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    A case for replacing the Times’ op-ed section with these classic columns.

    Brittany Allen

    April 17, 2024, 12:49pm

    In a recent entry from his excellent newsletter “How Things Work,” the labor journalist Hamilton Nolan decried the state of the column, as epitomized in the op-ed section of the paper of record. In a snort-inducing takedown, Nolan argued that the kind of writing manufactured daily for a broad audience tends toward the mediocre when it is not “actively malicious.” (For example of latter, see this piece from Mother Jones connecting Pamela “Public Enemy” Paul’s recurring vitriol to anti-trans legislation.)

    Nolan makes a strong case for the structural flaws baked into the medium. On the one hand, as (sh*t-stirring, reactionary) opinion writing looms larger and largerfiguratively and literally, on the Times’ homepageit’s become easier to conflate musings with news. Which is obviously no bueno, for a free press. And on the more innocuous end, if you are not delighted by, say, Margaret Renkl’s taking empathy cues  “from the squirrels in [her] birdhouse,” it is true you will never get that time back. It is lost, forever, just like those poor, evicted birds.

    I’m pretty convinced by Nolan’s railing. But I’m also a Pollyannawith, it should be noted, a tiny horse in this race. Columns have not always been cesspools of poorly argued pablum. The form has had some diamonds, and I wonder if revisiting these might help us reimagine the column’s platonic ideal. If I had my drothers (and a time machine), I’d like to replace a good three quarters of the paper-of-record’s opinion masthead with these bygone minarets.

    Greg Tate’s “Black-Owned,” in Vibe

    The late, great Greg Tate’s column in Vibe magazine “was a staple and a megaphone,” intended to spotlight vanguard Black makers across mediums. In his regular corner, the fleet-footed Tate conducted interviews, interrogated hip hop, and wrote praise notes to his favorite artists. He had a special knack for capturingwell, vibein language. (Of  D’Angelo,’s “Voodoo,” Tate wrote, “There are times when the music on this disc sounds so raw, so naked and exposed, you’ll be tempted to throw a blanket over its brittle, shivering bones.”) I pour one out regularly for this flyboy, whose musings remain a joy to read.

    Jonas Mekas’ “Movie Journal,” in The Village Voice

    Writing in ArtForum, Amy Taubin credited the filmmaker Jonas Mekas’ column on-cinema-at-the-cinema with leading her to underground film. In his weekly report, the late polymath gushed about indie creators like Harry Smith and Andy Warhol, and wrestled with his establishment film critic peers. Taubin says of the journal entries:

    “…it is their slash-and-burn immediacy that makes them exciting. Reading them in the Voice and again today, one has the sense that Mekas is secure in the place from which he speaks, and that he says plainly what’s on his mind without fussing about the niceties of prose, damping down hyperbole, or tailoring his style to the standards of art criticism or journalism. He wrote about the liberation of movies in a voice that inspired liberation.”

    I mean, sold. Is anyone doing this today?

    “Reviewing the Reviewers,” from Spy

    The comedian Will Hines considered the late Spy “…a club for funny people too smart to be scared off by small type.” Voice-driven commentary populated this snarky rag, which was known for punching up and committing to the bit.

    In a tweet last week, author Adam Sternbergh lamented the loss of Spy‘s “Reviewing the Reviewers,” column, in which subjects got to snap back at their goofier critics. But thankfully, Internet Archive has a trove of back issues. Just to throw a rock: in the October 1986 edition, you can find such pearls from critic’s critic columnist Michèle Bennett as: “We are distressed to note that The Village Voice‘s David Edelstein is a man obsessed.” Bennett goes on to chide “the dog day sloppiness” radiating from the Times’ Book Review, right before she mocks another author for his “dangerous case of the wangdoodles.” I stand with Sternbergh.

    “Eat This,” from Sassy 

    Did you know Kim Gordon once lived on tuna tacos? And Mike D messes with carrot cake? “Eat This,” a back page column from the much beloved Sassy magazine, aspired to be “a new sort of recipe column which proves once and for all that cooking is the only difference between snails and escargot.” In a typical entry, an up and coming indie musician would share a dubious recipe and a Proustian reflection. Here’s Evan Dando’s (TM) “Morning Noonan Knight Sauce”: “Melt chocolate and water together, stirring over low heat until one solid mass of muck.”

    Innocuous enough. But even if you weren’t really gonna make “Kim’s summerific shrimp kebabs,” or Thurson Moore’s chili, this section could be surprisingly poignant (See the mother’s day-inspired ‘Pastarama a lamama!’). It was also exactly the right length, andsometimeswise. Per Christina’s potato recipe: “Mashed potatoes are a skill you’re gonna need to survive in this world. It’s a jungle out there.”

    Lynda Barry’s “Ernie’s Pook Comeek,” alt-weekly syndication

    I know, I know. This is arguably a comic strip. But somehow, ‘column’ feels a better descriptor for this strange and wonderful serial, brought to your local alt-weekly from the bright mind of Lynda Barry. Following the odd duck sisters Marlys and Maybonne, this graphic romp explored the stranger corners of childhood. Happily, you can find an excerpt right here on The Hub.

    Barry, a recognized genius, portrayed the icks and outs of coming-of-age in this singularly unflinching series. I miss narrative comics in the newspaper. Let’s start a petition to bring these back.

    To summarize: I abide the column when it’s a good distraction. I love the column when it’s a passionate, thoughtful praise noteor witty screed, as seen in Nolan’s own newsletter. Though we must keep throwing stones at the overconfident, underbrained Public Enemies wielding their pulpit power in outrageous bad faith, I pine for a media culture that still gives good whimsy. Maybe we’ll get one again, someday.

    What if Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales came out today?

    James Folta

    April 17, 2024, 11:41am

    Today is the anniversary of Geoffrey Chaucer’s first reading of  The Canterbury Tales in 1387, when he performed the epic at the court of King Richard II. It’s the perfect day to reread a tale or two, rewatch A Knight’s Tale with Paul Bettany as Chaucer, or wonder what it would be like if The Canterbury Tales came out today, instead of 600 years ago.


    Chaucer reads the first draft at King Richard II’s Court, a very hip reading series hosted by the King to showcase up-and-coming writers and jesters. Photos of the reading flood social media, as do stories of the killer afterparty.

    *

    Chaucer is interviewed in The Paris Review for The Art of the Tales No. 1. He talks about growing up as a London kid, his travels abroad, and responds to accusations that he was a “nepo-page” and was only apprenticed to a Countess because of his dad.

    *

    BookTokers become obsessed with reciting Chaucer’s spicy passages, and Prank TikTokers start “Miller’s Tale-ing” each other.

    *

    The film rights to The Canterbury Tales are sold for an enormous sum to a movie studio hoping to spin the Tales into a new Marvel Cinematic Universe. But the CTU fails to get off the ground due to bizarre choices: the CGI fight between the Summoner and the demon in “The Friar’s Tale” is widely mocked, and the insertion of a wise-cracking roommate named Dale in “The Franklin’s Tale” doesn’t make any sense. But the studio makes some money back on merch: Wife of Bath Halloween costumes are extremely popular with kids.

    *

    Chaucer’s episode of Marc Maron’s podcast is the shortest in the show’s history because he’s so allergic to Marc’s cats that they have to stop recording. Chaucer’s appearance on Smartless goes better, but he keeps getting steamrolled by Will Arnett’s riffing.

    *

    Chaucer drops in at a comedy club late at night to work out some new Tales. The crowd goes wild when he walks out, and some audience members post videos of him reciting a draft called “The Influencer’s Tale.” After this, Chaucer starts using Yondr bags to lock up audience members’ phones.

    *

    “The Cook’s Tale” and its star become the focus of a SantaCon-style pub crawl where people skip work to roam around drinking. Everyone hates bumping into the “Perkin Revellers.”

    *

    The Canterbury Tales’ book tour becomes the hot literary event, and up-and-coming writers vie for a slot opening for Chaucer. Fans post set lists online and speculate over which tales Geoffrey’s going to read in which city. The shows are always 5+ hours long.

    *

    Chaucer gets into a bunch of Twitter beefs after people start dunk-tweeting on his prose:

    “And smale foweles maken melodye,/That slepen al the nyght with open ye” ??? wtf is this bro

    I’ll say it: Ch**cer ruined the epic poem and I can’t believe people are sharing his stuff around like it’s good?

    canterbury tales? more like cant write, bury these tales

    *

    A minor lit scandal breaks out when someone discovers that Chaucer has a bunch of fake Twitter accounts he uses to yell at critics and share “You Gotta Stop Dripped Out Geoffrey Chaucer” memes.

    A new Ocean Vuong novel is coming next summer.

    James Folta

    April 16, 2024, 10:56am

    Ocean Vuong has a new novel set to be published in June 2025, as announced on Publishers Marketplace and Vuong’s Instagram.

    The Emperor of Gladness is Vuong’s second novel, and “follows a year in the life of a wayward young man in New England who, by chance, becomes the caretaker for an 82-year-old widow living with dementia, powering a story of friendship, loss, and how much we’re willing to risk to claim one of life’s most treasured mercies: a second chance.”

    Mark your calendar! And while you wait, you might read Vuong’s debut, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, as well as the 10 books that Vuong said made the book possible.

    What is the point of the author interview?

    Brittany Allen

    April 16, 2024, 10:10am

    This weekend, inspired by a rewatch of James L. Brooks’ 1987 masterpiece Broadcast News, I got to thinking about the art (and point) of the interview. Especially here, on our little island called the literary world. 

    There’s a real and historical abundance of author tête-à-têtes in these streets. On the one hand, we have The New York Times weekly “By the Book” column, in which authors with upcoming pub dates answer softballs like, “what’s on your nightstand?” Accompanied by a benevolent illustration of the subject, this Q&A typically radiates positivity. Writers extol their peers, and routinely shy away from the single sneaky question. (“Disappointing, overrated, just not good: What book did you feel you were supposed to like, and didn’t?”) 

    On the pithier side, there’s the Proust Questionnaire, a broad, biting script popularized in Graydon Carter’s Vanity Fair but based on a dinner party game Marcel himself enjoyed. With questions like, “on what occasions do you lie?” the PQ functions diagnostically; it calls to mind, for me, one of Heather’s lunchtime polls. As with “By the Book,” PQ participants are rewarded with a portrait. But the Vanity Fair house style renders subjects in modish angular lines, where the Times sends everyone off in soft pastel. This indicates a spiritual difference. If “By the Book” conjures an image of a sated, mid-career writer rereading the classics in a hammock, probably in coastal New England, then the PQ conjures a cocktail party in mid-century Manhattan. That’s you in the corner of Monkey Bar, swirling martini dregs and getting real withlet’s sayTom Wolfe. 

    On perhaps the meatiest end of the interview spectrum, The Paris Review has been publishing their trademark “Art of Fiction,” conversations since 1953.  Critics have praised the form of these somewhat Socratic dialogues. And a very small corner of the internet goes berserk whenever one of the classicslike this one, from James Baldwinis lobbed over the paywall. The “Art-of…” series can even function as a teaching tool. I’ve encountered Review chats on syllabi. 

    The proliferation and endurance of the author interview is especially curious to me given that writers are supposed to be introverts, as difficult to coax into light as Villeneuve’s Beast. (That’s a cliche, of course. But I think it’s fair to say the writer is not inherently more charismatic than any other kind of person, in an interview setting.) Why then is the form so hardy? And apparently compelling, in both canape and full meal form?

    Or, better put: What do we really want from an author interview? 

    *

    Perhaps this last is a question best explored in negative space. For I know off the dome what I don’t want: slavering. Interviews that function too openly as publicity tools can leave this reader unsatisfied and suspicious. Certain cookie cutter “By the Book” questions, for instance, strike me as useless in their generality. (“Do you like a book that engages you intellectually or emotionally?” Shocking, news at eleven, most people like both.) 

    On the flip side, I don’t want too much from an interviewer. Anyone who listens to podcasts will be familiar with the hectic, over-eager host, prone to interruption and “this is more of a comment”s. Even if it’s born of enthusiasm, if the interviewer is too loud in the mix, I’ll tap out. Who even are you, I find myself thinking. Nobody asked who you’d invite to the hypothetical dinner party, random editor. 

    This grousing would suggest I go to an author interview for an obvious-looking reason: to hear from an author in their own, specific words. But this too is unsatisfying, suspicious.

    For if their own words were all I wanted, wouldn’t I just read the author’s book?

    *

    The late Janet Malcolm spoke of the “moral problem of journalism,” and made the case that interviewing was inherently unkind. I’ve feared the truthiness of this argument as much as I’ve admired its frankness. And here’s the part where I admit that there is a measure of scrutiny-verging-on-schadenfreude that I, Brittany, take to interviews. I do not want a puff piece, with its broad and reverent inquiries re: Inspiration. In conversation, which is to say in conflict, I hope to glimpse something more of a person than they’ve elected to show me; I want what is under the words the author has already granted me (edited) access to. I want to peep the well that feeds the work.

    To this end, my favorite interviews are slightly…spicy. But contra to Malcolm, I do not think they are inherently unkind. Take Isaac Chotiner’s 2019 New Yorker interview with the (elder…) enfant terrible author, Bret Easton Ellis.

    When it was published, some people called this chat an eviscerationif a well-deserved one. But on reread I find it more exacting than antagonistic. Chotiner arrives with a clear and informed point of view. He grants Ellis multiple chances to clarify or defend his several contradictory claims. And Ellis very much hoists himself on his own petard, tossing off bullish, evasive responses. This interview is fun to read because, yes, it cuts a self-styled truth-teller down to sizebut it also functions as useful context for would-be buyers of the book. If an author can’t explain the ideas he purports to be exploring in a collection, reason runs: perhaps that collection is not well-baked enough to enter my house. 

    For a more recent example of this tough-but-fair affect, I look to The Paris Review. Last weekabouts, Sheila Heti interviewed Lauren Oyler in a gracious, lively conversation centered around the latter’s new essay collection. Much was made (in some circles) of Heti asking Oyler about her apparently unscrupulous research methods. Yet the exchange doesn’t read like a trap. As in the Chotiner/Ellis interview, the hard question is grounded in a close read of The Work, and Oyler is given ample time to answer it. One can infer what they will from her response. 

    I think the result, in both these cases, is a glimpse of The Work that is somehow clearer than the (much-circulated, sometimes unkind) reviews of the books themselves. For in their own words, we get a sense of the author’s true interests. The wells being tapped, and the wells running dry. 

    *

    Another reason I go to author interviews? Nebulous spiritual guidance. As a writer myself, I want hacks. What does this person know that I don’t yet? What can I learn from their process, or steal from their nightstands?

    I recognize something eerie in this approach, which anoints authors gurus and turns every tossed off piece of advice into a meme-able koan. But on the flip side, it can be motivating to think of writing as a spiritual enterprise. The “muse” as concept is way sexier than the daily dudgeon of moving commas around. Just as swirling martinis with the New Journalistsin my mind, anywayis a pleasant carrot to type toward. Sure, I smell something rotten in this elevation of the writing  lifestyle over the work of writing. But it’s also true that whenever writing is spun as a glamorous pursuit, it does become easier to do. (I’m sorry; I don’t make the rules.)

    Perhaps to admit as much is to admit I’ve fallen into the publicist’s trap. Which brings us back to the gist: what is the author interview for? Whether puffy or incisive, does the Q&A necessarily contribute to the rude deification of the author? Orif Malcolm is right and I’m just a jerk in denialher rude destruction?

    It’s a classic Tuesday morning double-bind.

    I’ll leave you with some positive space. Claudia Tate’s recently reissued collection, Black Women Writers at Work, contains a goldmine of deep, unflinching conversations. Featuring interviews with writers like Toni Cade Bambara, Gayl Jones, and Toni Morrison, this collection is fine reading for well-wishers and guru-seekers alike. 

    It’s nice to hear these authors explain how they “did it.” Not least because they did it so well. Makes me feel like I could, too, someday.

    Véra Nabokov! Darkly humorous sleaze! 22 new books out today.

    Gabrielle Bellot

    April 16, 2024, 5:10am

    It’s the middle of April, a time when the transcendent experience of seeing a total eclipse the previous week—if you were lucky enough to geographically and meteorologically—has, for many readers, been eclipsed by the signature rain and lightning of the month. Should the gray gloom be keeping you in with a desire to check out something new, you’re in quite the luck—I’ve got twenty-two new books to recommend below, ranging from novels and poetry collections to memoirs and provocative nonfiction.

    May your to-be-read piles grow tall and wild—and isn’t that fitting for April, too?

    *

    The Spoiled Heart - Sahota, Sunjeev

    Sunjeev Sahota, The Spoiled Heart
    (Viking)

    “In this thoughtful, searching excavation of interlocking tragedies and contemporary politics, Sunjeev Sahota offers us a novel at once Shakespearean and thrillingly of our time. The Spoiled Heart hurts to read, but in all the good way.”
    –Sarah Thankam Mathews

    Henry Henry - Bratton, Allen

    Allen Bratton, Henry Henry
    (Unnamed Press)

    “Allen Bratton’s Henry Henry brilliantly highlights the tension between history and modernity, power and freedom, and fathers and sons. A darkly humorous examination of the weight of privilege packed with drugs, dicks, Catholicism, cigarettes, and, yes, love—Henry Henry is a sharply-written party you don’t want to miss.”
    –Isaac Fitzgerald

    The Alternatives - Hughes, Caoilinn

    Caoilinn Hughes, The Alternatives
    (Riverhead)

    “I wish I knew how Caoilinn Hughes has managed to write a book of such depth and gravity that is also so gripping and relentlessly funny. A tale about sisterhood, a novel of ideas, a chronicle of our collective follies, a requiem for our agonizing species, The Alternatives unfolds in a prose full of gorgeous surprises and glows with intelligence, compassion, and beauty.”
    –Hernan Diaz

    Committed: On Meaning and Madwomen - Scanlon, Suzanne

    Suzanne Scanlon, Committed: On Meaning and Madwomen
    (Vintage)

    “Suzanne Scanlon’s memoir Committed is a lyrical and illuminating account of a young woman’s struggle with mental illness and institutionalization. Mining the metaphors endemic to the institutional setting…and making use of medical records and her own journals alongside literary depictions and descriptions of treatment, Scanlon questions the cultural conversations around women and mental illness, framing a compelling narrative of her own recovery and redemption.”
    –Natasha Trethewey

    I Cannot Control Everything Forever: A Memoir of Motherhood, Science, and Art - Bloom, Emily C.

    Emily C. Bloom, I Cannot Control Everything Forever: A Memoir of Motherhood, Science, and Art
    (St. Martin’s Press)

    “A poignant, luminous, and exquisitely crafted debut memoir. With honesty, wit, stunning prose, and a formidable intelligence, Bloom delivers profound insights into modern parenthood, illuminating its complexities through meditations on science, technology, and art. This is required reading for anyone seeking to better understand the way love generates deep and interconnected truths.”
    –Chlóe Cooper Jones

    The Secret Mind of Bertha Pappenheim: The Woman Who Invented Freud's Talking Cure - Brownstein, Gabriel

    Gabriel Brownstein, The Secret Mind of Bertha Pappenheim: The Woman Who Invented Freud’s Talking Cure
    (PublicAffairs)

    “Brownstein’s wonderful book is part intellectual history, part scientific inquiry, and reads like a detective novel. The mystery concerns Freud’s most famous patient, and the wildly satisfying twist is that our most fundamental ideas about the human mind grow out of this very case.”
    –Joe Weisberg

    Reader, I - Van Landingham, Corey

    Corey Van Landingham, Reader, I
    (Sarabande Books)

    “Corey Van Landingham makes use of all her imagination and all her lived experience to yield moments of sublimity, humor, sadness, and joy. And the real gift of this work is Van Landingham’s ability to transform the mundane into that which is sacred through a kind of plain-spokenness that makes the entire text look like magic….Reader, I is a no holds barred romp of poetry full of formal innovation and wonder.”
    –Jericho Brown

    Woke Up No Light: Poems - Mottley, Leila

    Leila Mottley, woke up no light
    (Knopf)

    woke no light is a revolution of words and worlds, readying to become. Poems centering the effect of street scriptures, gender roles, police brutality, and the humanity lost to celebritism; Mottley leaves no rock unturned and aims to set us all free.”
    –Mahogany L. Browne

    Good Grief - Pastor, Brianna

    Brianna Pastor, Good Grief
    (HarperOne)

    Good Grief is emotional, raw, and powerful. It touches on emotions that often go unnoticed and unnamed. It touches on places that usually only the silence of the night knows. This book will have you cry and feel seen in ways you didn’t even know you needed. I highly recommend you pick up a copy today.”
    –Christine Guttierez

    Thorn Tree - Ludington, Max

    Max Ludington, Thorn Tree
    (St. Martin’s Press)

    “Rife with flashes of some of my favorite books, from Dana Spiotta’s Eat the Document to Don DeLillo’s Underworld, Max Ludington has achieved something deep and lasting in Thorn Tree. This one will draw you in and keep you thinking long after you’ve read its final pages.”
    –Daniel Torday

    Crooked Seeds - Jennings, Karen

    Karen Jennings, Crooked Seeds
    (Hogarth Press)

    “The past comes back to haunt a woman whose life is deteriorating in this powerful new novel from [South African] Booker Prize-longlisted author Jennings….With evocative prose and an apocalyptic setting, Jennings brings these complicated women to life while the world around them slowly crumbles. Readers will be captivated by this compelling novel about the corrosive power of family secrets.”
    Booklist

    Negative Space - Linden, Gillian

    Gillian Linden, Negative Space
    (Norton)

    “Imagine The Bonfire of the Vanities compressed into a week of pandemic teaching, or Renata Adler casting her gimlet eye on the absurdities of motherhood. This is the best comic novel I’ve read in years.”
    –Ed Park

    Loose of Earth: A Memoir - Blackburn, Kathleen Dorothy

    Kathleen Dorothy Blackburn, Loose of Earth: A Memoir
    (University of Texas Press)

    Loose [of] Earth is an arresting memoir about love and unbending religion, toxicity and disease, and one family’s desperate wait for a miracle that never came. Blackburn has proven herself an adept essayist, making this a release you don’t want to miss.”
    Chicago Review of Books

    This Part Is Silent: A Life Between Cultures - Kim, Sj

    SJ Kim, This Part Is Silent: A Life Between Cultures
    (Norton)

    “SJ Kim’s pellucid lyricism hides a razorblade: I haven’t read a more beautiful, more raging and anguished account of racism and female erasure. It’s a book about finding a toehold in a world that would rather you slipped and fell. It’s a book about survival and unbelonging. It is necessary reading.”
    –Neel Mukherjee

    Lotus Girl: My Life at the Crossroads of Buddhism and America - Tworkov, Helen

    Helen Tworkov, Lotus Girl: My Life at the Crossroads of Buddhism and America
    (St. Martin’s Essentials)

    “Other books have told us, engagingly, of how West began to meet East in the 1960s and beyond. But none I have read cuts through every illusion and projection with the warmth, the clarity, the unflinching self-awareness of Helen Tworkov’s indispensable memoir….[T]he great gift of Lotus Girl is to share with every reader a wise, undeluded, deeply searching enquiry into mind and how we can start to transform it.”
    –Pico Iyer

    A Revolver to Carry at Night - Zgustova, Monika

    Monika Zgustova, A Revolver to Carry at Night (trans. Julie Jones)
    (Other Press)

    “A literary delight. Monika Zgustova’s A Revolver to Carry at Night gives voice to the nearly forgotten story of Véra, wife of renowned author Vladimir Nabokov. This is just the kind of novel I love—one that illuminates the significance of a strong, historical woman so that her sacrifices and victories are written and remembered.”
    –Sarah McCoy

    The Band - Ma-Kellams, Christine

    Christine Ma-Kellams, The Band
    (Atria Books)

    “Ma-Kellams takes readers on a gripping exploration of the complexities that accompany fame….This darkly humorous novel examines the more sinister aspects of celebrity and the profound impact it can have on the individuals caught up in global stardom. As K-pop has become a worldwide sensation, this timely book provides a different perspective on societal pressures associated with fame and the dangerous toll they can take on a person’s mental health.”
    Booklist

    Butter: A Novel of Food and Murder - Yuzuki, Asako

    Asako Yuzuki, Butter: A Novel of Food and Murder (trans. Polly Barton)
    (Ecco Press)

    “Exuberant, indulgent romp of a novel…Butter is a full-fat, Michelin-starred treat that moves seamlessly between an Angry Young Woman narrative and an engrossing detective drama and back again. Yuzuki has crafted an almost Dickensian cast of fleshy characters, with just as many surprise connections….Let this book bring you under its spell.”
    The Times (U.K.)

    Lies My Teacher Told Me: A Graphic Adaptation - Powell, Nate

    James W. Loewen, Nate Powell, Lies My Teacher Told Me: A Graphic Adaptation
    (New Press)

    “James Loewen’s history of our country is everything most textbooks are not: critical, idea-rich, anti-racist, class-conscious—and funny. Loewen’s irreverent storytelling comes to life in Nate Powell’s action-packed adaptation of Loewen’s classic Lies My Teacher Told Me. This volume is especially welcome at a moment when truthful history is under attack.”
    –Bill Bigelow

    The Museum of Other People: From Colonial Acquisitions to Cosmopolitan Exhibitions - Kuper, Adam

    Adam Kuper, The Museum of Other People: From Colonial Acquisitions to Cosmopolitan Exhibitions
    (Pantheon)

    “A nuanced, informative look at the history, development, and future of museums of anthropology and ethnology….This highly recommended work…challenges preconceptions and encourages readers to think critically about this complex and important issue.”
    Library Journal

    The Work of Art: How Something Comes from Nothing See more

    Adam Moss, The Work of Art: How Something Comes From Nothing
    (Penguin Press)

    “In this handsome book, [Adam Moss] interviews more than forty creators in all disciplines who ‘walk me through, in as much detail as they could muster, the evolution of a novel, a painting, a photograph, a movie, a joke, a song, and to supply physical documentation of their process’…including Stephen Sondheim, Louise Glück, Twyla Tharp, and George Saunders….The book is amply illustrated….[T]his is an inspiring work.”
    Kirkus Reviews

    Alien Earths: The New Science of Planet Hunting in the Cosmos - Kaltenegger, Lisa

    Lisa Kaltenegger, Alien Earths: The New Science of Planet Hunting in the Cosmos
    (St. Martin’s)

    “If you’ve ever wondered if we’re alone in the cosmos—and Dr. Kaltenegger is certain you have, start with Alien Earths. With her combined degrees in astronomy and engineering, she presents a primer on the geology, physics, chemistry, biology, and ultimately mathematics of places just like Earth—which she sets about seeking every (Earth) day. She’ll show you; the answer is in the sky, our window on the cosmos. Read on.”
    –Bill Nye