Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple
Little, Brown and Company, 2012
borrowed from the library

This book is a lot of things. It's hilarious, for starters. Bernadette can be off-putting at times, but mostly she had me in stitches. She's surrounded by snotty, wealthy soccer moms, and she can't stand a bit of their crap. Bee is equally entertaining, as she's wise beyond her years and has picked up many of her mother's tendencies to swim against the current. However, the novel also touches on many more serious themes of mental illness, work-family balance, and marital issues...even as it keeps its sense of humor.
The conclusion is fitting without being explosive, and I was left enamored with Bee and Bernadette as a mother-daughter team. Where'd You Go, Bernadette is nothing that I expected, while still somehow being everything that I wanted...that is probably the corniest thing I've ever written, but that makes it no less true.
Incendiary by Chris Cleave
Knopf, 2005
personal purchase
Fact: Chris Cleave is one of my favorite authors. Most people know him from Little Bee, but I honestly loved his 2012 release Gold even more. I bought Incendiary, his debut novel, quite a while ago and finally jumped into it this month. I am so glad that I did!

This is a short novel with an awful lot to say. Cleave's novel was originally released on what, sadly, was also the same day as the London tube attacks in 2005, making this book especially relevant at the time. However, as we continue to face terror threats around the globe, I think this makes for fascinating reading. Incendiary forces you to think more deeply about these problems, beyond threat levels and travel advisories and removing your shoes at the airport. It's quite a bit different from Little Bee, but I think will give you just as much to discuss when you're done.