Cover of A Whale Hunt

A Whale Hunt

How a Native-American Village Did What No One Thought It Could

Robert Sullivan

Book Info

Publisher
Simon and Schuster (2000), 294 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780684864341
Publisher Description

With the gray whale off the endangered list, the Makah Indians decide to resurrect the skills of their ancestors and return to the hunt amidst tribal infighting and animal rights activists. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Also on these shelves

Thoughts on A Whale Hunt

One day a couple of months ago, Robert Sullivan stood at the counter of the bookstore wearing the expression of a man who was trying to remember the title of a book that was just escaping him. We get that a lot.

In fact he was trying to sort out what was different and what was the same about the bookstore since the time when he wrote A Whale Hunt, when he lived for long stretches on the Olympic Peninsula over the course of two years, sometimes in a tent, sometimes in a structure he describes as a "shanty", ocassionally in a motel. This is now fully two decades ago, so the mental effort of putting it all back together is entirely understandable.

I'd seen the book in "Outdoor" section, but I didn't realize how much detail about the Neah Bay, the lives of the personnages of the famous whale hunt, and about the Makah tribe itself the book contained. I found it absolutely fascinating.

I loved the nuanced and contextualized perspective on the events that resulted in Sullivan embedding himself in the place while the slow-to-occur whale hunt takes place. He's generous and honest. He's also a bit of an odd duck. There's an essay about Moby Dick spread out in the footnotes of the book. It's literally the only thing he uses footnotes for. It's supurfluous and a gag.

Cover of Again and Again

Again and Again

A Novel

Jonathan Evison

Book Info

Publisher
Penguin (2023), 337 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780593184158
Publisher Description

From one of America’s greatest, most creative novelists comes Again and Again, a poignant and endlessly surprising story about love lost, found, and redeemed Eugene “Geno” Miles is living out his final days in a nursing home, bored, curmudgeonly, and struggling to connect with his new nursing assistant, Angel, who is understandably skeptical of Geno’s insistence on having lived not just one life but many—all the way back to medieval Spain, where, as a petty thief, he first lucked upon true love only to lose it, and spend the next thousand years trying to recapture it. Who is Geno? A lonely old man clinging to his delusions and rehearsing his fantasies, or a legitimate anomaly, a thousand-year-old man who continues to search for the love he lost so long ago? As Angel comes to learn the truth about Geno, so, too, does the reader, and as his miraculous story comes to a head, so does the biggest truth of all: that love—timeless, often elusive—is sometimes right in front of us. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Tremor

Tremor

A Novel

Teju Cole

Book Info

Publisher
Random House (2023), 257 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780812997118
Publisher Description

An “extraordinary, ambitious” (The Times UK) novel that masterfully explores what constitutes a meaningful life in a violent world—from the award-winning author of Open City New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice • “Cole’s mind is so agile that it’s easy to follow him anywhere.”—The New Yorker A PUBLISHERS WEEKLY BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR Life is hopeless but it is not serious. We have to have danced while we could and, later, to have danced again in the telling. A weekend spent antiquing is shadowed by the colonial atrocities that occurred on that land. A walk at dusk is interrupted by casual racism. A loving marriage is riven by mysterious tensions. And a remarkable cascade of voices speaks out from a pulsing metropolis. We’re invited to experience these events and others through the eyes and ears of Tunde, a West African man working as a teacher of photography on a renowned New England campus. He is a reader, a listener, a traveler, drawn to many different kinds of stories: stories from history and epic; stories of friends, family, and strangers; stories found in books and films. Together these stories make up his days. In aggregate these days comprise a life. Tremor is a startling work of realism and invention that engages brilliantly with literature, music, race, and history as it examines the passage of time and how we mark it. It is a reckoning with human survival amidst “history’s own brutality, which refuses symmetries and seldom consoles,” but it is also a testament to the possibility of joy. As he did in his magnificent debut Open City, Teju Cole once again offers narration with all its senses alert, a surprising and deeply essential work from a beacon of contemporary literature. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Tremor

I cannot believe it has been over a decade since I found my way to Teju Cole's Open City. I can't recall how I found it, only that it knocked my socks off and set me off annoying everybody to read it. "Guy walks around urban landscape and thinks about stuff" was, admittedly, in the wheelhouse of my wheelhouse, and Cole's cool, literate spin on that was catnip. As Ryu Speth puts it over at Vulture:

This sort of plotless, discursive writing, in which a swirl of associations and memories and ideas are held together by the centripetal force of an impeccably educated flaneur, is exceedingly difficult to pull off without sounding like a colossal bore — and Cole did pull it off, with great lyricism and sensitivity, his sentences strolling majestically through Julius’s neighborhood in Morningside Heights.

I just loved it.

And then I cold water was thrown on me when someone I respected (a writer of very, very good fiction of great intricacy and volume, published by a major publisher) chastised my friend and I for "falling for" Cole's schtick. I recall him dismissing it as pure self-congratulatory intellectual masturbation, and I think I felt stung because I could feel some truth in that.

Tremor, Cole's first novel since then, shows just how right we both were.

The protagonist of this multilayered novel is, like Cole, a Nigerian-born Harvard professor, photographer, and critic, but the strands of this novel incorporate different voices and perspectives to explore a wider world than the New York of Open City. There is a focus on the uses and abuses of art in our individual and collective cultural imagination, but the range of subject matter here is extraordinary: music, art, friendship, literature, geography, history, grief.

Yeah, the ghost of Sebald is here. SFJ says people compare Cole to W.G. Sebald "in the same way that any thrash band will be formally indebted to Slayer and Metallica." I think that understates the superficiality of the comparison. Sebald's plundering and erasure of his source material is exactly the sort of artistic appropriation he is shining a light on, even in himself.

Cole shows extraordinary attention to the world but can also keep the limits and qualities of his own attention within the frame without breaking the spell. And with discernment of a photographer accustomed to leaving nearly all the negatives unprinted, and almost all the prints out of the exhibition, he says just enough to hit his mark.

Cover of Seven Empty Houses

Seven Empty Houses

Samanta Schweblin

Book Info

Publisher
Penguin (2023), 209 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780525541400
Publisher Description

Winner of the 2022 National Book Award for Translated Literature A blazing new story collection that will make you feel like the house is collapsing in on you, from the 3 time International Booker Prize finalist, "lead[ing] a vanguard of Latin American writers forging their own 21st-century canon.” –O, the Oprah magazine The seven houses in these seven stories are strange. A person is missing, or a truth, or memory; some rooms are enticing, some unmoored, others empty. But in Samanta Schweblin's tense, visionary tales, something always creeps back inside: a ghost, a fight, trespassers, a list of things to do before you die, a child's first encounter with darkness or the fallibility of parents. In each story, twists and turns will unnerve and surprise: Schweblin never takes the expected path and instead digs under the skin, revealing surreal truths about our sense of home, of belonging, and of the fragility of our connections with others. This is a masterwork from one of our most brilliant modern writers. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Seven Empty Houses

Reading the first page of Seven Empty Houses felt like having the bus driver flooring it to 60 mph the moment you step through the door. Dangerous, yes. Disorienting, yes. Disturbing, probably. But not boring.

I didn't know that the paperback edition of the latest from of absolutely savage storytelling from Samanta Schweblin was hitting the shelves until I held it in my hand. Straight into the backpack it went. Translated by Megan McDowell, whose treatment of Our Share of Night by Mariana Enriquez this year has still been haunting my dreams.

Cover of The Heart of a Peacock

The Heart of a Peacock

Emily Carr and Ira Dilworth

Book Info

Publisher
Douglas & McIntyre Limited (2005), 242 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781553650843
Publisher Description

A collection of 51 short stories by the legendary writer and painter Emily Carr, arranged in themes such as her experiences with Native people, her adventures with various beloved creatures and her love of nature. Together, they underline Carr's place as a writer with the sharp yet tender eye of an artist, with a deep feeling for the tragedies of life and with a rich sense of the comic. The book is enhanced by seven of Carr's line drawings of scenes from nature. The Heart of a Peacock is the fourth of the seven books by Emily Carr to be published by Douglas & McIntyre in a completely redesigned edition, each with an introduction by a noted Canadian writer or an authority on Emily Carr and her work. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Desert Solitaire

Desert Solitaire

Edward Abbey

Book Info

Publisher
Simon and Schuster (1990), 294 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780671695880
Publisher Description

An account of the author's experiences, observations, and reflections as a seasonal park ranger in southeast Utah. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of The Morning Star

The Morning Star

A Novel

Karl Ove Knausgaard

Book Info

Publisher
Penguin (2022)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780399563447
Publisher Description

A New York Times Notable Book One of NPR's Best Books of 2021 "Knausgaard is among the finest writers alive.” —Dwight Garner, New York Times The international bestseller from the author of the renowned My Struggle series, The Morning Star is an astonishing, ambitious, and rich novel about what we don't understand, and our attempts to make sense of our world nonetheless One long night in August, Arne and Tove are staying with their children in their summer house in southern Norway. Their friend Egil has his own place nearby. Kathrine, a priest, is flying home from a Bible seminar, questioning her marriage. Journalist Jostein is out drinking for the night, while his wife, Turid, a nurse at a psychiatric care unit, is on a night shift when one of her patients escapes. Above them all, a huge star suddenly appears blazing in the sky. It brings with it a mysterious sense of foreboding. Strange things start to happen as nine lives come together under the star. Hundreds of crabs amass on the road as Arne drives at night; Jostein receives a call about a death metal band found brutally murdered in a Satanic ritual; Kathrine conducts a funeral service for a man she met at the airport – but is he actually dead? The Morning Star is about life in all its mundanity and drama, the strangeness that permeates our world, and the darkness in us all. Karl Ove Knausgaard’s astonishing new novel, his first after the My Struggle cycle, goes to the utmost limits of freedom and chaos, to what happens when forces beyond our comprehension are unleashed and the realms of the living and the dead collide. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Trust

Trust

Hernan Diaz

Book Info

Publisher
Penguin (2023), 417 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780593420324
Publisher Description

WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR FICTION A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER ONE OF THE NEW YORK TIMES TOP TEN BOOKS OF 2022 ONE OF BARACK OBAMA'S FAVORITE BOOKS OF 2022 LONGLISTED FOR THE 2022 BOOKER PRIZE “Buzzy and enthralling …A glorious novel about empires and erasures, husbands and wives, staggering fortunes and unspeakable misery…Fun as hell to read.” —Oprah Daily "A genre-bending, time-skipping story about New York City’s elite in the roaring ’20s and Great Depression."—Vanity Fair “A riveting story of class, capitalism, and greed.” —Esquire "Exhilarating.” —New York Times Even through the roar and effervescence of the 1920s, everyone in New York has heard of Benjamin and Helen Rask. He is a legendary Wall Street tycoon; she is the daughter of eccentric aristocrats. Together, they have risen to the very top of a world of seemingly endless wealth—all as a decade of excess and speculation draws to an end. But at what cost have they acquired their immense fortune? This is the mystery at the center of Bonds, a successful 1937 novel that all of New York seems to have read. Yet there are other versions of this tale of privilege and deceit. Hernan Diaz’s TRUST elegantly puts these competing narratives into conversation with one another—and in tension with the perspective of one woman bent on disentangling fact from fiction. The result is a novel that spans over a century and becomes more exhilarating with each new revelation. At once an immersive story and a brilliant literary puzzle, TRUST engages the reader in a quest for the truth while confronting the deceptions that often live at the heart of personal relationships, the reality-warping force of capital, and the ease with which power can manipulate facts. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Owned
Cover of A Field Companion for Wandering

A Field Companion for Wandering

Conner Bouchard-Roberts

Book Info

Publisher
Winter Texts (2022), 160 pages
Publisher Description

Compact. Contemplative. Mobile. Elliptical. One one hand, this is my Anti-Lonely-Planet manifesto. Working to critique forms of commercial and colonial travel that have taken over our imaginations of the world. On the other hand, this is the best I can do in crafting a sincere text that is meant to be read while travelling. A text that inspires contact with strangers, that changes meaning based on where/when you read it, that never offers answers, and most simply is a companion to the loneliness and fear one encounters when out in the world. I designed it to be read from any page. Containing many routes that offer different experiences. Gathered loosely into the 4 sections of any journey: Almost Gone, Gone, Long Gone, and Back. Each section lingers in a sense of that experience. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Owned
Read
Also on these shelves
Cover of The Analog Sea Review

The Analog Sea Review

Number 4

Book Info

ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781732251991
Publisher Description

undefined (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of How to Protect Bookstores and Why

How to Protect Bookstores and Why

The Present and Future of Bookselling

Danny Caine

Book Info

Publisher
Microcosm Publishing (2023)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781648411632
Publisher Description

undefined (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Desert Notes and River Notes

Desert Notes and River Notes

Stories

Barry Lopez

Book Info

Publisher
Open Road Media Books (2021)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781504068901
Publisher Description

Two volumes of fiction from the National Book Award-winning author of Arctic Dreams: "Lopez feels a deep spiritual connection to the natural world." --San Francisco Chronicle To National Book Award-winning author Barry Lopez, the desert and the river are landscapes alive with poetry, mystery, seduction, and enchantment. In these two works of fiction, the narrator responds viscerally and emotionally to their moods and changes, their secrets and silences, and their unique power. Desert Notes portrays the mystical power of an American desert, and the reflections it sparks in the characters who travel there. River Notes, a companion piece, celebrates the wild life forces of a river, calling readers to think deeply on identity and about the hopefulness of their onward journeys, with a lyrical collection of memories, stories, and dreams. From an evocative tale of finding a hot spring in a desert to a meditation on the thoughts and dreams of herons, Lopez offers enthralling stories that enable us to see and feel the rhythms of the wilderness. These sojourns bring readers a specific sense of the darkness, light, and resolve that we encounter within ourselves when away from home. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of In the Distance

In the Distance

Hernán Díaz

Book Info

ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781566894883
Publisher Description

A young Swedish boy, separated from his brother, becomes a man; the man, despite himself, becomes a legend and outlaw. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Scorched Earth

Scorched Earth

Beyond the Digital Age to a Post-Capitalist World

Jonathan Crary

Book Info

Publisher
Verso Books (2022), 145 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781784784447
Publisher Description

Refusing the digital world of late capitalism In this uncompromising essay, Jonathan Crary presents the obvious but unsayable reality: our “digital age” is synonymous with the disastrous terminal stage of global capitalism and its financialisation of social existence, mass impoverishment, ecocide, and military terror. Scorched Earth surveys the wrecking of a living world by the internet complex and its devastation of communities and their capacities for mutual support. This polemic by the author of 24/7 dismantles the presumption that social media could be an instrument of radical change and contends that the networks and platforms of transnational corporations are intrinsically incompatible with a habitable earth or with the human interdependence needed to build egalitarian post-capitalist forms of life. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Tawny Grammar

Tawny Grammar

Essays

Gary Snyder

Book Info

Publisher
National Geographic Books (2019)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781640091757
Publisher Description

Two beautifully paired essays, “Tawny Grammar” and “Good, Wild, Sacred," serve to offer an autobiographical framework for Gary Snyder's long work as a poet, environmentalist, and a leader of the Buddhist community in North America. He begins standing outside a community hall in Portland, Oregon, in 1943 and concludes as a homesteader in the backcountry of Northern California more than forty–five years later. A wonderful introduction to Gary Snyder, this will also serve to remind his faithful readers of the thrill of his insights and his commitments crucial to our future on Turtle Island. Each palm–size book in the Counterpoints series is meant to stay with you, whether safely in your pocket or long after you turn the last page. From short stories to essays to poems, these little books celebrate our most–beloved writers, whose work encapsulates the spirit of Counterpoint Press: cutting–edge, wide–ranging, and independent. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Users

Users

A Novel

Colin Winnette

Book Info

Publisher
National Geographic Books (2023)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781593767372
Publisher Description

Marrying the philosophical absurdities of life, technology, start-up culture, and family, Users is for readers of Kevin Nguyen’s New Waves, Dave Eggers’s The Circle, and viewers of the hit Apple TV+ original series Severance Miles, a lead creative at a midsize virtual reality company known for its “original experiences,” has engineered a new product called The Ghost Lover. Wildly popular from the outset, the “game” is simple: a user’s simulated life is almost identical to their reality, except they’re haunted by the ghost of an ex-lover. However, when a shift in the company's strategic vision puts The Ghost Lover at the center of a platform-wide controversy, Miles becomes the target of user outrage, and starts receiving a series of anonymous death threats. Typed notes sealed in envelopes with no postage or return address, these persistent threats push Miles into a paranoid panic, blurring his own sense of reality, catalyzing the collapse of his career, his marriage, and his relationship with his children. The once-promising road to success becomes a narrow set of choices for Miles, who, in a last ditch effort to save his job, pitches his masterpiece, a revolutionary device code-named the Egg, which will transform the company. The consequences for Miles seal him inside the walls of his life as what was once anxiety explodes into devastating absoluteness. In a world rife with the unchecked power and ambition of tech, Users investigates—with both humor and creeping dread—how interpersonal experiences and private decisions influence the hasty developments that have the power to permanently alter the landscape of human experience. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Cascadia Field Guide

Cascadia Field Guide

Art, Ecology, Poetry

Cmarie Fuhrman, Elizabeth Bradfield, and Derek Sheffield

Book Info

ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781680516227
Publisher Description

"A literary field guide of art, poetry, and natural history for 128 of the Beings that live in the thirteen biogregions that make up Cascadia, a region that ranges from southeast Alaska to northern California and from the Pacific coast to the Continental Divide"-- (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of In Praise of Good Bookstores

In Praise of Good Bookstores

Jeff Deutsch

Book Info

Publisher
Princeton University Press (2022), 216 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780691207766
Publisher Description

"Books, even obscure ones, are readily available online in the age of digital retail. As bookstores attempt to find their identity in a new era, some have survived by selling everything from toys to socks, coffee to stationery. In this short book, Jeff Deutsch, the director of the Seminary Co-op Bookstores in Chicago, aims to make the case for the value of spaces devoted to books and the value of the time spent browsing their stacks. It is a defense of serious bookstores, but more importantly it is a paean to the spaces that support them; the experience of readers as they engage with the books, the stacks, and each other; and the particular community created by the presence of such an institution. Drawing on his lifelong experience as a bookseller and his particular experience at Sem Co-op, Deutsch aims, in a series of brief essays, to consider how concepts like space, time, abundance, measure, community, and reverence find expression in a good bookstore, and to show some ways in which the importance of the bookstore is both urgent and enduring"-- (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of A Darker Wilderness

A Darker Wilderness

Black Nature Writing from Soil to Stars

Erin Sharkey

Book Info

ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781571313904
Publisher Description

A vibrant collection of personal and lyric essays in conversation with archival objects of Black history and memory. What are the politics of nature? Who owns it, where is it, what role does it play in our lives? Does it need to be tamed? Are we ourselves natural? In A Darker Wilderness, a constellation of luminary writers reflect on the significance of nature in their lived experience and on the role of nature in the lives of Black folks in the United States. Each of these essays engages with a single archival object, whether directly or obliquely, exploring stories spanning hundreds of years and thousands of miles, traveling from roots to space and finding rich Blackness everywhere. Erin Sharkey considers Benjamin Banneker's 1795 almanac, as she follows the passing of seasons in an urban garden in Buffalo. Naima Penniman reflects on a statue of Haitian revolutionary François Makandal, within her own pursuit of environmental justice. Ama Codjoe meditates on rain, hair, protest, and freedom via a photo of a young woman during a civil rights demonstration in Alabama. And so on--with wide-ranging contributions from Carolyn Finney, Ronald Greer II, Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Sean Hill, Michael Kleber-Diggs, Glynn Pogue, Katie Robinson, and Lauret Savoy--unearthing evidence of the ways Black people's relationship to the natural world has persevered through colonialism, slavery, state-sponsored violence, and structurally racist policies like Jim Crow and redlining. A scrapbook, a family chest, a quilt--and an astounding work of historical engagement and literary accomplishment--A Darker Wilderness is a collection brimming with abundance and insight. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Elderflora

Elderflora

A Modern History of Ancient Trees

Jared Farmer

Book Info

ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780465097845
Publisher Description

The epic story of the planet's oldest trees and the making of the modern world Humans have always revered long-lived trees. But as historian Jared Farmer reveals in Elderflora, our veneration took a modern turn in the eighteenth century, when naturalists embarked on a quest to locate and precisely date the oldest living things on earth. The new science of tree time prompted travelers to visit ancient specimens and conservationists to protect sacred groves. Exploitation accompanied sanctification, as old-growth forests succumbed to imperial expansion and the Industrial Revolution. Taking us from Lebanon to New Zealand to California, Farmer surveys the complex history of the world's oldest trees, including voices of Indigenous peoples, religious figures, and contemporary scientists who study elderflora in crisis. In a changing climate, a long future is still possible, Farmer shows, but only if we give care to young things that might grow old. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Our Share of Night

Our Share of Night

A Novel

Mariana Enriquez

Book Info

Publisher
Hogarth (2023), 609 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780451495143
Publisher Description

“A masterpiece of literary horror.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review) A woman’s mysterious death puts her husband and son on a collision course with her demonic family in the first novel to be translated into English by the International Booker Prize–shortlisted author of The Dangers of Smoking in Bed—“the most exciting discovery I’ve made in fiction for some time” (Kazuo Ishiguro). ONE OF THE MOST ANTICIPATED BOOKS OF 2023: BuzzFeed, Electric Lit, Book Riot, BookPage, The Rumpus, World Literature Today, Publishers Weekly “Monumental.”—The New York Times “A magnificent accomplishment.”—Alan Moore “One of Latin America’s most exciting authors.”—Silvia Moreno-Garcia A young father and son set out on a road trip, devastated by the death of the wife and mother they both loved. United in grief, the pair travel to her ancestral home, where they must confront the terrifying legacy she has bequeathed: a family called the Order that commits unspeakable acts in search of immortality. For Gaspar, the son, this maniacal cult is his destiny. As the Order tries to pull him into their evil, he and his father take flight, attempting to outrun a powerful clan that will do anything to ensure its own survival. But how far will Gaspar’s father go to protect his child? And can anyone escape their fate? Moving back and forth in time, from London in the swinging 1960s to the brutal years of Argentina’s military dictatorship and its turbulent aftermath, Our Share of Night is a novel like no other: a family story, a ghost story, a story of the occult and the supernatural, a book about the complexities of love and longing with queer subplots and themes. This is the masterwork of one of Latin America’s most original novelists, “a mesmerizing writer,” says Dave Eggers, “who demands to be read.” (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of West of Here

West of Here

Jonathan Evison

Book Info

Publisher
Algonquin Books (2012), 513 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781616200824
Publisher Description

At the foot of the Elwha River, the muddy outpost of Port Bonita is about to boom, fueled by a ragtag band of dizzyingly disparate men and women unified only in their visions of a more prosperous future. A failed accountant by the name of Ethan Thornburgh has just arrived in Port Bonita to reclaim the woman he loves and start a family. Ethan’s obsession with a brighter future impels the damming of the mighty Elwha to harness its power and put Port Bonita on the map. More than a century later, his great-great grandson, a middle manager at a failing fish- packing plant, is destined to oversee the undoing of that vision, as the great Thornburgh dam is marked for demolition, having blocked the very lifeline that could have sustained the town. West of Here is a grand and playful odyssey, a multilayered saga of destiny and greed, adventure and passion, that chronicles the life of one small town, turning America’s history into myth, and myth into a nation’s shared experience. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of The High Sierra: A Love Story

The High Sierra: A Love Story

A Love Story

Kim Stanley Robinson

Book Info

ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780316593014
Publisher Description

An intimate, panoramic journey through the Sierra Nevada, the best hiking mountains on Earth, according to bestselling novelist Kim Stanley Robinson. Kim Stanley Robinson first ventured into the Sierra Nevada mountains during the summer of 1973. He returned from that encounter a changed man, awed by a landscape that made him feel as if he were simultaneously strolling through an art museum and scrambling on a jungle gym like an energized child. He has gone back to the mountains again and again over the course of his life--more than a hundred trips--and has gathered a vast store of knowledge about this extraordinary range in the process. The High Sierra is his celebration of this exceptional place, a treat for those who know it and a guide for those who don't--an exploration of what makes this span of mountains one of the most compelling places on Earth. Robinson tells the story of the Sierras through many aspects. He describes the geological forces that shaped it, and the history of its exploration, going back to the indigenous peoples who made it home and whose traces can still be found today. He celebrates the people whose ideas and actions protected the High Sierra for future generations. He describes uniquely beautiful hikes and the trails to be avoided. Robinson weaves his own experiences through the book, including life-altering events, defining relationships, and unforgettable adventures. He speaks again and again to timeless questions about the human communion with the wild and with the sublime--deftly illustrating the personal growth that only seems to come from time spent outdoors. The High Sierra is a gorgeous, absorbing immersion in a place, born out of a desire to understand and share one of the greatest rapture-inducing experiences our planet can offer. Packed with maps, gear advice, breathtaking photos, and much more, it is an astounding guide that will tempt veteran hikers and casual walkers alike to lace up their boots for their next adventure. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Cover of Gilead

Gilead

A Novel

Marilynne Robinson

Book Info

Publisher
Picador (2020), 256 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781250784018
Publisher Description

Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Critics Circle Award, Gilead is the long-hoped-for second novel by Marilynne Robinson, one of our finest writers--a hymn of praise and lamentation to the God-haunted existence that Reverend Ames loves passionately, and from which he will soon part. In 1956, toward the end of Reverend John Ames's life, he begins a letter to his young son, an account of himself and his forebears. Ames is the son of an Iowan preacher and the grandson of a minister who, as a young man in Maine, saw a vision of Christ bound in chains and came west to Kansas to fight for abolition: He "preached men into the Civil War," then, at age fifty, became a chaplain in the Union Army, losing his right eye in battle. Reverend Ames writes to his son about the tension between his father--an ardent pacifist--and his grandfather, whose pistol and bloody shirts, concealed in an army blanket, may be relics from the fight between the abolitionists and those settlers who wanted to vote Kansas into the union as a slave state. And he tells a story of the sacred bonds between fathers and sons, which are tested in his tender and strained relationship with his namesake, John Ames Boughton, his best friend's wayward son. This is also the tale of another remarkable vision--not a corporeal vision of God but the vision of life as a wondrously strange creation. It tells how wisdom was forged in Ames's soul during his solitary life, and how history lives through generations, pervasively present even when betrayed and forgotten. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Gilead

After years of flirtation, I finally opened a Marilynne Robinson book.Gilead is beyond acclaimed (Pulitzer Prize, National Book Critics Circle, PEN/Faulkner) and so-often recommended that I was worried it might be overhyped. It was not. I may be a sucker for epistolary novels, but this imagined communication from an older reverand to his son on the occasion of what he takes to be a terminal heart condition, is moving, deep and incredibly evocative. Robinson teases out deep ideas and contemplations of John Ames, who has spent his life in a small town in Iowa, thinks of what his son might want to know about him after he is gone . Here is a depiction of mid-20th-century rural America that puts me in mind of John Williams Stoner for its unromanticized depiction of a difficult times, and Robinsion ingeniously incorporates the conflicts of the American experience into the text by its setting. The fictional Gilead is a flashpoint for abolitionist settlers from Kansas. The background radiation of white protestant American worldview might hit differently for a reader who did not grow up in an atmosphere thick with the same presumptions, where Christian scripture is assumed to map our world and guide us through it, and our lot is to reconcile our lived experience to that belief system or vice versa, but there is a deep reckoning with fundamental ideas about human nature and values for any reader. I wish I'd read it sooner but also feel kind of happy to have found a writer who lived up to my expectations, and whose body of work now feels like a treasure trove for me to mine.

Cover of Across the Olympic Mountains

Across the Olympic Mountains

The Press Expedition, 1889-90

Robert L. Wood

Book Info

Publisher
Mountaineers Books (1988), 252 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780898862195
Publisher Description

In 1889 Washington's then governor, Elisha Ferry, called on men of adventure to cross the Olympic Mountains, a range shrouded in mystery. The Seattle Press, the state's primary newspaper, stepped up to the challenge, sponsoring the Press Expedition. And soon departed a band of men into the mountains during one of the worst winters in recorded history... (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode
Also on these shelves
Cover of Mount Chicago

Mount Chicago

A Novel

Adam Levin

Book Info

Publisher
National Geographic Books (2022)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780385548243
Publisher Description

From the award-winning author of Bubblegum and The Instructions, a daring new novel about the irony, the humor, and the heartbreak of survivorship. "Adam Levin is one of our wildest writers and our funniest." –George Saunders, bestselling, award-winning author of Lincoln in the Bardo A one-in-ten-billion natural disaster devastates Chicago. A Jewish comedian, his most devoted fan, and the city’s mayor must struggle to move forward while the world—quite literally—caves beneath their feet. With this polyphonic tale of Chicago-style politics and political correctness, stand-up comedy and Jewish identity, celebrity, drugs, and animal psychology, Levin has constructed a monument to laughter, love, art, and resilience in an age of spectacular loss. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Mount Chicago

I love Adam Levin's hyperliterate maximalism, and am biased towards his depictions of Chicago as so recognizeable as the Chicago that I know and lived in for 20 years. This book was filled with loving nods and indulgent depictions of places that I know well and miss very much.

This book is a VERY big 592 pages, and it's not for everybody. Levin combines George Saunders' pathos forged in the heat of absurdity with David Foster Wallace's exhaustive exploration of every implication of his fictive creation. This book also leans very heavily into Knausgaardian autofiction, with Levin creating a stand-up comedian version of himself that resembles in spirit the versions of self actual comedians offer of themselves. And while frequently hilarious, there is a pervasive darkness here that not everybody will go for.

If any of those signposts interest you, you're in for a treat. If they feel more like red flags, save it for us Levin-heads.

Cover of Nightbitch

Nightbitch

A Novel

Rachel Yoder

Book Info

Publisher
Anchor (2022)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780593312148
Publisher Description

In this blazingly smart and voracious debut novel, an artist turned stay-at-home mom becomes convinced she's turning into a dog. • "A must-read for anyone who can’t get enough of the ever-blurring line between the psychological and supernatural that Yellowjackets exemplifies." —Vulture One day, the mother was a mother, but then one night, she was quite suddenly something else... An ambitious mother puts her art career on hold to stay at home with her newborn son, but the experience does not match her imagination. Two years later, she steps into the bathroom for a break from her toddler's demands, only to discover a dense patch of hair on the back of her neck. In the mirror, her canines suddenly look sharper than she remembers. Her husband, who travels for work five days a week, casually dismisses her fears from faraway hotel rooms. As the mother's symptoms intensify, and her temptation to give in to her new dog impulses peak, she struggles to keep her alter-canine-identity secret. Seeking a cure at the library, she discovers the mysterious academic tome which becomes her bible, A Field Guide to Magical Women: A Mythical Ethnography, and meets a group of mommies involved in a multilevel-marketing scheme who may also be more than what they seem. An outrageously original novel of ideas about art, power, and womanhood wrapped in a satirical fairy tale, Nightbitch will make you want to howl in laughter and recognition. And you should. You should howl as much as you want. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Nightbitch

Nightbitch is a gleeful and raw fable about bodily and societal disassociation experienced by a new mother (identified only as "the mother"), who finds herself turning into a dog, whom she dubs "Nightbitch." The mother loves her 2-year-old son, but her decision to give up her own career while her husband's itinerant work-life keeps him out of the perilously monotonous trenches of child-rearing. And so, it takes becoming an animal for her to feel herself again, and her transformation is drawn out cleverly. Exceedingly relatable to a new parent, the gritty magical realist fable examines the role of mothers in capitalist society and pulls no punches exploring the contours of the sacrifices, double-standards and pitfalls of contemporary motherhood. Its funny, insightful and somehow corrective to a lot of parenting/motherhood discourse we're swimming in right now.

Cover of The Guest Lecture

The Guest Lecture

Martin Riker

Book Info

Publisher
Grove Press, Black Cat (2023)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780802160416
Publisher Description

With "a voice as clear, sincere, and wry as any I've read in current American fiction" (Joshua Cohen), Martin Riker's poignant and startlingly original novel asks how to foster a brave mind in anxious times, following a newly jobless academic rehearsing a speech on John Maynard Keynes for a surprising audience In a hotel room in the middle of the night, Abby, a young feminist economist, lies awake next to her sleeping husband and daughter. Anxious that she is grossly underprepared for a talk she is presenting tomorrow on optimism and John Maynard Keynes, she has resolved to practice by using an ancient rhetorical method of assigning parts of her speech to different rooms in her house and has brought along a comforting albeit imaginary companion to keep her on track--Keynes himself. Yet as she wanders with increasing alarm through the rooms of her own consciousness, Abby finds herself straying from her prepared remarks on economic history, utopia, and Keynes's pragmatic optimism. A lapsed optimist herself, she has been struggling under the burden of supporting a family in an increasingly hostile America after being denied tenure at the university where she teaches. Confronting her own future at a time of global darkness, Abby undertakes a hero's quest through her memories to ideas hidden in the corners of her mind--a piecemeal intellectual history from Cicero to Lewis Carroll to Queen Latifah--as she asks what a better world would look like if we told our stories with more honest and more hopeful imaginations. With warm intellect, playful curiosity, and an infectious voice, Martin Riker acutely animates the novel of ideas with a beating heart and turns one woman's midnight crisis into the performance of a lifetime. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on The Guest Lecture

Here we have a novel not of ideas but of the feelings about ideas. About what ideas make us do and become and create things inside us we can't see until later if at all, about disillusionment with ideas and with people who once held lit us on fire. Abby is a precariously un-tenured and spectacularly insomniac economics professor, lying awake next to her sleeping daughter and husband while confronting the anxiety about the next day's talk on John Maynard Keynes she is unprepared to give. I found The Guest Lecture playful, touching, smart and surprising, and it made me up Riker's first novel, Samuel Johnson's Eternal Return on my to-be-read list. I first learned of him as co-founder of the Dorothy Project, but he is one hell of a writer, The last time I felt this deeply trapped inside another consciousness was Ducks, Newburyport.

Cover of Elite Capture

Elite Capture

How the Powerful Took Over Identity Politics (and Everything Else)

Olufemi O. Taiwo

Book Info

ISBN/EAN Product Code
9781642596885
Publisher Description

A powerful indictment of the ways elites have co-opted radical critiques of racial capitalism to serve their own ends. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Elite Capture

This is a short, accessible and incredibly useful book about how political movements fall apart or lose their meaning because of influence of the powers that be, as elites co-opt and disarm ideas that go against their interests. Seemingly well-intentioned practices (such as identity politics and providing deference to marginalized and exploited group members) feel less like they're making things better and more like they are missing something fundamental: a real chance to make the system of oppression less oppressive. It turns out that in addition to capturing resources and wealth, elites also capture our conversations, using the influence they have over everything to change the common ground. Táíwò consistently reminds us that the point isn't to call out individuals, but to change systems. I really liked his exploration of the metaphor of "the room," as in "reading the room." ‘History has built the rooms around us; we find ourselves in places, and with people, resources, and incentives, that we did not choose.’ And while it's not pointless per se to criticize the composition of those within the room, it can keep us from doing the much harder work of... building new rooms. "We need to focus on building and rebuilding rooms, not on regulating traffic within and between them." 120 pages of straight fire that really helped things click for me.

Cover of  Gigantic Cinema

Gigantic Cinema

A Weather Anthology

Paul Keegan

Book Info

Publisher
National Geographic Books (2021)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780393540758
Publisher Description

A luminous, "deliciously playful" (Rishi Dastidar, Guardian) anthology of poems and prose inspired by the weather. In three hundred varied entries, Gigantic Cinema narrates the weather of a single capricious day, from dawn through rain, volcanic ash, nuclear dust, snow, light, fog, noon, eclipse, hurricane, flood, dusk, night, and back to dawn again. It includes reactions both formal and fleeting—weather rhymes, journals and jottings, diaries and letters—to the imaginary and actual drama unfolding above our heads. Ranging from Homer’s winds and Ovid’s flood to Frank O’Hara’s sun, Pliny’s reportage on the eruption of Vesuvius to Elizabeth Bishop’s “Song for a Rainy Season,” Gigantic Cinema offers an expansive collection of writing inspired by the commotion of the elements. Rather than drawing attention to authors and titles, entries appear as a medley of voices; as editors Alice Oswald and Paul Keegan write in their stunning introduction, the excerpts ask to be read “with no hat, no coat, no preconceptions, encountering each voice abruptly, as an exclamation brought on by the weather.” Assembling a chorus of responses (ancient and modern, East and West) to air’s manifold appearances, Gigantic Cinema offers a new perspective on the oldest conversation of all. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Gigantic Cinema

This is a captivating and surprising anthology: three hundred entries from every sort of source imaginable (naturalists, poets, scientists, philosophers, humorists, prophets... you name it) which in some way concern the weather. The curation is expansive, and the range of effects from the passages is quite varied. The source authors are indicated very casually at the bottom of the page, and the overall effect gives primacy to the excerpts themselves. The book's back cover indicates that the collection "narrates the weather of a single capricious day" but I certainly couldn't keep that thread in my hands. More instructive is the authors' preface, which describes the collection as "absurd, fragmentary, unfinishable." Of course it is! The weather is one minute the most interesting and impactful thing in one's life, and the next something taken for granted as mere fodder for small talk. The overall effect here is expansive. Each extract (even ones that left me unmoved or disinterested) felt like a pinhole camera, showing several other dimensions. It reminded me of the expansive feeling of Christian Marclay's "The Clock." I read one passage thinking it was an evocative poem about camping, noticed it was from Antarctic explorer Captain R. F. Scott, and read it again and it hit differently. I read in the index that this came from his final (doomed) expedition, meaning this was from the last year of his life, and read it a third time. Again, different. I was smitten by this weird, unexpected collection.

Cover of Also A Poet

Also A Poet

Frank O'Hara, My Father, and Me

Ada Calhoun

Book Info

Publisher
Grove Press (2023)
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780802162137
Publisher Description

A staggering memoir from New York Times-bestselling author Ada Calhoun tracing her fraught relationship with her father and their shared obsession with a great poet When Ada Calhoun stumbled upon old cassette tapes of interviews her father, celebrated art critic Peter Schjeldahl, had conducted for his never-completed biography of poet Frank O'Hara, she set out to finish the book her father had started forty years earlier. As a lifelong O'Hara fan who grew up amid his bohemian cohort in the East Village, Calhoun thought the project would be easy, even fun, but the deeper she dove, the more she had to face not just O'Hara's past, but also her father's, and her own. The result is a groundbreaking and kaleidoscopic memoir that weaves compelling literary history with a moving, honest, and tender story of a complicated father-daughter bond. Also a Poet explores what happens when we want to do better than our parents, yet fear what that might cost us; when we seek their approval, yet mistrust it. In reckoning with her unique heritage, as well as providing new insights into the life of one of our most important poets, Calhoun offers a brave and hopeful meditation on parents and children, artistic ambition, and the complexities of what we leave behind. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Also A Poet

At times, Ada Calhoun's voice comes across as maybe a little too raw, the frankness veering towards uncharitableness or even hostility towards her subject. But that unvarnished intimacy, when the subject is your own father (renowned art critic and writer Peter Schjeldahl), the working through of this perspective and its explanation is definitely part of the narrative arc. Calhoun finds boxes of taped interviews for her father's abandoned biography of poet Frank O'Hara, and her attempt to finish what he started is both sincere and hubristic. This is like Wild, with the midcentury Greenwich Village scene playing the role of Pacific Crest Trail: a fascinating but ultimately circumstantial backdrop for a journey of self-discovery. Lots of good storytelling, irresistible tidbits of a notorious artistic milieu, and some fine writing here, as Calhoun celebrates a reverence for great writing and what it does to the lives of those who have to live with those who create it. Riveting.

Cover of Liberation Day

Liberation Day

Stories

George Saunders

Book Info

Publisher
Random House (2022), 257 pages
ISBN/EAN Product Code
9780525509592
Publisher Description

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • “One of our most inventive purveyors of the form returns with pitch-perfect, genre-bending stories that stare into the abyss of our national character. . . . An exquisite work from a writer whose reach is galactic.”—Oprah Daily Booker Prize winner George Saunders returns with his first collection of short stories since the New York Times bestseller Tenth of December. ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: The New Yorker The “best short-story writer in English” (Time) is back with a masterful collection that explores ideas of power, ethics, and justice and cuts to the very heart of what it means to live in community with our fellow humans. With his trademark prose—wickedly funny, unsentimental, and exquisitely tuned—Saunders continues to challenge and surprise: Here is a collection of prismatic, resonant stories that encompass joy and despair, oppression and revolution, bizarre fantasy and brutal reality. “Love Letter” is a tender missive from grandfather to grandson, in the midst of a dystopian political situation in the (not too distant, all too believable) future, that reminds us of our obligations to our ideals, ourselves, and one another. “Ghoul” is set in a Hell-themed section of an underground amusement park in Colorado and follows the exploits of a lonely, morally complex character named Brian, who comes to question everything he takes for granted about his reality. In “Mother’s Day,” two women who loved the same man come to an existential reckoning in the middle of a hailstorm. In “Elliott Spencer,” our eighty-nine-year-old protagonist finds himself brainwashed, his memory “scraped”—a victim of a scheme in which poor, vulnerable people are reprogrammed and deployed as political protesters. And “My House”—in a mere seven pages—comes to terms with the haunting nature of unfulfilled dreams and the inevitability of decay. Together, these nine subversive, profound, and essential stories coalesce into a case for viewing the world with the same generosity and clear-eyed attention Saunders does, even in the most absurd of circumstances. (Publisher's Description)

Links
Barcode

Thoughts on Liberation Day

I read everything George Saunders writes, ever since Civilwarland in Bad Decline. If I'm honest nothing he's written since that book (and there's been no shortage of wonderful stuff) recalibrated my understanding of what was possible in fiction using a contemporary voice quite as much, but I love it all. These days he is adding nuance to the formidable body of moral philosophy he has smuggled into my consciousness disguised as fiction, and this story is no exception. The wise, bearded bodhisattva of the short story still has a crackling imagination, a generational ear for internal dialog, and a superhuman supply of empathy. Many of these stories humanize characters dehumanized by their work (most memorably a hell-themed subterranean amusement park in "Ghoul") and others burrow deep into personal histories (two rivals remembering one man in "Mother's Day", a man trying to communicate honestly with his grandson across the chasm of dystopia in "Love Letter"). This is Saunders' first short story collection in about a decade. It's a little uneven, and there is undeniably a grimness to these stories, but there's so much insight and kindness and attentiveness to some of the weirdest parts of the human condition that none of that matters. I'm happy he's tried other things, but I'd be just fine if all he did was give us one of these every few years.