Literature and Poetry
Jill Norgren Writes: My Choices of Good Reads For The Past Year
Barack Obama writes with grace and honesty. Clarity defines his discussions of policy and politics ... and helps us to understand the strategies guiding the decisions of the new president-elect as Biden forms a government... Elizabeth Strout's stories are brilliantly observed and can leave you breathless with surprise. James McBride's main character runs us ragged in the 2020 mystery novel Deacon King Kong in the maelstrom of aging and loss. In each, there is the poignancy of older characters chasing life... Homeland Elegies by Pakistani-American playwright Ayad Akhtar’s bears some comparison with Olive, Again. It is described as a novel but is more comfortably thought of as linked stories... Douglas Stuart's Shuggie Bain evokes the chaotic domestic world of drinkers without a scintilla of sentimentality and The Brothers Mankiewicz is a well shaped biography based on new interviews and archival sleuthing. Read on for the entire look at these new reads. more »
Serena Nanda Reviews Light in Dark Times: The Human Search for Meaning
Alisse Waterston is a cultural anthropologist; the inspiration for the book was her own emotional and intellectual development as an anthropologist and an activist, but her search for meaning goes far beyond cultural anthropology, which she describes only briefly in terms of its relevance as a source of light in dark times. The book is a work of art as well as a narrative, enlivened by the charming sketches of the co-author, Charlotte Corden, and is rooted in an interdisciplinary intellectual immersion in historical and modern literature, philosophy, poetry, and social science. Waterston’s fictional and nonfictional encounters are focused on the widespread current political, economic and humanitarian crises. more »
Serena Nanda Reviews: Tunis to Nairobi, Overland by Truck: Adventures in Africa
A perfect read for trying times! Cultural anthropologist and photographer Barry Kass begins his memoir by quoting Richard Burton, the British explorer, who wrote that "one of the gladdest moments in human life … is the departure upon a distant journey into unknown lands." This is especially true given the travel restrictions in the coronavirus pandemic and thus all the more of a pleasure to read. Kass’s memoir is not your ordinary travelogue. It is filled with descriptions of exotic locations and adventures but also with honest musings, like the deep appreciation of the comforts – hot water showers – that we in the United States take for granted.
more »
Ferida Wolff's Backyard: Mushroom Hunt; Grasshoppers Leap Into the Future (on glass!)
Ferida Wolff writes: During this pandemic we are often, understandably, lost in negative, worrisome thoughts. But there are positive things to focus on: neighbors greeting neighbors with smiles and friendly though distant conversations, gratitude for the dedication of our health practitioners, conscious appreciation of the people in our lives. more »