to taste funky, Jon and some other guests climb to the roof to investigate the water towers. In one, they find the corpse of a young girl who's been murdered. "The Last" raises the moral question of whether one isolated murder would still matter given what appears to be the erasure of most of the people on the planet. Jameson presents her story in the form of a diary that Jon writes, so there's a you-are-there vividness to the events.

Here, for instance, is an entry from day 27 of Jon's stay in post-apocalyptic limbo. (Reading) I'm sure I heard guitar music last night. I went for a walk, which was terrifying even by candlelight, and tried to locate the room it was coming from. But I couldn't find it. Fourteen floors, almost a thousand rooms, and I didn't see or hear a single person.

Like "The Guest Book," "The Last" tells a story readers will get lost in. But it's also a story you'll be very relieved to escape from.

BIANCULLI: Maureen Corrigan teaches literature at Georgetown University. She reviewed "The Guest Book" by Sarah Blake and "The Last" by Hanna Jameson.

On Monday's FRESH AIR, why would anyone want to revisit the awkwardness of their middle school years? We talked with Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle who do just that in their Hulu series "PEN15," which they created and in which they star. Also, John and Molly Chester tell us about creating an environmentally sustainable farm, the subject of their documentary "The Biggest Little Farm." Hope you can join us.

(SOUNDBITE OF URI CAINE'S "CHORO MALUCO")

BIANCULLI: FRESH AIR's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham, with additional engineering support from Joyce Lieberman and Julian Herzfeld. Our associate producer for digital media is Molly Seavy-Nesper. Roberta Shorrock directs the show. For Terry Gross, I'm David Bianculli.

(SOUNDBITE OF URI CAINE'S "CHORO MALUCO") Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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