Purchase a copy for yourself here! “Every life has its kernel, its hub, its epicentre, from which everything flows out, to which everything returns. This moment is the absent mother’s: the boy, the empty house, the deserted yard, the unheard cry … It will lie at her very core, for the rest of her life”,… Continue reading Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell
Tag: bookblog
Nine Shiny Objects by Brian Castleberry
Purchase a copy for yourself here! On June 24, 1947, private pilot Kenneth Arnold reported seeing a string of nine unidentified flying objects in the Mount Rainier area, a story that would spark national news coverage and mark the first modern UFO sighting post-WWII. The story catalyzed an international obsession with UFOs and extraterrestrial life,… Continue reading Nine Shiny Objects by Brian Castleberry
Lot by Bryan Washington
Purchase a copy for yourself here! “Houston is molting. The city sheds all over the concrete”, writes Bryan Washington in his award-winning story collection, Lot, an exploration of one of America’s most fascinating metropolises and the characters that inhabit it. Around half of the stories in the collection are told from the perspective of Nicolás,… Continue reading Lot by Bryan Washington
Real Life by Brandon Taylor
Purchase a copy for yourself here! With his recent debut, Real Life, Brandon Taylor has reinvigorated the concept of the campus novel. The novel’s protagonist is Wallace, a grad student biochemistry researcher at a midwestern university, one which has not admitted a black student into its lab in over three decades. Wallace, a gay black… Continue reading Real Life by Brandon Taylor
Rodham by Curtis Sittenfeld
Purchase a copy for yourself here! In her 2003 memoir, Living History, Hillary Rodham Clinton recalls the moment that Bill Clinton proposed marriage to her: “I knew that when I decided to marry, I wanted it to be for life. … I thought of him as a force of nature and wondered whether I’d be… Continue reading Rodham by Curtis Sittenfeld
The Nonfiction Edit
Diclaimer: This list is not any sort of authoritative list of the best nonfiction reads of all time. This is simply a collection of ten diverse reads, which offer excellent reportage, compelling prose, and unique approaches to educating readers. On this list you’ll find some excellent antiracist reads, urgent #MeToo stories, fascinating books that explore… Continue reading The Nonfiction Edit
Recollections of My Nonexistence by Rebecca Solnit
Purchase a copy for yourself here! Recollections of My Nonexistence begins as a meditation on place—specifically the small but elegant apartment that Solnit moved into in her early 20s, where she began the academic and artistic research that would come to define her work in the following decades. Solnit was a resident of a mostly… Continue reading Recollections of My Nonexistence by Rebecca Solnit
The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett
Purchase a copy for yourself here! Britt Bennett’s recent novel, The Vanishing Half, deals in multiplicative identities. The Vanishing Half is Bennett’s follow up to her debut novel, The Mothers (Read my review here), which similarly dwells on how explosive secrets can tear families and communities asunder. The novel begins with sixteen-year old twins, Desiree… Continue reading The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett
A Burning by Megha Majumdar
Purchase a copy for yourself here! A Burning begins not only with a burning—a train car lit on fire in a terrorist attack that kills 100 patrons—but with a Facebook post. Jivan, a young Muslim woman living in the Kolabagan slum in Bangladesh, witnessed the terrorist attack and expresses her outrage on social media, posting… Continue reading A Burning by Megha Majumdar
The Memoir Edit
Disclaimer: This is not meant to be any sort of authoritative list of the ten best memoirs ever, but rather an edit of ten memoirs that I feel embody the best of the genre. I wanted to capture the diversity of the memoir space, and thus I’ve included lighthearted celebrity memoirs, deeply moving activist memoirs,… Continue reading The Memoir Edit