Yesterday we offered up the Guardian's list of summer reads; today we've got the Voice's take on what the well-dressed beach bag is carrying ...
THE BODY OF JONAH BOYD By David Leavitt Bloomsbury, 215 pp., $23.95Leavitt's latest isn't a murder mystery, as its anagrammatic title suggests, but it holds plenty of secrets. At its center, aptly, is a secretary, who insinuates herself into the lives of her boss/lover and his family. Leavitt combines some of his familiar characters and themes—the domineering, dying mother; the sensitive prodigy who grows up to be a mediocre talent; the artist who takes credit for another's work—to create an irresistible book unlike any he's written before. Its biggest secrets remain unrevealed, but here's one: Leavitt lifted the two implausible devices that set the plot in motion—the faculty housing that can be owned but not inherited, the writer who never makes copies of his work in progress—from his own stranger-than-fiction life. J.M.
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