New from Melville House: Good on Paper by Rachel Cantor.
About the book, from the publisher:
The highly anticipated second novel from a writer Emily St. John Mandel calls “sharp, witty, and immensely entertaining”Visit Rachel Cantor's website.
Is a new life possible? Because Shira Greene’s life hasn’t quite turned out as planned. Shira is a permanent temp with a few short stories published in minor literary magazines and a PhD on Dante’s Vita Nuova that she abandoned halfway.
Her life has some happy certainties, though: she lives with her friend Ahmad, and her daughter, Andi, on the Upper West Side. They’re an unconventional family, but a real one, with Friday night dinner rituals, private jokes, and the shared joys and strains of any other family.
So when she gets the call from Romei, the winner of last year’s Nobel Prize and the irascible idol of grad students everywhere, and he tells her he wants her to translate his new book, Shira is happy . . . but stunned. Suddenly, Shira sees a new life beckoning: academic glory, a career as a literary translator, and even love (with a part-time rabbi and owner of the neighborhood indie bookstore). That is, until Romei starts sending her pages of the manuscript and she realizes that something odd is going on: his book may in fact be untranslatable.
A deft, funny, and big-hearted novel about second chances, Good on Paper is a grand novel of family, friendship, and possibility.
See Cantor's list of the ten worst jobs in books.
The Page 69 Test: A Highly Unlikely Scenario.
--Marshal Zeringue