A Novel About Coming of Age Amid the Troubles In Anna Burns’s “Milkman,” political terror and sexual surveillance compound the claustrophobia of adolescence. Briefly Noted Book Reviews “Invisible,” “Between Two Millstones,” “Ultraviolet,” and “Frail Sister.” Briefly Noted Book Reviews “Unsheltered,” “Scribe,” “Palaces for the People,” and “Schumann.” Hermann Hesse’s Arrested Development The stories Hesse tells appeal to young people, because they keep faith with the powerful emotions of adolescence, which most adults forget or outgrow. Briefly Noted Book Reviews “In the House in the Dark of the Woods,” “The Golden State,” “An American Odyssey,” and “I Should Have Honor.” How Anthony Powell Wrote His Twelve-Volume Masterpiece Four decades after its completion, “A Dance to the Music of Time” endures as a classic, with a devoted following of readers who love it—or love to hate it. Briefly Noted Book Reviews “Then They Came for Me,” “The Poison Squad,” “Sleep of Memory,” and “The Caregiver.” Briefly Noted Book Reviews “The Witch Elm,” “Eleanor, or, The Rejection of the Progress of Love,” “City of Light,” and “The Man Who Walked Backward.” Sylvia Plath’s Last Letters A new volume of her correspondence is suffused with a sense of foreboding—portents of the looming tragedy that has come to define the poet’s legacy. Briefly Noted Book Reviews “All You Can Ever Know,” “Hiking with Nietzsche,” “One Part Woman,” and ”Desirable Body.”