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A selection of summaries from The New York Times Book Review:

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By
JOUMANA KHATIB
, New York Times

A selection of summaries from The New York Times Book Review:

WHY BUDDHISM IS TRUE: The Science and Philosophy of Meditation and Enlightenment, by Robert Wright. (Simon & Schuster, $17.) Can Buddhism’s central tenets lead to more enlightened individuals and societies? Wright, the author of “The Moral Animal,” draws on evolutionary psychology and neuroscience to make his case, weighing the advantages of mindful meditation and how it can potentially benefit humanity.

THE END OF EDDY, by Édouard Louis. Translated by Michael Lucey. (Picador, $16.) This autobiographical novel follows a young gay boy’s coming-of-age in working-class France. Growing up in a stagnating factory town, where violence and xenophobia are endemic, Eddy was subjected to torment that was only compounded by his sexuality; ultimately, his attraction to men may have been his salvation.

CATTLE KINGDOM: The Hidden History of the Cowboy West, by Christopher Knowlton. (Mariner/Eamon Dolan/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $15.99.) Cattle ranching took off in the 1870s, with wealthy Northeast entrepreneurs lured by the promise of the West’s rewards. Knowlton picks three novices, including Teddy Roosevelt, to illustrate the industry’s boom and bust; for all the eager forecasting, the era of the cowboys lasted less than two decades.

THE AWKWARD AGE, by Francesca Segal. (Riverhead, $16.) When a widowed English piano teacher and an American obstetrician fall in love in North London, their blossoming romance faces just one hurdle: their teenage children, who can’t stand each other. As the families work to knit together, some prototypically English scenarios arise (“polite, brittle, utterly empty” conversations, for starters), adding humor to the drama. Times reviewer Hermione Hoby called this tidy novel a “spry and accomplished comedy of manners.”

THE SHOW THAT NEVER ENDS: The Rise and Fall of Prog Rock, by David Weigel. (Norton, $17.95.) Weigel delves into the genre’s history, including what it inherited from predecessors like the Beach Boys and the Beatles and its resonance today. As John Williams wrote in The Times, the book is “a new history of the genre written by an ardent, straight-faced defender who also understands what is most outlandishly entertaining about it.”

PERENNIALS, by Mandy Berman. (Random House, $17.) Camp Marigold is the backdrop for this debut novel, where teenagers navigate the perils of female adolescence: puberty, friendship and, above all, sex. At the core is the friendship between Sarah and Fiona, two girls who go on to become counselors, but the book expands to include memories from generations of campers and even Marigold’s director.

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