fbpx

Book novelties for autumn 2019: books that you can read in one sitting

Book novelties for autumn 2019 are coming, and probably the most beautiful addition you can think of at this time of year is a quality read that won't let you rest for one reason or another - such works are not easy to find, so we have compiled a carefully selected set of book novelties for autumn 2019, which you can devote your time to without a bad conscience.

The summer reading season is upon us he slowly concludes, you will put lighter reading in the basement, book novelties for autumn 2019 but they are just waiting to occupy the empty space on your shelves.
According to data from some online book stores, they were in Slovenia this summer (Felix) among others best selling books of 2019 The art of racing in the rain and The Girl Who Lived Twice (both of which got their own movie versions that are well worth watching).

Tonight, make yourself some cocoa or hot tea, hug a light blanket and let yourself go incredible stories, that you have in stock until you order new books from the list book novelties for autumn 2019, which impressed us the most in the editorial office.

Book novelties for autumn 2019:

Stephen King,
The Institute

Genre: horror movie
Expected outcome: September 10

The Institute, Stephen King
The Institute,
Stephen King

This year, the legendary Stephen King experienced another film adaptation of his novel, namely Cat cemetery, which is all horror fans scared to death. He remained true to himself and to what is most important to him, so he will surprise all fans of his reading with a new horror The Institute.

Luke Ellis is a 12-year-old boy living in Minnesota. After his parents they kidnap and them they kill, the boy is taken to a mysterious institution (The Institute), in which children with strong abilities, such as telepathy and telekinesis—they all arrived the same way he did. Although Luke is comforted by the presence of other children, he wants out, a no one has yet managed to escape, as the punishments are severe and the captive population is constantly growing.

Margaret Atwood,
The Testaments

Genre: dystopian fiction
Expected outcome: September 10

Margaret Atwood The Testaments
Margaret Atwood
The Testaments

The last time readers see Offred, a woman forced into reproductive slavery, her fate was completely unknown. 15 years later, Margaret Atwood will finally reveal what happened to the iconic characters first introduced in the world famous dystopia A girl's story from 1985.

The writer promises that readers will finally find out what the real her is the fate of the women of Gilead.

Edward Snowden
Permanent Record

Genre: biography
Expected outcome: September 17

Permanent Record, Edward Snowden
Permanent Record,
Edward Snowden

In 2016, Oscar winner Oliver Stone is in the biographical thriller Snowden explored the intimate background of events and decisions, which made Snowden a notorious whistleblower and a hero in the fight for the right to privacy, while as national enemy number one was looking for a safe haven far away from her homeland and loved ones. Now we will get the answers first hand!

In 2013, at the age of 29, he revealed the US government's plan for mass surveillance, now in his biography he shares with readers the answers to the questions, what brought him to it. It also includes in the story memories to childhood in Maryland and working at the NSA.

Ta-Nehisi Coates,
The Water Dancer

Genre: fantasy
Expected outcome: September 24

The Water Dancer, by Ta-Nehisi Coates
The Water Dancer,
This- Nehisi Coates

Ta-Nehisi Coates surprised the world already in 2015 with a book Between the World and Me, in which he writes letters to his son and explains to him, what it's like to be a black person in the US. A year later, he published the book Black Panther, which also got its film version. In 2019, he is also dealing with the same issue.

In the book he discovers dark racist and slave-owning history through the eyes of the boy Hiram, a young slave who, with the help of the mysterious superpowers he possesses, escapes from the plantation on his way to freedom drowned and sees the image of his mother, from whom he was separated as a small boy.

Elizabeth Strout,
Olive, Again

Genre: saga
Expected outcome: October 2019

Olive Again by Elizabeth Strout
Olive Again,
Elizabeth Strout

Elizabeth Strout is an author who always hits the mark with her books. She achieved her greatest success with a book Olive Kitteridge, for which she received the Pulitzer Prize in 2008. A decade later, the bestseller will get its due sad, a at the same time a playful sequel.

Olive not only struggles to understand her life, but also the life of the people around. She has a new man, a Harvard professor she met at the end of the first book, she's about to give birth (at an extremely inopportune moment), she's fighting lawyers and an inheritance she doesn't want to accept… but still insists and inspires the reader to the last page in the book.

Malcolm Gladwell,
Talking to Strangers: What We Should Know about the People We Don't Know

Genre: a self-help manual
Cautious outcome: September 10

Malcom Gladwell, Talking to Strangers: What We Should Know about the People We Don't Know
Malcolm Gladwell,
Talking to Strangers: What We Should Know about the People We Don't Know

In July 2015, a black girl named Sandra Bland is pulled over for a minor traffic violation in rural Texas. A few minutes later, she is arrested and imprisoned. Three days later he commits suicide in his cell. Where did it break? Book Talking to Strangers focuses on what happens when we encounter people we don't know, why we look away from them, and what that says about us.

Through a series of puzzles, encounters and misunderstandings, from little-known stories to infamous cases - Gladwell takes us with the book to the path of the unexpected.

Eva Mahkovic
Mastercard suffers the most on such a day

Genre: Notes, short prose
Expected outcome: autumn 2019

Eva Mahkovič, MasterCard suffers the most on such a day
Eva Mahkovič, MasterCard suffers the most on such a day

On such a day, Mastercard suffers the most from Eva Mahkovic's records, which were on Facebook as statuses published between December 2016 and April 2019. The texts, which were originally intended for a limited group of readers, the author's Facebook friends, reflect the urban life of a working woman from Ljubljana, around thirty years old: these are lists of everyday events, overheard and recorded situations of modern Ljubljana, comments on current social events, intimate confessions, and the combination of these records is eventually compiled into a kind of diary form, a calendar, as the records are distinctly placed in space and time.

The texts are hybrids in form and genre, moving between prose and poetry, but they are really neither; given that they were created in the medium of a social network, they gradually form their own literary genre with its own rules and specific language, which through the contained visual signs (emojis), traces of interactivity and other elements indicate the medium in which they were created.

Other book novelties for autumn 2019:

  • Mary HK Choi, Permanent Record (September 3)
  • Dana Thomas, Fashionopolis: The Price of Fast Fashion and the Future of Clothes (September 3)
  • Ann Patchett, The Dutch House (September 24)
  • Ali Wong, Dear Girls: Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets & Advice for Living Your Best Life (October 15)

With you since 2004

From 2004 we research urban trends and inform our community of followers daily about the latest in lifestyle, travel, style and products that inspire with passion. From 2023, we offer content in major global languages.