April 15, 2022: Volume XC, No. 8

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lives on blue Gatorade, turkey slices, saltines, and as much weed as she can scam from her clueless ex-boyfriend Thomas, all the while obsessed with the mysterious Beau Rubidoux, a photographer with a perfectly exalted chart—“placements where the sign can achieve its highest potential.” Emily insists astrology is a scam, merely generalizations designed to flatter us, and yet she still falls prey to its allure. “The thing is: I have a Gemini moon, and that allows me to hold two contradictory ideas at once,” she says. Dawn is a down-and-out Gen Xer with borderline personality disorder and a regrettable tendency to send horrible texts to ex-girlfriends and her estranged son whenever she drinks. Their paths first cross when Dawn pays Emily to read her astrology chart. Both women are living the opposite of exalted lives: lonely, broke, and self-loathing, if for somewhat different reasons. Emily lies to her friends and family so they’ll like her more; Dawn has sabotaged every relationship in her life by saying the most awful things possible. Luckily, their sharp humor and self-awareness save them from being insufferable even as they say and do terrible things. Like the planets of the zodiac, the two women orbit each other, leading to a

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toe-curlingly awkward finale that’s as funny as it is cringeworthy. Ultimately, this is a story about seeking—money, fame, fate, and most importantly, human connection; with prose as delightfully moody as its heroines, it’s cynical yet strangely uplifting. A caustic yet charming snapshot of contemporary digital life.

THE RECRUIT

Drew, Alan Random House (416 pp.) $28.00 | June 14, 2022 978-0-399-59212-6 Young neo-Nazis in Rancho Santa Elena, a quiet Southern California town, conduct a campaign of hate crimes against minorities, leading police detective Ben Wade to uncover a widespread White supremacist conspiracy. Set in 1987, this thriller focuses on Jacob, a 14-year-old boy who’s recruited into a gang of skinheads by his 20-something neighbor Ian after Ian sees him testing out homemade pipe bombs in his backyard. Ian, the son of a corrupt councilman whose eldest son was killed in Vietnam, has terrorized a Vietnamese shop owner named Bao Phan and his family by leaving a fatally poisoned, throat-slit dog by their back door. Jacob, the abused son of a traumatized Vietnam veteran, is officially inducted as a skinhead after being pressured to brutally attack Mexican migrant workers. Shocked to discover his father is having an affair with a young Vietnamese woman—Bao’s 22-yearold daughter, Linh—Jacob is overcome with rage. Meanwhile, having left the LAPD, worn down by gang wars in that city, Wade is surprised to confront an even worse form of violence in Rancho Santa Elena. In Los Angeles, there was a logic to the gang wars, which were over drugs, territory, and money. “This is just hate,” he says. “Nothing rational about it.” Though set in the past, at a time when the internet was first enabling hate groups opposed to the very existence of the federal government to link up via online bulletin boards, Drew’s sequel to Shadow Man (2017) could hardly speak more powerfully to the present moment in the United States. A terrific crime novel with an explosive climax, the book dares to find a level of empathy with its young perpetrators, connecting the dots between being frightened and “walking around in the dark” and turning to hate. A moving, grippingly relevant mystery.


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