novel, World News from Waverley High (September 2026), she is the author of three previous works of historical fiction: Tasa’s Song (2016), A Ritchie Boy (2020), and Bessie (2023). A longtime civic leader, she is the founder and owner of Gramercy Books, an independent bookstore in Central Ohio. Kass lives in Columbus with her husband, Frank; they have four children, six grandchildren, and a labradoodle named Wally.
Recently I asked the author about what she was reading. Kass's reply:
I recently picked up The Rest of Our Lives by Ben Markovitz after receiving an email invite from Al Filreis, a Faculty Director at UPenn’s Kelly Writers House, to join a small book group to discuss this novel in in the fall—I must have been on their mailing list. While I couldn’t participate, my interest to read the book, shortlisted for the 2025 Booker Prize, was piqued. This is a tender story about a middle-aged man fightingVisit Linda Kass's website.illness and marital woe who heads on a road trip, east to west. Tom Layward, a 55-year-old academic, is at a crossroads in his life. When his wife had an affair twelve years earlier, he vowed to leave her as soon as his youngest child left the nest. The story takes place at the time when daughter Miri is headed for Carnegie Mellon in Pittsburgh, and Tom and wife Amy are not on good terms. His decision to keep driving after dropping Miri off at school is an impulsive act for Tom, a man of reason. As Tom keeps driving west, he visits people from his past—an old college friend, his ex-girlfriend, his brother, his son. As he moves toward some unknown future during this extended road trip, he considers his life and his past choices with regret and irony. His thoughtful insights and observations leave you aching, and the ending surprises.
I own a bookstore and curate our author programs. So I’m always eager to attend author conversations hosted elsewhere. I was in Sag Harbor when The Church, a vibrant community arts center and exhibition space, hosted Gayle Feldman, veteranPublishers Weekly reporter and author of Nothing Random: Bennett Cerf and the Publishing House He Built, in conversation with Cathleen McGuigan, longtime cultural writer and arts editor at Newsweek. While I don’t often read biographies, rarely whopping 800+ pagers, this subject really appealed to me. Feldman’s book takes readers inside the world of the co-founder of Random House, a man who later became a celebrity on the game show, What’s My Line?. It is both a landmark cultural history and a personal detailed look at Cerf’s star-studded life when New York, Hollywood, and the literary life were at their most glamorous and privileged. Worth reading for anyone interested in American publishing in the 20th century and how Cerf, with other prominent entrepreneurs, remade the book business: what was published, and how.
My bookstore, Gramercy Books, is located in the Columbus area, in the home state of the legendary Toni Morrison. As part of a state-wide collaboration going on in Ohio thisyear, we agreed to dedicate three of our book club-formatted programs to Morrison novels. We held the second in our series featuring The Bluest Eye, her acclaimed first novel of eleven. The book is a powerful examination of our obsession with beauty and conformity that asks questions about race, class, and gender with the Novel Prize winner’s characteristic subtlety and grace. It’s the story of Pecola Breedlove—an 11- year-old Black girl in an America whose love for its blond, blue-eyed children can devastate all others. Pecola prays for her eyes to turn blue: so that she will be beautiful, so that people will look at her, so that her world will be different. Morrison delivers the nightmare at the heart of her yearning, and the tragedy of its fulfillment. There is a precision to the writing, restrained and yet charged with pain at its core. Haunting.
I’ve been in a book club that has met monthly for nearly three decades. By Any Other Name by Jodi Picoult was our most recent selection. It takes its title from a famous line in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, “A rose by any other name wouldsmell as sweet." The title leads the reader straight into a dual timeline novel split between the present and the sixteenth century, with interspersed snippets from the script of a play. In the present, a young woman, Melina Green, has written a play about her ancestress, Emilia Bassano, but Melina is unable to get her play produced because of misogyny in the theater world. The historical timeline is the story of Emilia Bassano, a real-life woman, who Picoult suggests wrote the best of Shakespeare’s plays since Emilia could not publish them under her own name. The theory that Shakespeare was a woman, as Picoult acknowledges, was first put forward by the academic Elizabeth Winkler in a 2019 essay in the Atlantic, and then in a book published last year. While the historical sections are meticulously researched and the novel has vivid depictions of Elizabethan England, the modern-day timeline doesn’t feel as compelling or have the same depth as the historical arc.
--Marshal Zeringue































