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It's tempting, looking at the fall's books, to think of this as a political season. Dick Cheney got it started with "In My Time: A Personal and Political Memoir," and Joe McGinnis pitched in with "The Rogue: Searching for the Real Sarah Palin." (That caused a minor tempest last year when the author moved in next door to his subject, infuriating the former Alaska governor.)
In November we'll see a different (and perhaps conflicting?) take on the George W. Bush presidency from Cheney's when former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice publishes "No Higher Honor: A Memoir of My Years in Washington." John Paul Stevens reflects on his 35 years on the Supreme Court in "Five Chiefs: A Supreme Court Memoir," due in early October; Michele Bachmann will weigh in in November with "Core of Conviction: My Story."
Still, for all that, the biggest books this fall are works of fiction — in terms of not just anticipation but size.Haruki Murakami's much-anticipated novel "1Q84," which unfolds in an alternate universe (or does it?), weighs in at 932 pages; Peter Nadas' Hungarian epic "Parallel Stories" spans 1,133.
In "Reamde," science fiction visionary Neal Stephenson takes 981 pages to spin a saga of technological intrigue and online fantasy, whileStephen King's 800-plus page "11/22/63" re-imagines the Kennedy assassination through the filter of a time traveler intent on correcting the wrongs of the past. Rounding out the epics is Chad Harbach's 500-page debut "The Art of Fielding," a baseball novel set at a small Midwestern college, revolving around the lives of five friends.
Not all the fall's fiction is so massive: National Book Award winner Denis Johnson's novella "Train Dreams" is a nuanced portrait of a day laborer in an earlier America and the quiet stoicism that becomes his code.
Don DeLillo publishes his first book of short fiction, "The Angel Esmeralda," featuring nine stories dating to the late 1970s — and so does "Winter's Bone" author Daniel Woodrell, whose "The Outlaw Album" offers 12 taut and desperate tales. Russell Banks' "Lost Memory of Skin" explores a different sort of desperation, built around a young man on probation for indiscretions with an underage girl.
"The Marriage Plot," Jeffrey Eugenides' follow-up to his Pulitzer Prize-winning "Middlesex," goes back to the 1980s, evoking college life and deconstructing love; Lydia Millet's "Ghost Lights" is a sequel to her 2008 novel "How the Dead Dream." In "Zone One," Colson Whitehead puts a literary spin on the zombie genre.
Beyond politics, perhaps the most eagerly awaited nonfiction book of fall is Joan Didion's "Blue Nights," which picks up where "The Year of Magical Thinking" left off to examine the death of her daughter Quintana and her reactions to growing older. P.J. O'Rourke revisits the territory of his 1988 best-seller "Holidays in Hell" with "Holidays in Heck"; Christopher Hitchens' "Arguably" gathers more than 100 essays on world affairs, literature and the vicissitudes of the author's mind.
In "Quite Enough of Calvin Trillin," the New Yorker contributor offers 40 years of humor writing, pretty much the same span covered by "Fear and Loathing at Rolling Stone: The Essential Writing of Hunter S. Thompson," which includes "Fear and Loathing in Elko," the gonzo journalist's 1992 takedown of Clarence Thomas, and "Strange Rumblings in Aztlan," his iconic piece on the 1970 killing of former Los Angeles Times columnist Ruben Salazar.
At his best, Thompson was not just a reporter but also a social critic, a role several authors fill this fall. In "The Ecstasy of Influence," Jonathan Lethem mixes old and new essays to frame a kaleidoscopic look at what it means to be a writer and a thinker; Lawrence Weschler does something similar with "Uncanny Valley: Adventures in the Narrative," which brings together occasional pieces, criticism and profiles.
Dubravka Ugresic's "Karaoke Culture" investigates the decentering influence of pop culture, while John Jeremiah Sullivan's "Pulphead" collects essays from GQ, the Paris Review and elsewhere to get at what Greil Marcus once called "the old, weird America," the one that never quite emerges in the history books. And speaking of the old, weird America, don't forget Julia Scheeres' "A Thousand Lives," which tells the tragic tale of Jonestown — in its way, a peculiarly American apocalypse. Scheeres wrote the 2005 memoir "Jesus Land," a brilliant look at her upbringing in a radically religious home.
David Trinidad's "Dear Prudence: New and Selected Poems" is a comprehensive look at the career of an essential poet, going back to the 1970s; Patti Smith's collection of impressionist prose pieces, "Woolgathering," originally published in 1992 by Hanuman Books, appears in a trade edition for the first time. Art Spiegelman proves you can go home again with "MetaMaus," a lavish deconstruction of his graphic novel about the Holocaust, while Matt Kish brings a related sensibility to "Moby-Dick in Pictures," in which he literally draws over Herman Melville's novel page by page.
There are two versions of "The Iliad" — a reissue of Richmond Lattimore's classic translation and a new rendering by Stephen Mitchell — as well as a two-volume set of nine novels of the Harlem Renaissance (including Wallace Thurman's "The Blacker the Berry," Jean Toomer's "Cane" and Langston Hughes' "Not Without Laughter") from the Library of America.
And let's finish up with "The Annotated Peter Pan," edited by Harvard professor Maria Tatar, in which the boy who never grew up finds himself redefined for a new generation: the very mission of a living literature, political or otherwise.