Categories
reviews

The Books I Read in 2023

Every year, I challenge myself to read a certain number of books. I used to set my goal around thirty, but I read over fifty books in both 2021 and 2022, so this year, I set my goal at forty.

Once again, I read over fifty. Fifty-six, to be exact.

While used to provide a short summary and review of each book, no one wants to read (and I don’t want to write) fifty-six book reports. So this year, I’ll give you the Top 10 Books I Read in 2023 before posting the whole list.

10. Project Hail Mary

Andy Weir

An astronaut wakes up next to two dead bodies on a spaceship with no memory of who he is or what he’s supposed to do.

9. The End of the World Running Club

Adrian J. Walker

A meteor shower has destroyed most of the northern hemisphere. Separated from his wife and children, a reluctant father has to traverse the ravaged landscape of the British Isles on foot if he’s to make it to the last escape boat and find his family again.

8. Fates & Furies

Lauren Groff

A profound exploration of the complexities of marriage told over a span of twenty-four years. The narrative is split into two parts, with the first half presenting the husband’s perspective as a privileged actor-turned-playwright, and the second half revealing the wife’s side of the story, gradually uncovering the hidden layers and secrets of their lives

7. A Market of Dreams & Destiny

Trip Galey

The story takes place in the Untermarket, a magical bazaar beneath 19th-century London where fate and fortunes are traded. The protagonist is a human apprentice sold to a powerful merchant of the Untermarket. His life takes a dramatic turn when he crosses paths with a runaway princess desperate to sell her destiny and with an indentured servant whose handsomeness and lack of guile are too much for him to ignore.

6. The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi

Shannon Chakraborty

Set against the backdrop of the medieval Islamic world, this rollicking story follows Amina al-Sirafi, a formidable former pirate and ship’s captain. After retiring to a peaceful life of piety and motherhood, Amina is drawn back into adventure when she is hired to rescue the kidnapped daughter of a late friend.

5. The Light Pirate

Lilly Brooks-Dalton

Set in a future that is deeply affected by climate change, the narrative unfolds in four parts, each reflecting the rhythms of the elements and the disintegration of the known world. The story centers around Wanda, a young girl born in a Florida hurricane. As the sea levels rise, the storms surge, and the infrastructure collapses, the U.S. government decides to abandon the state, and Wanda’s story evolves into a sweeping tale of survival, resilience, and the challenges of navigating a rapidly changing and often brutal world.

4. When Women Were Dragons

Kelly Barnhill

A speculative fiction novel set in an alternative history of the U.S. during the 1950s, the story revolves around a unique phenomenon known as the “Mass Dragoning of 1955,” where hundreds of thousands of women, burdened by grievances and persecution, spontaneously transform into dragons and fly away, leaving physical and emotional destruction in their wake.

3. A Thousand Ships

Natalie Haynes

A reimagining of the Trojan War, A Thousand Ships retells the ancient tale from the perspectives of 25 mortal and immortal women. The book gives voice to various women, including goddesses, nymphs, princesses, queens, and slaves, whose lives, loves, and rivalries were deeply affected by the long and tragic war.

2. M: Son of the Century

Antonio Scurati

The first book in a planned quartet of novels about Benito Mussolini, this epic historical novel delves into the birth and rise of fascism in Italy. The narrative is rich in historical details and interweaves period documents and sources with the author’s creative interpretation of Mussolini’s mind, exploring the seductive power of nationalism and the development of authoritarianism in Italy.

1. Barkskins

Annie Proulx

A historical fiction novel that begins in the late 17th century, following the lives of two young Frenchmen, René Sel and Charles Duquet, who arrive in New France (Canada). They become woodcutters, known as ‘barkskins’, in exchange for land from a feudal lord. The novel spans over 300 years, tracing the family lineages of Duquet and Sel and exploring their descendants’ lives as they navigate the complexities of survival and identity in a changing world. The story also encompasses the broader theme of deforestation, from the era of European colonization to the contemporary concerns of global warming.

The Complete List

Here are the rest of the books I read (or listened to) this year. They are listed in the order I read them, and I’ve bolded the ones I recommend.

  1. Drunk On All Your Strange New Words, by Eddie Robson
  2. The Fires, by Sigríður Hagelín Björnsdóttir
  3. Death Wins A Goldfish: Reflections from a Grim Reaper’s Yearlong Sabbatical, by Brian Rea
  4. Future Home of a Living God, by Louise Erdich
  5. The Pale Blue Eye, by Louis Bayard
  6. The Last Tale of the Flower Bride, by Roshani Chokshi
  7. Hypercapitalism, by Larry Gonick
  8. Meru, by S.B. Sivya
  9. Ducks: Two Years in The Oil Sands, by Kate Beaton
  10. Your Black Friend and Other Strangers, by Ben Passmore
  11. A Gift for a Ghost, by Borja Gonzalez
  12. Good Morning, Midnight, by Lilly Brooks-Dalton
  13. Sing, Nightingale, by Marie Hélène Poitras
  14. Walk the Vanished Earth, by Erin Swan
  15. The Dreams of a Common Language: Poems 1974-1977, by Adrienne Rich
  16. Stone Blind, by Natalie Haynes
  17. The Uninhabitable Earth, by David Wallace-Wells
  18. Rose/House, by Arkady Martine
  19. Dragon’s Egg, by Robert L. Forward
  20. The Celts: A Very Short Introduction, by Barry Cunliffe
  21. The Order of Time, by Carlo Rovelli
  22. Flight of the Puffin, by Ann Braden
  23. Meet Us By The Roaring Sea, by Akil Kumarasamy
  24. The Broken Constitution: Lincoln, Slavery, & The Refounding of America, by Noah Feldman
  25. Skinny Legs & All, by Tom Robbins
  26. God’s Bankers: A History of Money & Power at the Vatican, by Gerald Posner
  27. What Never Happened, by Rachel Howzell Hall
  28. The Afterlives, by Thomas Pierce
  29. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas: An American Slave, by Frederick Douglas
  30. Slow Time Between the Stars, by John Scalzi
  31. Forty Signs of Rain, by Kim Stanley Robinson
  32. Fifty Degrees Below, by Kim Stanley Robinson
  33. Sixty Days and Counting, by Kim Stanley Robinson
  34. Ring Shout, by P. Djèlí Clark
  35. Hall of Small Mammals, by Thomas Pierce
  36. Deadlands, by Victoria Miluch
  37. How To Stop Time, by Matt Haig
  38. The Free People’s Village, by Sim Kern
  39. The Village Healer’s Book of Cures, by Jennifer Sherman Roberts
  40. Don’t Say A Thing: A Predator, A Pursuit, and the Women Who Persevered, by Tamara Leitner
  41. The Hanging City, by Charlie N. Holmberg
  42. World Within A Song, by Jeff Tweedy
  43. Secession on Trial: The Treason Prosecution of Jefferson Davis, by Cynthia Nicoletti
  44. Scorpio, by Marko Kloos
  45. Legends & Lattes, by Travis Baldtree
  46. The Nix, by Nathan Hill

And that’s it: 56 books and 15,181 pages read in 2023.

Categories
life reviews

Three Books That Changed My Life

In 2007, I began tracking my reading habits on Goodreads. Over the past sixteen years, I read or listened to 581 books containing 210,880 pages. Suppose we use my averages over the past sixteen years to estimate my reading habits for the twenty-five years of my reading history before Goodreads existed. In that case, I’ve read 1,500 books containing nearly 524,000 pages.

I’d like to tell you about the three that most changed my life.

Skinny Legs & All

By Tom Robbins

My friend, Jess Tanen, found me in the hallway of our high school. The year was 1992, and we were in ninth grade. She grabbed me by the arm and dragged me to her locker. She took a book from her backpack and handed it to me, saying, “Here. This is the weirdest book I’ve ever read. I didn’t like it, but I think you’ll love it.”

I opened it up and read the first sentence:

This is the room of the wolfmother wallpaper.

I don’t think I’ve come across a better combination of words in the English language than “wolfmother wallpaper.” Like a heroin addict, I’ve been chasing the high ever since.

Tom Robbins quickly became my role model as a writer, thinker, and philosopher. He luxuriated in extended metaphors, dazzled with whimsical, mind-expanding analogies, and wrote about the history of religion, politics, governments, and culture without forgetting the role of vaginal juices in the lives of his sexually progressive heroines.

I was already a wannabe writer by ninth grade. I didn’t have the size or talent to be a jock, the work ethic to be an honors student, the discipline to be a musician, or the skills to become a theater geek. But I did love books, and I could sit for hours in a room with a keyboard and a blank screen without getting lonely or bored.

Most importantly, pretty girls gave me positive feedback on my writing. If sports, good grades, guitars, or theatrical monologues weren’t going to do it, writing would have to be my thing.

Every high-school writer goes through an emo phase. They believe in big, heavy literature that plumbs the depth of the human soul. They imagine heroes who look out windows into the pouring rain, smoking a cigarette and thinking about the existential French woman who left them for a one-legged veteran of the Great War who struggles with nightmares and smells like boiled cabbage. Suicide figures prominently in the writing of high schoolers.

Tom Robbins saved me from that. He wrote outlandish books full of big ideas without forgetting to make his readers laugh with delight or get turned on by raw descriptions of human sexuality. He embraced the principles of the Enlightenment at the same time as he reveled in the darkness of our romantic, pagan inclinations. He wove together evolution and spirituality, commercialism and divinity, astronomy and astrology, utopia and reality.

He gave me a way to see the world, care for the world, and love the world without taking it too seriously to remember how ridiculous we all are.

Louis C.K. tells the story of his first memory. He is four years old, standing in front of his parent’s house, shitting in his pants — “a massive, terribly painful shit.” He doesn’t remember the first half of the shit — his memory begins halfway through shitting. “I came online as a result of the anal pain that I was experiencing. It actually awakened me — yeeeeeoooooow! — into the stream of consciousness I’m now living. That’s how my life started. That’s who I am.”

I have the same feelings about Skinny Legs & All and Tom Robbins. Reading that book awakened me into the stream of consciousness I’m now living in.

House of Leaves

by Mark Z. Danielewski

My wife had a boyfriend when we first met. She doesn’t remember this and denies it being accurate, but she told me that she and her boyfriend were engaged. I was attracted to her, sure, and over the next seven or eight months, that attraction would become the love and devotion it continues to be (no feelings were made known until long after she’d broken up with her boyfriend), but in our first months in each other’s lives, we were, more than anything else, great friends.

We were both freshmen in college. We met under a tree. I sat beneath it reading a book, and she had the nerve to approach me (a stranger) and initiate a conversation. One of her first questions was, “What are you reading?” It wasn’t long before it became clear how much we loved books.

We spent virtually all our time together over the next three months. Neither of us enjoyed our roommates, so we exiled ourselves from our dorm rooms and lived in the college library, “surrounded by stories surreal and sublime.

We wrote papers sitting next to each other in the computer labs, suggested which books the other should read, and printed out short stories the other needed to experience. We ate breakfasts, lunches, and dinners together, made late-night runs to Denny’s, and grabbed ice coffees at Dunks.

At the end of the first semester, she was flying home to Chicago to spend the holidays with her family, and I was driving to Boston to spend the month with mine. I dropped her off at the airport, but before we left campus, she gave me a book to read.

I looked at the cover: House of Leaves, by Mark Z. Danielewski.

“Look inside,” she said.

I began to flip through it, and the typography and layout were as much a work of art as the story itself.

The story has several layers to it. The main text is a book-length, critical review of a non-existent documentary. The documentary is made Real World style, with mostly fixed cameras placed throughout a home. It follows a famous filmmaker (the director of the documentary) and his model wife as they buy, move into, and settle down in their new home. They quickly discover an impossible hallway on the house’s outer wall. After further investigation, the married couple uncovers an impossible maze built beneath their home, which they soon delve into.

Hundreds of footnotes comment on the critical study. The footnotes were written by an L.A. drifter named Johnny. Johnny discovered the study in the burned-out apartment of an old blind recluse who died violently under mysterious circumstances. His footnotes often run for pages and contain a novel’s worth of plot within them.

The layout and typography of House of Leaves mirror the maze in the story, requiring the reader to, for example, twist and turn the physical book as the characters climb a spiral staircase or skip dozens of pages when the characters go through a secret door. The spillover of the footnotes also causes the reader to flip through six or seven pages to follow Johnny’s story before flipping back to where the footnote started to return to the main thread.

The effect is that the reader gets as lost in the story as the characters. As Johnny begins to question reality and sense an ever-increasing dread at the unknown monster(s) that stalk the characters through the maze, the reader takes on the same emotions, making the book one of the most engaging I’ve ever read and one of the scariest.

I found it so scary that I couldn’t put it down. I read the book in one marathon sitting because the moment I turned out the light, I could hear Johnny’s monster breathing at my bedside, threatening my sleep.

The next day, I called my friend and told her how incredible it was. That’s when she admitted that she hadn’t finished it.

“It was too weird for me,” she said, “But I knew you’d love it.”

We’d read many of the same books that semester. Some were assigned by our shared professors. Others were the result of recommendations from friends.

But when I finished House of Leaves and discovered that she gave it to me because it was too weird and she knew I would love it, I felt more seen than I ever had before.

We wouldn’t confess our love for each other for another four months, but after reading House of Leaves on her recommendation, I knew I was hooked.

James, the Brother of Jesus: The Key to Unlocking the Secrets of Early Christianity and The Dead Sea Scrolls

By Robert Eisenman

Jesus was not an only child. He had at least two brothers and probably multiple sisters. After Jesus’ crucifixion, his brother, James, became the arch-leader of the movement. James, the Brother of Jesus, attempts to uncover who James was and how understanding him will bring us closer to the historical Jesus.

In my own life, it served as the final break between me and the faith in which I was raised.

James, the Brother of Jesus, is not a great book. At 1,156 pages, it is 700-800 pages too long and incredibly repetitive. It strays for scores of pages at a time, making it difficult to follow the author’s thread.

It also contains (though not by the author’s fault) a cast of historical personages with similar or identical names, requiring the reader to do too much detective work to determine which person the author is referring to at any given moment. True, this confusion of names lies at the heart of the author’s scholarly investigation (he maintains that the chaos of names was intended to obscure the reality of the Church’s history). Still, he could have made it easier for the reader to untangle the relationships and identities of the individuals involved.

Despite its flaws, James, the Brother of Jesus serves as the foundation of everything I understand about Christianity — namely, that it has very little to do with the historical personage of Jesus and everything to do with the words and acts of a man who never met Jesus, a man we now call St. Paul.

This is not a new understanding of Christianity. Scholars have long understood, and the New Testament makes it clear (Acts 15:2), that the Jerusalem community of Christians that arose after Jesus’ crucifixion had issues with Paul’s work among the Gentiles.

But by focusing on “James the Lord’s Brother” (Gal. 1:19), whom Eisenman shows was the “actual, physical successor” to Jesus, the book provides “a historically accurate semblance of what Jesus himself, in so far as he actually existed, might have been like.”

I first read the book when it made its debut in 1998. I was twenty-one years old at the time. Despite having served as an altar boy for three years, despite working as a receptionist for the priests in the rectory, and despite the nuns who led my Catholic education in the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD) telling me since the first grade that I would become “the first American Pope,” I had already ventured beyond the confines of the Roman Catholic Church thanks, primarily, to the journey Tom Robbins had sent me on (see above).

I retained a deep connection to the Church, however. I may no longer have been a Catholic, but I was still, in many ways, a Christian. James, the Brother of Jesus, shattered my perception of Christianity.

The book highlights the biases of “historians” such as Eusebius, as well as the authors of the New Testament and its Apocrypha, in the creation of Christianity, demanding that believers reckon with the political realities of the early Christian writers and the way Roman and Jewish power structures required so much to be hidden away from plain-reading eyes.

While the orthodox-upending nature of the book is not revolutionary, its subject most definitely was. If we accept Eisenman’s conclusion that “who or whatever James was, so was Jesus,” then we have to admit that the all-loving Christ presented by modern Christianity is fake. Jesus was actually a militant Jewish zealot, a member of an oppositional alliance against the establishment of Rome and the Herodian-controlled Second Temple, whose followers went about armed for battle (Matt. 26:51).

Jesus came not to save the souls of the world but to free Jerusalem from foreign invaders, a political messiah more than a spiritual one. The historical Jesus has more in common with today’s militant Muslims who seek to drive the forces of the infidel American Empire out of Saudia Arabia than with the all-loving Christ preached about in our churches. To get closer to Jesus, one must look to the lost traditions that were driven out of the Roman Church in the fourth century.

With that as the basis for my understanding of the reality of Jesus, my approach to received histories was changed forever.

This perception-shattering work has been followed by dozens of others, all of which could be categorized under the grand title of another essential book, Lies My Teachers Told Me.

As a result, James, the Brother of Jesus, caused me to not only break with my faith; it formed my philosophy as an educator. My goal as a teacher has been, first and foremost, to destroy whatever misunderstandings have been delivered to my students by the myths of our time. For twenty-one years, I was beholden to the myth of Christianity, the complex reality of world history hidden from me and (I imagine) from my teachers. I refuse to let my students suffer the same fate.


Skinny Legs & All opened me up to a universe where humor, sexuality, and profound philosophical inquiry harmoniously coexist. Tom Robbins disarmed me from the stereotypical broody, angst-ridden teenage writer phase and liberated me to become an audacious explorer of thought.

House of Leaves, with its labyrinthine narrative structure, not only tested the limits of my reading comfort but also marked the inception of a deep and understanding relationship with the woman who would become my wife.

Lastly, James, the Brother of Jesus, shook the foundations of my religious faith, transforming my worldview and shaping my pedagogical philosophy. This book, despite its flaws, helped me confront the discrepancies between received histories and the more intricate, often concealed narratives of reality.

These three books have undoubtedly catalyzed significant shifts in my life, and their effect on my personal evolution stands as a testimony to the transformative power of books.


Our great human adventure is the evolution of consciousness. We are in this life to enlarge the soul, liberate the spirit, and light up the brain.

Tom Robbins, Wild Ducks Flying Backward
Categories
reviews

The Books I Read in 2022

Every year, I participate in the Goodreads Challenge, where you challenge yourself to read a certain number of books for the year and track your progress.

This year I set a goal of 45 books. I read or listened to 56.

I used to go through the books one by one. Now that I’m cracking 50 books a year, however, I choose my favorites in various categories, then post the whole list with a simple note on each.

A fantasy painting of a landscape with three moons and mountains.

Best Fiction

Battle of the Linguist Mages

The cover of the novel, Battle of the Linguist Mages
By Scotto Moore

The second novel from Scotto Moore, a playwright from the Seattle area, Battle of the Linguist Mages is ridiculous, rowdy, hilarious, touching, and wildly compelling.

It combines virtual-reality video-gaming with linguistics, anarchism, artificial intelligence, magic, raves, and the apocalypse.

One of this year’s best-selling fantasy novels, Babel, or the Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators’ Revolution, by R.F. Kuang, also uses the power of language to develop a system of magic, but where Babel is a magical history in the vein of Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, Moore’s ridiculous novel is more akin to Neil Stephenson’s Snow Crash. They both take place in the near future, make use of virtual worlds, and have a hyperkinetic energy that keeps the reader flying through the pages.

If you like your books about the potential technodestruction of the planet to be hilarious and fun, Battle of the Linguist Mages will not disappoint.

Runner Up: Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, by Gabrielle Zevin

This book surprised me so many times, and never disappointed me. Another book centered around video games, this novel explores the lifelong relationship between two people.

I read a lot of high-concept fiction: speculative fiction, cli-fi, sci-fi, fantasy, etc. While Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow contains aspects of those, it’s a more character-driven story about two lifelong friends and the successes and challenges they face together…and alone.

Zevin’s book appears at the top of a lot of book lists this year. For me, though, Battle of the Linguist Mages has it beat due to the sheer audacity of what Mr. Moore attempted.

The Rest of The Fiction Books I Read

This list is arranged in the order I read them. It does not include books in a series or graphic novels, both of which I discuss further below. Recommended books are starred.

  • Ulysses, by James Joyce
    This was my third reading of Mr. Joyce’s masterpiece, though this time, I stopped at Scylla & Charybdis. I found it tough to motivate through when I was only reading it before bed.
  • Flint & Mirror, by John Crowley 🌟
    John Crowley’s latest historical fiction is about Tyrone’s Rebellion against the Tudor conquest of Ireland, with a dash of magic thrown in.
  • This is How You Lose the Time War, by Amal Al-Mohtar & Max Gladstone 🌟
    A beautiful romance about two opposing agents in a secret war to secure the future by destroying the past.
  • Travel Light, by Naomi Mitchison 🌟
    A children’s book mentioned in This Is How You Lose The Time War, recommended by Ursula K. Leguin, and definitely worth your time.
  • Termination Shock, by Neal Stephenson 🌟
    The newest from Stephenson, this cli-fi novel explores what happens when one billionaire decides to seed the clouds with sulfur in a fit of entrepreneurial geoengineering. The effects will create a new system of climate winners and losers.
  • Parable of the Sower, by Octavia Butler
    Many consider this a classic, and while I’m a big fan of Butler’s Patternmaster and Xenogenesis series, this one didn’t do it for me.
  • Babel (or) the Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators Rebellion, by R.F. Kuang 🌟
    A compelling magic system keeps the concept of this novel in the clouds; still, the characters and story are grounded in loss, grief, identity, self-worth, and colonialism.
  • Gypsies, by Robert Charles Wilson 🌟
    A multiverse story about a family capable of imagining a better reality and then going there…oftentimes because they are hunted.
  • The Aenid, by Virgil (trans. by Robert Fagles) 🌟
    This one’s as good as they say. The last time I read The Illiad was in 2010. I don’t remember it describing in as much detail the religious rituals and sacrifices that Virgil’s poem includes. As a result, Virgil’s poem feels more visceral — in every sense of the word.
  • The City We Became, by N.K. Jemisin
    While I love N.K. Jemisin’s previous works, this one left me a bit flat. I enjoyed the characters enough. I just couldn’t bring myself to buy her conceit: certain cities are alive, personified in avatars, and their birth results in transdimensional disasters. I appreciate Jemisin’s creativity. Her Broken Earth trilogy blew my mind, and I loved her Inheritance and Dreamblod series. Unfortunately, this one just didn’t do it for me.
  • The City in the Middle of the Night, by Charlie Jane Anders
    This author’s second novel follows humanity after we abandoned Earth and settled on a tidally-locked, alien-inhabited planet. Days and nights don’t exist, and temperatures range from burning your skin to freezing your blood. Despite its conceptual story of survival and politics on the edge of an eternal twilight, the characters’ obsession with each other will have you doubting some of their decisions.
  • How High We Can Go in The Dark, by Sequoia Nagamatsu 🌟
    A strong contender for my favorite fiction of the year, this collection of interconnected short stories is sympathetic, darkly funny, and incredibly sad. Imagine a world where virtually all children and millions of adults are guaranteed to die from an ancient virus unleashed by the thawing of the Arctic tundra. Now imagine a series of short stories that explore a diverse range of subjectivities who inhabit that world, all of whom have lost someone (or everyone) they love. Now include enough bread crumbs in each story for the reader to discover a singular novel unwritten in the spaces between the stories. A beautiful book.
  • Emergency Skin, by N.K. Jemisin
    A 40-page story, Emergency Skin is the transcript of a “consensus consciousness” giving instructions to a test-tube-created space traveler. The traveler has come to what is supposed to be a dead Earth to retrieve ingredients for the Founders (think Musk, Bezos, and Branson of the planet it came from, only to learn that all Earth needed to recover was to rid itself of the billionaire class. Decent enough for 40 pages, but nothing that will blow your mind.
  • A Gentleman in Moscow, by Amor Towles 🌟
    Another strong contender for fiction novel of the year — and a wonderful book to read in December — A Gentleman in Moscow informs, delights, connects, and excites. This novel of a former Russian aristocrat under a lifelong house arrest in one of Moscow’s grandest hotels pleases on every level.
  • When We Cease to Understand the World, by Benjamin Labatut 🌟
    A masterful blend of fact and fiction, this collection of stories explores the inner lives of some of the most famous names in science and mathematics, including Heisenberg, Schrödinger, De Broglie, and Grothendieck. It makes for a fascinating journey on the borderland between genius and madness.
  • No One Is Talking About This, by Patricia Lockwood 🌟
    This book devastated me. If I didn’t finish reading it on New Year’s Eve (ten days after I originally posted this list), I might have even selected it as my favorite fiction of the year. Lockwood’s writing vividly captures the fleeting consciousness of today’s cultural moment only to smite it with tremendous emotional force in the back half of the work. This one made me laugh out loud several times, and then it brought me tears. Just a beautiful book that everyone alive right now should read.

Best Fiction Series

The Expanse

The cover of Leviath Wakes, by James S.A. Corey
By James S.A. Corey

The nine novels of The Expanse are essentially three trilogies that follow the crew of a spaceship named after Don Coyote’s horse.

The first trilogy begins after humanity colonizes the solar system and accidentally uncovers an alien bio-weapon that defies physics while infecting any lifeform it encounters.

The second trilogy takes the characters beyond the solar system via an alien technology that opens a gate to a kind of Grand Central Station for the universe. This section focuses on the politics of who will control the metaphorical Grand Central Station.

The third trilogy explores the mystery of the alien civilization that created the bio-weapon and gate while examining how the Expanse functions when an upstart galactic empire takes over.

Of the nine novels, only one (the fifth book, Nemesis Games) was a disappointment. I could only finish it because one of the characters, Amos, is a joy to read. The subsequent four novels returned to the quality of the previous four, and the whole series ended about great.

The series became a TV show on SyFy (and later Amazon), ending after six seasons in Dec. 2021. People raved about it, but when I tried it, I couldn’t get past the production quality and the way it ignored a vital element of the books.

The Expanse series is the first science fiction I’ve read that takes gravity seriously. It shapes the physical structures of a whole new class of human beings who’ve only ever lived in the zero gravity of space. But it also affects virtually every scene in the story. The writers (“James S.A. Corey” is a pen name for a pair of writers) take great pains to remind readers that things work differently in space.

The TV show avoids this crucial element of the books by giving the characters magnetic boots that allow them to walk semi-normally. I quickly grew bored by the show without the effects of gravity (or its lack) to make this tale different from any others I’d encountered.

I loved the characters in the novels, especially how they adapted and evolved throughout 5,000+ pages of the story. But what I loved most was the gravity.

Runner Up: The Murderbot Diaries, by Martha Wells

I read five of the six novels in the series (so far) and found all five fast and intriguing. The titular murderbot is a hilarious, paranoid artificial intelligence who would rather spend time watching soap operas than having to murder so many humans. Most of the books are under 200 pages in this series, but they keep you turning pages fast.

Best Nonfiction

Real Enemies: Conspiracy Theories and American Democracy, World War I to 9/11

By Kathryn S. Olmstead

One of my colleagues scheduled me to teach a summer class called “Conspiracy Theories.” Like any well-educated person, I’m familiar with many conspiracy theories. I adhere to some of them (e.g., Oswald did not act alone, nor did Epstein kill himself). Others, I find laughable (e.g., 9/11 was not an inside job, and the moon landing most definitely happened).

I didn’t want the class to be a rehash of various conspiracy theories, though. We’ve seen the consequences of misinformation, disinformation, and poor critical thinking skills getting in the way of reality. Over a million Americans died partly because our President told us to shine sunlight up our ass.

A class that surveyed some of the theories that bedeviled the country since the Salem Witch Trials might be fun for the students, but it wouldn’t prepare them to live in 21st-century America.

Thanks to Real Enemies: Conspiracy Theories and American Democracy, World War I to 9/11, I could do more than provide a survey. Armed by Kathryn Olmstead, a professor of History at UC Davis, I could present a thesis that would be meaningful in their adult lives. Her book reveals the actual, no doubt about it, 100% real conspiracies enacted by the U.S. government throughout the 20th century that fostered the cancerous growth of the paranoid style of American politics.

Many Americans believe their government conspires against them because the American government admits it conspired against them.

Dr. Olmstead writes in her introduction, “…generations of anti-government conspiracy theorists since World War I have at least one thing in common: when they charge that the government has plotted, lied, and covered up, they’re often right.”

The book debunks many of the conspiracies of the 20th century. At the same time, it reveals the conspiracies that drove the anti-government groups crazy enough to imagine the now-debunked conspiracy in the first place.

For example, those interested in history have heard that President Roosevelt had an advance warning about Pearl Harbor. This “advanced-knowledge conspiracy theory” suggests the president allowed Americans to die and ships to sink because he wanted the U.S. to get involved in World War II. This, of course, is not true.

Thanks to American code breakers, Roosevelt knew a Japanese attack was imminent. But he (along with everyone else) expected it to take place in the Philippines (which, in fact, it also did). Olmstead writes, “American leaders knew only that war was coming somewhere, sometime soon.”

The actual conspiracy was not that Roosevelt knew Pearl Harbor was the target. It’s that, after the attack, he conspired to prevent Congress from investigating his administration’s intelligence failure. As one Congress member said, “There will have to be an explanation—sooner or later—and it had better be good.”

Instead of letting Congress investigate, Roosevelt created a five-person commission to whitewash the administration’s failures. We can look at the Warren Commission and the 9/11 Commission for how other presidents followed Roosevelt’s lead.

The Roberts Commission’s objective was to determine which, if any, U.S. military officials the U.S. should blame for the attack. Most importantly, the commission was not asked to investigate the failures of civil politicians such as President Roosevelt and his cabinet.

Roosenvelt’s enemies fell into a frenzy when the Roberts Commission pinned the disaster on two of Pearl Harbor’s commanders. Their disbelief led to the creation of the conspiracy that is still debated today.

Olmstead’s book explores conspiracies related to the Red Scare, the Kennedy Assassinations (of course), Nixon and Watergate, UFOs, CIA mind control experiments, Jonestown, the Iran-Contra scandal, CIA-led infusions of crack into the Black community, Ruby Ridge & Waco, and (of course) 9/11.

Throughout each investigation, she shows that the crackpots who saw a government conspiracy in blameless behavior had their origins in the American government conspiring to do something else instead.

As the man said, “Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they aren’t after you.”

Runner Up: Against Elections, by David Van Reybrouck

Elections are bought and paid for by the millionaire and billionaire classes in this country. The working poor and (basically non-existent) middle class has little say over its representative leaders. Nor do these “representatives” serve the interests of their constituents once they take office. The 2020 HBO documentary, The Swamp, clarifies that America’s electoral reality forces politicians (regardless of their original intent) to adjust their objectives to those of the lobbyists.

Surprising no one: electoral politics is all about money, and unless we fix campaign financing in the country, it will not change.

That is unless we decide to get rid of elections altogether.

In Against Elections, David Van Reybrouck argues in favor of replacing politicians with randomly selected Americans — think of Congress as jury duty. As he writes, “Elections are the fossil fuel of politics. Whereas they once they gave democracy a huge boost…it now turns out they cause colossal problems of their own.”

He doesn’t suggest replacing elections with sortition is a panacea. “Citizens chosen by lot may not have the expertise of professional politicians, but they add something vital to the process: freedom. After all, they don’t need to be elected or re-elected.”

His book has many examples demonstrating how sortition has worked in the past and practical methods for putting it into practice in the United States.

The jokes about the governing skills of a populace that can hardly name the branches of its government write themselves. They make it easy to dismiss Van Reybrouck’s idea. But I challenge you to give this short book a read and come out the other side not agreeing that the solution to Congressional gridlock is to abolish elections.

The Rest of The Nonfiction Books I Read

This list is arranged in the order I read them. It does not include graphic novels which I discuss further below. Recommended books are starred.

  • Let’s Go (So We Can Get Back), by Jeff Tweedy
    A memoir of the frontman for the rock band Wilco. You’ll enjoy it if you love Wilco. You probably won’t care if you don’t.
  • How Democracies Die, by Steven Levitsky
    A shallow exploration of the title. Suppose you’ve read any decent magazine articles about the current state of our democracy and/or its historical precursors. In that case, there’s nothing here for you.
  • Heaven’s Breath: A Natural History of the Wind, by Lyall Watson 🌟
    A beautifully written book that provides just what the subtitle says it will. This was the first read of my summer this year. It gave me a new sense of the sacred as I sat in my backyard, drinking a beer, listening to the wind tickle the leaves of our maple tree, and feeling its breath across my skin.
  • How to Hide An Empire: A History of the Greater United States, by Daniel Immerwahr 🌟
    So what do you know about how the United States conquered its territories (Puerto Rico, etc.) and dominated the globe? Not enough is what. Read this one to learn more.
  • How The Irish Saved Civilization: The Untold Story of Ireland’s Heroic Role from the Fall of Rome to the Rise of Medieval Europe, by Thomas Cahill
    This one had been on my To Read list for decades before I added it to my Audible library this summer. I listened to it while carting students around Vermont. I’m glad I read it, but you probably don’t need to.
  • JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters, by James W. Douglass 🌟
    A good friend recommended this one while we debated the take on the Kennedy Assassination presented in Real Enemies. This book reveals a lot of information I hadn’t known, specifically the secret interactions Kennedy had with Kruschev and Castro, all in the hopes of peace. His move towards a common peace is “why he died and why it matters.”
  • The Stranger in the Woods: The Extraordinary Story of the Last True Hermit, by Michael Finkel 🌟
    This read like a great, extra-long magazine article. The hermit, Christopher Knight, lived for nearly three decades within a mile of a bunch of summer homes on North Pond in Maine, but he only spoke to humans twice during his self-exile. He did, however, burgle those homes a lot.
  • A Human History of Emotion: How The Way We Feel Built The World We Know, by Richard Firth-Godbehere
    I was excited by this popular introduction to “the growing discipline called the history of emotion,” which “tries to understand how people understood their feelings in the past.” While I found some nuggets, the book eventually bogged down. The later chapters feel like a checklist designed to get us into the modern era.
  • The Gus Chronicles: Reflections From An Abused Kid, by Charles D. Appelstein
    We were assigned this reading at my job this year. The Gus Chronicles is a fictional memoir of an abused kid at a residential facility. The main character is a composite of my students, and almost every page gave me something new to think about. But if you don’t work with this population, you’ll probably get bored by the author’s attempts at cleverness.
  • Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain, by Lisa Feldman Barrett 🌟
    One of my former colleagues gave a presentation highlighting “the lizard brain.” I’d known for a while that the theory of “the triune brain” had long been discounted, but I didn’t have a clear understanding of today’s more scientific understandings. This book gave a good introduction.
  • Lakota America: A New History of Indigenous Power, by Pekka Hämäläinen 🌟
    This fantastic look at the Lakota perspective on North American history demonstrates that former European colonists were not the dominant civilization on the continent for much of our history.
  • Yearbook, by Seth Rogen
    A fun memoir where the audiobook was recorded, in part, like an audio play with different actors performing different voices. Because I’m a sucker for Seth Rogen’s “fuck it” sensibility, I enjoyed this series of stories from his life. They generally circle around (surprise, surprise) his relationship with drugs. It didn’t include nearly enough Hollywood gossip, but each story was strong enough on its own that I didn’t much care.
  • Index, A History of the: A Bookish Adventure from Medieval Manuscripts to the Digital Age, by Dennis Duncan 🌟
    Another book appearing on many Best of the Year lists, Index, A History of the doesn’t attempt to be more than it says it is, but it is more fun than you’d expect. Duncan makes each chapter compelling, and the indexes at the end are, as you might imagine, a vital part of the work.

Best Graphic Novel

Penultimate Quest

By Lars Brown and Bex Glendining with John Kantz

I picked this one up thinking it would be little more than an adult-appropriate Dungeons & Dragons-themed graphic novel, but it turned out to be much deeper than that.

The characters in the book experience a quasi-Groundhog Day existence. There’s a never-ending dungeon with monsters, treasures, and a tavern where they can celebrate their victories. If they die, they return to the start of the dungeon. However, the stakes of their existence are nil, and after several adventures, they question their purpose.

The sections in this omnibus take each character’s story deeper, revealing that there is more to this adventure than meets the eye.

Note the man in the Hawaiian shirt and sandals. This ain’t a normal fantasy tale.

I’m selecting it as my favorite graphic novel of the year because the omnibus surprised me so much. I generally had no idea where each story was going.

Runner Up: The Arrival, by Shaun Tan

This wordless graphic novel tells the story of a man who leaves his family behind in a dangerous country so he can make a start for them in a new land. Its use of “gibberish” symbols for writing and language, its otherworldly architecture, its alien food, and its alien creatures capture (I have to assume) the isolation and out-of-placeness of being an immigrant. By committing to the fantastic elements of his world, Tan makes the immigration story universal, bypassing the prejudices and bigotry that can quickly turn empathy into politics.

All that ever matters.

The art in this graphic novel is (as it must be in a wordless book) stupendous. Every page is a delight, every pencil stroke, every shadow. Next time you’re in a library or killing time in a bookstore, find this one, sit down in a comfortable chair, and allow yourself to arrive in this intimately drawn, strangely familiar world.

The Rest of The Graphic Novels I Read

This list is arranged in the order I read them. Recommended books are starred.

  • Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of the Species: A Graphic Adaptation, by Michael Keller & Nicole Rage Fuller
    One of my colleagues asked me to read this book and decide if it would be appropriate for our students with reading difficulties. The book is more than an adaptation of On The Origin of the Species; it also includes biographical elements and the broader context of the time Darwin worked in. Not a bad read, but definitely too complex for most of my students.
  • Boxers, by Gene Luen Yang 🌟
    A fantastical version of China’s Boxer Rebellion, where a young boy who communes with the ancient Chinese gods leads the Boxers against the foreign devils: the colonialists and the Christians. Unfortunately, many of those Christians are Chinese, leading to severe moral questioning. A fantastic book.
  • Saints, by Gene Luen Yang 🌟
    Picking up with one of the side characters from Boxers, this graphic novel explores the Chinese Christian on the other side of the Boxer Rebellion. More than just a retelling of the first book from a different perspective, however, Saints is a story about loyalty: to one’s people, one’s country, or one’s faith. Another fantastic book.
  • First Man: Reiminaging Matthew Henson, by Simon Schwartz 🌟
    I’d never heard of Matthew Henson. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, this African-American salesclerk worked as Robert Peary’s valet, traveling with him to Nicaragua and, later, on seven voyages to the Arctic. According to Henson, he was the first person to reach the geographic North Pole in April 1909, not Peary (many dispute that Peary or Henson actually got there). As the White leader of the expedition, Peary took all the credit, of course. Though Henson did achieve some level of fame in his later years, he suffered through plenty of lean times. This graphic novel tells an imaginary version of that tale.
  • They Called Us Enemy, by George Takei 🌟
    George Takei is one of country’s more famous individuals. He first gained fame as Sulu from Star Trek. Takei later became an outspoken activist for gay rights and one of the most followed individuals on Facebook. But before that, he was a Japanese-American boy whose family was illegally sent to an internment camp during World War II. In They Called Us Enemy, Takei shares his family’s story.
  • Long Walk to Valhalla, by Adam Smith & Matthew Fox 🌟
    A story about a young man at the end of his rope. He grew up without a mother and with an alcoholic, abusive father and a special needs brother who hallucinates. He meets a young girl who claims to be a Valkyrie who has come to accompany him to Valhalla, but before that, there are a few things she needs him to do. Another book that ended up being more profound than I expected.

Thanks for checking out the books I read this year. I hope you’ve found a few books you can add to next year’s list.

Categories
reviews

The Books I Read in 2021

Every year, I participate in the Goodreads Challenge, where you challenge yourself to read a certain number of books for the year and then track your progress.

This year I set a goal of 35 books. I read or listened to 58.

I usually go through the books one-by-one, but I don’t want to write, and you don’t want to read, an annotated list of 58 books, so this year, I’m going to select my favorites from various categories, then post the whole list.

Favorite Fiction

51342031 SY475

The Ministry for the Future, by Kim Stanley Robinson

Like many dutiful readers of speculative fiction, I’ve read my share of “cli-fi” (i.e., fiction that focuses on climate change). Still, Kim Stanley Robinson’s The Ministry for the Future outshines all the others. 

Several of my friends have read this one, and not all of them were as impressed as I was, but I enjoyed the relationships between the characters, the terrible vision of what’s to come, and the possibilities Robinson comes up with as to how any changes at all will be made to our societies.

If you’re living in the 21st Century, The Ministry for the Future is a must-read.

Favorite Nonfiction

Book Cover

The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity, by David Graeber and David Wengrow

Written by an anthropologist and an archaeologist, The Dawn of Everything re-examines our understanding of humanity’s earliest years in light of the latest discoveries in anthropology and archaeology.

But more than an update on the scientific literature, the book restates the question of our origins. With examples throughout the world, they demonstrate that “There is no ‘original’ form of human society…[and that] as far back as we can trace such things, human beings were self-consciously experimenting with different social possibilities.”

Throughout the book, the authors reveal historical examples of various social structures. They use their findings to build new theories of domination and freedom, exploring how the growth of one led to the protection or expansion of the other, a sociological dance that is still ongoing today.

“What if the sort of people we like to imagine as simple and innocent are free of rulers, government, bureaucracies, ruling classes the like, not because they are lacking in imagination, but because they’re actually more imaginative than we are?”

The importance of this book is not just historical; it shows that, from the very beginning, humans have experimented with their social and political structures and that most changes in those structures were self-conscious. Our world has not always been this way, and this way is not an inevitable conclusion to history. We can, and we have always had, the freedom to change.

Not-so-Quick Note: Graeber and Wengrow put forth two major theories in this book. The first defines the primary forms of freedom.

In the United States, freedom is an empty word used primarily by people on the right to rationalize selfish acts. But Graeber and Wengrow argue freedom boils down to three things:

  • The freedom to abandon one’s community, knowing one will be welcomed in faraway lands
  • The freedom to shift back and forth between social structures, depending on the time of year
  • The freedom to disobey authorities without consequence

For example, most indigenous Americans belonged to a clan whose organization went above and beyond their nation, tribe, kin, or even language. Members of the Bear clan, for example, were welcomed into the homes of other members anywhere on the continent, regardless of language or nation. “This made it a relatively simple matter for anyone disenchanted with their immediate biological kin to travel very long distances and still find a welcome.”

Next, many cultures practiced different social relationships depending on the season. Indigenous Americans on the Great Plains, for example, “created structures of coercive authority that lasted throughout the entire season of hunting and the rituals that followed, dissolving when they dispersed into smaller groups.”

Finally, many “chiefs” we read about in history only held power in their immediate vicinity. If you didn’t want to follow the orders of the chief, you just had to move down the road a few miles, where a chief and henchman couldn’t see you. 

In addition, to reduce the arbitrary violence of a sovereign, most societies “would try to surround the godlike personages of [their] rulers with an endless maze of ritual restrictions, so elaborate that the rulers ended up, effectively, imprisoned in their palaces.”

The second major theory the book makes defines the primary principles of social power:

  • Control of violence (e.g., the state’s monopoly on the use of force)
  • Control of information (e.g., religious and civil bureaucracies)
  • Individual charisma (e.g., “I’m special and deserve to be treated differently”)

Graeber and Wengrow invite us to think of “the secret agent” as the mythic symbol here: “James Bond, with his license to kill, combines charisma, secrecy, and the power to use unaccountable violence, underpinned by a great bureaucratic machine.”

Exploring history using these notions of freedom and social domination helps us understand “where we got stuck,” and invites us to imagine what a different world has actually looked like.

Everyone should read this book.

Favorite Graphic Novel

52079617Paying the Land, by Joe Sacco

This is a nonfiction piece about the history of the Dene people in Canada. It covers a broad scope of history, but primarily focuses on the 20th century, when the Dene way of life in the Northwest territories came into conflict with the extraction of oil, gas, and diamonds. 

It tells the horrid tales of “the residential schools,” whose mass graves of dead children drew the world’s attention earlier in 2021. But it goes beyond that, exploring the rise of drug use and alcoholism among the Dene due to generational trauma and Western imperialist efforts to eradicate an entire culture. 

Sacco’s work in this book is incredible. It’s a piece of in-depth journalism that puts you in the heart of the region while empathizing with the myriad individuals Sacco interviewed and researched for the book.

An absolute must-read.

Favorite Story Collection

40600870 SY475

A People’s Future of the United States, edited by Victor LaValle and John Joseph Adams

Each story in this collection imagines a different future for the United States. Its stories include: 

  • A bookstore that skirts the border between America and California.
  • A country where it is illegal to be non-binary, trans, or gay, to speak a language other than English, to not post to social media, or, really, to be anything other than “fine.”
  • A country where “the strongest military in the world turned on their own people.”
  • A country where librarians are the protectors of magic.
  • An entry in a history textbook about the transition from our current political and social reality and into what comes next.
  • A country where violent homophobia has become the norm (in this country, “Albany had had eighteen homophobic hate killings in the previous calendar year. Better than Buffalo, but then again, Buffalo had a 57 percent unemployment rate”), where the government filters art (the story takes place on the night Prince’s songs are added to the filter), and where “the best we could hope for was to keep our head down and find escape wherever we could.”
  • A country where a plague caused by the Doomsday Virus has taken hold.
  • A country where an unnamed but obvious President Trump is faced with an inter-dimensional time traveler caused by the success of the “MAGA Bomb,” a device which “erased a person’s racial development, resetting their genetic lineage back to their original code, called genetic cleansing.”
  • A country where Americans don’t vote with their hearts or their heads, but their fangs.
  • A country where “the full power of…bioengineering [was] not simply set loose on the world but left in the hands of…maniacal power-hoarding fiends, for them to weaponize and deploy at their will.”

And that’s only the first half or so of the stories in this collection. There’s such an embarrassment of riches in this book that I ended up using it to guide much of my reading for the rest of the year, checking out authors I first discovered here.

Favorite Book Series

Trilogy Cover

The Centennial Cycle, by Malka Older

I discovered Malka Older in The People’s Future of the United States. Dr. Older has a bachelor’s degree in literature from Harvard and  a master’s degree in international relations and economics from the School of Advanced International Studies. Her doctoral work focused on the multi-level governance and disaster responses. Professionally, she works for the School for the Future of Innovation in Society at Arizona State University and was the Head of Office in Darfur. She’s worked in humanitarian aid in Darfur, Sri Lanka, Uganda, Indonesia, Japan, and Mali.

All of which is to say that Dr. Older knows what she’s talking about, and in this near-future trilogy, she puts it all to work. 

In her near-future, most nation-states dissolved and the world is made up of polities of 100,000 people — a centenal. Each centenal votes democratically for a particular party to lead it. Some parties are global, with designs to capture a majority of the world’s centenals and thus open themselves to more power, while others are hyper-local with no intentions of expansion.

Further, a highly regulated version of the Internet aims to be the sole provider of facts and information about the world. It might seem big brother-ish,  but it’s more like one solution to the current pandemic of misinformation. You can think of it as a mix of Augmented Reality, Wikipedia, Snopes, Yelp, and the United Nations.

Each book in the cycle furthers the timeline and the narrative while also exploring the stratification, self-interests, and outliers of Dr. Older’s society.

The result is a cohesive setting and a plot with local and global stakes acted on by interesting characters from diverse backgrounds and with various perspectives and desires. The best kind of page-turner.

The Complete List in the Order I Read Them

(I’ve bolded the books I highly recommend)

  1. Family Tree: Volume 1, by Jeff Lemire and Phil Hester
  2. The Hidden Girl & Other Stories, by Ken Liu
  3. A People’s Future of the United States, edited by Victor LaValle and John Joseph Adams
  4. Ken State: Four Dead in Ohio, by Derf Backderf
  5. My Friend Dahmer, by Derk Backderf
  6. American War, by Omar El Akkad
  7. G.I. Joe: Hearts & Minds, by Max Brooks
  8. Code 7: Cracking the Code for an Epic Life, by Brian R. Johnson
  9. Robopocalypse, by Daniel H. Wilson
  10. Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre, by Max Brooks
  11. Blackfish City, by Sam J. Miller
  12. She Persisted: Harriet Tubman, by Andrea Davis Pinkney
  13. Liquid Reign, by Tim Reutemann
  14. Solutions & Other Problems, by Allie Brosh
  15. Kill Switch: The Rise of the Modern Senate, by Adam Jentleson
  16. The Mere Wife, by Maria Dahvana Headley
  17. The Adoption, by Zidrou
  18. The Sacrifice of Darkness, by Roxane Gay and Tracy Lynne Oliver
  19. The Ministry for the Future, by Kim Stanley Robinson
  20. The Times I Knew I Was Gay, by Eleanor Crewes
  21. Paying the Land, by Joe Sacco
  22. The Damascus Road, by Jay Parini
  23. Piranesi, by Susanna Clark
  24. To A God Unknown, by John Steinbeck
  25. The Silence, by Dom Delillo
  26. Mapping the Interior, by Stephen Graham Jones
  27. Autonomous, by Annalee Newitz
  28. Infomocracy, by Malka Older
  29. Reason, the Only Oracle of Man {or} a Compendius System of Natural Religion, by Ethan Allen
  30. Null States, by Malka Older
  31. State Tectonics, by Malka Older
  32. A Memory Called Empire, by Arkady Martine
  33. A History of the Town of Poultney, Vermont, from Its Settlement to the Year 1875, by Joseph Joslin
  34. A Desolation Called Peace, by Arkady Martine
  35. Germ Warfare: A Very Graphic History, by Max Brooks
  36. The Adventure Zone: Here There Be Gerblins, by Clint McElroy, Griffin McElroy, Justin McElroy, Travis McElroy, and Carey Pietsch
  37. Fake Blood, by Whitney Gardner
  38. Sailor Twain {or} The Mermaid in the Hudson, by Mark Siegel
  39. Templar, by Jordan Mechner
  40. Punk Rock Jesus, by Sean Murphy
  41. Factory Summers, by Guy Delisle
  42. Two Dead, by Van Jensen and Nate Powell
  43. The Girl from the Sea, by Molly Knox Ostertag
  44. A.D.: After Death, by Scott Snyder and Jeff Lemire
  45. The Secret to Superhuman Strength, by Alison Bechdel
  46. Walking Wounded: Uncut Stories from Iraq, by Olivier Morel
  47. That Can Be Arranged: A Muslim Love Story, by Huda Fahmy
  48. River of Ink, by Étienne Appert
  49. Unrig: How to Fix Our Broken Democracy, by Dan G. Newman
  50. Mason & Dixon, by Thomas Pynchon
  51. The Jesuits: A History from Ignatius to the Present, by John W. O’Malley
  52. The Awakened Kingdom, by N.K. Jemisin
  53. Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland, by Patrick Radden Keefe
  54. The Song of Achilles, by Madeline Miller
  55. Blind Lake, by Robert Charles Wilson
  56. The Five People You Meet in Heaven, by Mitch Albom
  57. The Mystwick School of Musicraft, by Jessica Khoury
  58. The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity, by David Graeber and David Wengrow
Categories
asides

Review: ‘The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity’

From Review: ‘The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity’:

[The authors make] the case that the conventional account of human history as a saga of material progress was developed in reaction to the Indigenous critique in order to salvage the honor of the West. We’re richer, went the logic, so we’re better. The authors ask us to rethink what better might actually mean.

One of the authors, David Graeber, wrote one of my favorite nonfiction books, Debt: The First 5,000 Years, and I can’t wait to get my hands on this one.

Categories
reviews

The Hidden Girl and Other Stories

Ken Liu’s The Hidden Girl and Other Stories (432 pages) contains nineteen stories, several of which intersect or (at the very least) occupy the same fictional future. Most of the stories are great, some of them are good, and one of them is downright terrible. If you enjoy speculative fiction, you’ll enjoy Liu’s latest collection, though you too will wonder if the terrible story found its origin in some ill-conceived movie pitch for less than literate producers.

Let’s start with the terrible one, shall we? It’s titled, “Grey Rabbit, Crimson Mare, Coal Leopard,” and it’s a mix between a superhero story and an animal shapeshifting story. The protagonist is a young woman whose family focused all of its resources on helping her rise up from their peasant class to join the nobility, a process that culminates in the great reveal of her inner being, which manifests as a wondrous and powerful animal. Unfortunately, the process does not go as planned, and the young woman walks away from it with the knowledge that she has shamed herself and her family and wasted all of their efforts to help her. Now she and her little brother comb through society’s wastelands, living off the detritus as professional scavengers, rather than walking among the upper classes as a noble creature of power. Until this one day…

I won’t go further into the narrative because the plot is decent and the conceit of Liu’s speculative world intrigues, but I will add that in this one story Liu telegraphs the bigger moments, and he seems to possess low expectations for his audience, explaining thematic intentions and character development the way one might explain them to a conference room full of high-powered, half-listening executives. 

Outside of this one story, however, none of the other eighteen disappoint. Several revolve around the concept of uploading one’s mind to the Internet and the tragedies and victories that might follow. Others explore a future Earth with a transformed climate or alien planets where future Earthlings are trying to find or create a refuge after escaping Earth’s new climate. Some explore the past through different eyes, as in the title story, “The Hidden Girl,” which takes place during the eighth century in China and focuses on a young assassin trained in the art of dimension shifting whose first real target provides her with a moral dilemma.

I enjoyed Liu’s curation of these stories. The interconnectedness of several of them kept me guessing at which ones harkened back to others and which ones stood alone, creating a strange kind of anticipation on the title pages of each story.

This is the fourth book I’ve read by Ken Liu (two of which were written by another author, but which he translated into English). I’d enjoyed all of them thus far, and I was glad to have this latest collection (minus that one story) live up to my expectations.

Categories
reviews

The Books I Read In 2020

Every year, I participate in the Goodreads Challenge, which is where you challenge yourself to read a certain number of books for the year and then track your progress. This year, like in years past, I set a goal of 30 books, and once again, I surpassed my goal.

This year’s list includes more audiobooks than normal, thanks to a walking regimen that saw me walking around five miles a day during the spring and summer of the Covid-19 pandemic. Once the cold weather came, I stopped walking so much, but the school year brought a 30-minute commute (I drive a couple of students to school in the morning like a de facto bus driver), so thankfully, I kept moving forward with audiobooks. 

Anyway, without further ado, here are the books I read or listened to in 2020.

The Legends of Luke Skywalker (433 pages)

I wrote a longer post about this short-story collection back in February, so I’ll just copy and paste some of the general points here.

In STAR WARS: Episode VII: The Force Awakens, Rey says to Han Solo, “Luke Skywalker? I thought he was a myth.” This question became the basis of Ken Liu’s canonical short-story collection, The Legends of Luke Skywalker.

Released during the run-up to the eighth movie, The Last Jedi, Liu’s short-story collection centers on an evening of stories told to the young deckhands of a transport barge making its way across the galaxy to Canto Bight.

These six legends of Luke Skywalker add little to the galaxy of STAR WARS, but they do provide readers with a deeper understanding of what it means to be a Jedi knight and how the Force is interpreted in different ways by the various cultures in the STAR WARS galaxy (much like the diverse cultures on Earth interpret the hard-to-grasp concept of divinity).

I don’t necessarily recommend this book for adults, but if your pre-teen or teenager is a big fan of Luke Skywalker and STAR WARS, this collection of short stories will expand with their understanding of the Force.

We Stand on Guard (168 pages)

Taking place 100 years in the future, this graphic novel follows a small band of Canadian freedom fighters as they defend their country against an invasion by the technologically superior United States.

I loved the concept of the story (as the author of a novel about the secession of Vermont from the U.S., how could I not?), and the artwork bedazzled me, but the characters felt wooden, and in this story of a possible future, the United States acted more like a faceless torturing monster than a complex antagonist with whom the band could grapple. Finally, many of the details of the U.S.’s technology seem ripped from The Empire Strikes Back (with Ottawa standing in for the ice planet of Hoth), limiting the artist’s innovations. 

It’s a short graphic novel, and I was able to read through it in about a half-hour. If you’re able to do the same, you’ll find it a decent read.

The Witcher Saga (2,038 pages)

After watching and loving the first season of The Witcher on Netflix, I decided to dive into the story’s fantasy world by reading the original novels.

Written by Polish author, Andrzej Sapkowski, The Witcher saga follows a genetically-modified monster-hunter-for-hire named Geralt of Rivia. It also follows, and no less focuses on, his sorceress star-crossed lover, Yennefer, and the golden child they’re both sworn to protect, an orphaned princess named Cirilla whose magical elvish blood has been prophesied for generations.

Like the TV series, the books play with the audience’s expectations of time and their understanding of the interconnectedness of causes and effects, and like the series, the novels do not make it easy to understand the political dynamics of this rich fantasy world or the motivations of all the complex characters who inhabit it.

While I enjoyed the saga, Sapkowski’s writing compares unfavorably to other fantasy epicists such as George R.R. Martin, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Ursula K. LeGuin. Sapkowski’s lack of rhythm and deftness could be the fault of his translators, but the five books I read were translated by different artists, and for some reason, I doubt they all experienced the same flaws in their work. I’ve read online that the two short-story collections Sapkowski published before the five-novel saga are much better reads, but I haven’t picked them up.

With that being said, if you enjoyed the Netflix series, I think you’ll enjoy the five books in this series. The characters you met on TV are all here, and Sapkowski takes the story to its full completion, which I think will improve your enjoyment of future seasons from Netflix (the production of Season 2, by the way, has been delayed, first because of the coronavirus and then because of injuries to the main actor).

Verax: A Graphic History of Surveillance in the 21st Century (229 pages)

This non-fiction, book-length comic (i.e., a nonfiction “graphic novel”) tells the story of Pratap Chatterjee, a journalist who dug deep into the role of electronic surveillance in domestic and foreign affairs. We follow Chatterjee as he investigates the complex industrial ties of drone manufacturers, government agents, journalists, whistleblowers, and more, but the crux of the story is the tale of Edward Snowden (one of Snowden’s code names was “Verax”).

The information contained within the comic is frightening, and the decision to tell this story in comic form improves its tale, but the author’s focus on his personal journey gets in the way of the book’s impact. I found myself zoning out whenever the comic became memoir-like rather than straight-style reporting. 

I enjoy reading non-fiction, book-length comics (such as The 9/11 Commission Report), but Verax didn’t do it for me. If the topic of surveillance in the 21st century interests you, you’re better off reading the revelations of Edward Snowden for yourself.

Frogcatchers (112 pages)

The second graphic novel I’ve read by Jeff Lemire, this surreal story captured my attention and held onto it.

A young man wakes up in what might as well be called “Hotel California” but is instead called the Edgewater Hotel. He discovers only one other person in the place, a small boy who seems to know a little bit more about what’s going on but who also doesn’t have all the answers the protagonist seeks.

I don’t want to give away anything more than that, but I will say by way of recommendation that Frogcatchers is, essentially, a quick and insightful sketch into the meaning and memories of a life. I gave it five stars on Goodreads as soon as I finished it. Definitely pick it up if you can.

The Messengers (1 hour, 20 minutes)

This short audiobook, an Audible original, was written by a playwright who received a commission from Audible’s Emerging Playwrights Fund. She penned this collection of interwoven short stories about a decades-long intergalactic war and the messengers who play a part in it.

I enjoyed every part of this audiobook. The stories and characters engaged my imagination, and the production and sound effects added to my immersion into the storytelling.

This was a free story for Audible subscribers, so if you’re already paying them every month, definitely add this one to your queue.

The Origin of Satan: How Christians Demonized Jews, Pagans, & Heretics (240 pages)

Written by Elaine Pagels, one of my favorite authors of Christian history, The Origin of Satan is less a history of the fallen angel and more an explanation of how Christians demonize those who threaten them. 

The history of Christian demonization starts with Christ’s earliest followers thinking their Jewish neighbors were the sons of Darkness. Early Christians were, essentially, a radical Jewish sect, and so the major threat to their safety and their mission came from the Jews who would not join their new movement and from the Jewish leaders who actively worked to erase their gains. The early Christians responded by turning their neighbors and leaders into agents of Satan.

But after St. Paul and St. Peter convinced Christians it was okay to proselytize to gentiles, the threat stopped being their Jewish forebears and instead became the Roman pagans whose influence now ran counter to their Christian mission. Satan shifted his influence from the Jews to the Romans and became the driving force of the Empire’s persecutions of the Christians. The Roman gods of Apollo, Zeus, and the others became allies of Satan, and their followers were those the Evil One had duped and betrayed.

After Rome converted to Christianity, the major threat to its centralized power became the diversity of Christian beliefs one could find throughout the region. The war between Good and Evil shifted to a war between Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy, with orthodox Christians seeing themselves as soldiers of God and the “heretics” as spawns of the Evil One who have come to corrupt the souls of good Christians everywhere.

Pagels writes, “For the most part, Christians have taught — and acted upon — the belief that their enemies are evil and beyond redemption,” and her book lays out a clear argument for why Satan ought to be understood as a sociological phenomenon and not a supernatural entity or force acting upon or within the world.

Exhalation (368 pages)

This short-story collection from Ted Chiang, the author of the short story that served as the basis for the movie Arrival, was a joy to read.

It includes nine stories that use sci-fi and fantasy plots to explore the human condition. There are stories of:

  • time travel
  • anatomical investigations of mechanical life
  • the technologically (and thus, scientifically) proven absence of a free will
  • “The Lifecycle of Software Objects”
  • automatic nannies
  • vast cloud-based video libraries of one’s memories
  • the existential angst of parrots who wonder why humans work so hard to find and communicate with aliens when there is still plenty of intelligent life on the planet they still haven’t communicated with
  • the divine creation of the Earth (as demonstrated by the archaeological discovery of trees without growth rings and men without navels), and
  • ways to communicate across the branching dimensions of the multiverse (and thus learn the outcomes of the roads not taken).

The longer stories are roughly a hundred pages (on my Kindle), while the shorter ones are only a dozen or so. This diversity of length helps keep a reader on edge.

If you enjoy the genre of speculative fiction — the genre of literature that begins with the question, “What if…?” — then Ted Chiang’s stories will definitely satisfy.

The Wild Robot (288 pages)

For the longest time, my daughter refused to read novels with me. She and her mother have read novels together for a while, but with me, she wanted books we could finish in one sitting (actually, she prefers listening to improvised “choose your own adventure” stories from me, but dads don’t always have the energy for improvised storytelling).

This is why The Wild Robot will always have a place in my heart. It was the first novel my daughter and I finished together.

The Wild Robot tells the story of a mechanical creature who is being shipped over the ocean from the manufacturer to the market. The shipping boat sinks, and the creature washes up on a deserted jungle island. Designed to fit into any culture or household, the robot is capable of learning from the lifeforms around it, so it learns from the foxes, turtles, geese, bears, and so much more. At first, the animals shun the robot, but it soon starts to grow on them. It ends up adopting an abandoned gosling, and when it struggles, the other creatures pitch in to help.

Unfortunately, the robot’s past is still out there, and sooner or later, it will come for her.

The book has simple illustrations every few pages to keep the wandering minds of children engaged, but the characters and plot were enough to hook my daughter and me. If you’ve got a young one at home, this one belongs on their shelf.

All Summer Long (176 pages), Stargazing (224 pages), and Snapdragon (236 pages)

These three graphic novels, all enjoyed by my daughter, basically focus on young girls learning what it means to be a friend and the difficulties that sometimes ensue.

All Summer Long focuses on a thirteen-year-old girl whose best friend goes away to summer camp. Stargazing tells the story of two Chinese American neighbors, one of whom sometimes sees celestial beings in the stars. And Snapdragon focuses on a young girl who befriends the town’s local witch.

All three of the books are great. My wife being the awesome mother that she is, we even ate meals inspired by each of the books, and me being the dorky father I am, we even exchanged DMs with the author of Stargazing via Twitter, where we shared a picture of our homemade Chinese dumplings as Nora tried them for the first time.

Island Book (278 pages), The Harrowing of Hell (128 pages), and Rice Boy (548 pages)

Island Book is another incredible graphic novel. Written by Evan Dahm, it tells the story of a young creature who defends her island from a monster, only to have everyone else on the island shun her. She leaves the island to figure out what attacked them and discovers that her island isn’t the only one in the sea, and the others all have life on them too.

This beautifully illustrated book with fantastic creatures and characters reveals an author with a powerful heart. My daughter and I were both so impressed, we ended up purchasing two more books by the same author.

The first, The Harrowing of Hell, is not for children. It tells the story of Christ’s descent into Hell during His three days as a dead man, interspersed with scenes inspired by the Gospels.

In Dahm’s telling, Christ descends, only to be prophesied to by Satan, “Retribution. Incarceration. War. In Thy Name, Jesus Christ. All flesh comes to worship before me…In Thy Death, And In Thy Memory,” and in thanks, Satan offers Christ a crown. Rejecting the offer, Christ struggles with the Evil One and is cast down once more, where He comes before the imprisoned souls of “the first…from the dust…we who disobeyed the First Law…all of our children suffer by our sin…it is as we were told.” Christ offers the first couple redemption, and when they question His power to forgive, he tells them, “The Sons of Man have power on Earth to offer forgiveness.” They reject him, however, choosing instead to remain imprisoned for eternity in their guilt.

It’s a beautiful and harrowing work, and it adds a necessary component to the rich literature of Christian apocrypha, one whose origins can be found in some of the earliest Church communities but whose powerful tale has long been shunned.

Dahm’s other work, Rice Boy, is also powerful, but in completely different ways. My daughter read it before I did, and she seemed to enjoy it while also thinking it rather weird. I feel much the same. It strikes an interesting balance between the child-friendly illustrations of Island Book and the powerful, yet ultimately subversive, themes of The Harrowing of Hell.

With these three works, Dahm may have become my favorite graphic novelist. I’m excited for the May arrival of his sequel, Island Book: The Infinite Land.

Akata Witch (369 pages)

After finishing The Witcher novels and Ted Chiang’s collection of short stories, I decided to start a new series by an author I’d never read but whom I followed on Twitter, Nnedi Okoraphor, Ph.D.

Her Akata series has been called the Nigerian Harry Potter, and while the label is obviously problematic, the story shares with the Harry Potter books a story of a young person entering a life of magical adventure.

I only read the first book in the series because I can’t say I enjoyed it. Elements were interesting, but it was too much of a young-adult novel for me. This is not the fault of the author. I suspect (and the book’s commercial and critical success demonstrates) plenty of people enjoyed it, but after The Legends of Luke Skywalker and The Witcher series, not to mention all the books I read along with my daughter, I may have just been done with young-adult novels for a while.

It didn’t help that, after The Wild Robot, I embarked on the following young-adult novel with my daughter.

The Magician’s Nephew: Book One of The Chronicles of Narnia (171 pages)

C.S. Lewis’s classic, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, may have been the first book written and published in The Chronicles of Narnia, but in the world of the books, The Magician’s Nephew comes first. It explains why there’s a London lampost in the middle of the Narnian woods; depicts the creation of Narnia by the lion, Aslan; looses the White Witch from her native realm and sets her up to become the historic antagonist in Narnia; and inaugurates the Narnian tradition of having a human king and queen rule over the land.

It’s also very much written by a very English gentleman in the middle of the twentieth century. While the excitement of the plot kept my daughter’s attention, Lewis’s vocabulary, grammar, and style proved too challenging for my eight-year-old rural American girl, and she bowed out with only two chapters left in the book, forcing me to finish it on my own.

As I put it back on her bookshelf, I thought to myself, “Another one bites the dust.”

Hiding in Plain Sight: The Invention of Donald Trump and the Erosion of America (320 pages)

Having finished The Origin of Satan as my audiobook, I shifted from the ancient world of early Christianity to the contemporary world of (hopefully?) late-stage Capitalism.

In Hiding in Plain Sight, Sarah Kendzior combines memoir, history, and analysis to tell a three-fold story that explains the current moment. She makes note of the political, economic, and cultural changes that have been wrought over her lifetime (which, coincidentally, is also my lifetime; she’s a year younger than I am) and which laid the grounds for the eventual election of President Trump.

Kendzior is famous for a few reasons. First, she wrote The View from Flyover Country: Dispatches from the Forgotten America, a self-published collection of essays that went on to be named by National Public Radio as a Best Book of the Year.

Second, she was one of the few political pundits who predicted President Trump’s victory in 2016, and her keen analysis made her a desired voice in the days and weeks and months that followed.

Third, she’s one of the co-hosts of Gaslit Nation, a podcast where she and her co-host uses their expertise on authoritarian states (the subject of her master’s thesis and her dissertation, not to mention several scholarly articles and book chapters) to analyze the news and global affairs.

In Hiding in Plain Sight, she shows how her life, the life of Donald Trump, and the economic and political state of the United States at the turn of the second decade of the twenty-first century align. It’s a story of the collapse of a democracy, the enrichment and entrenchment of an elite (and nihilistic) economic class, the decline of journalistic integrity, and the rise of existential despair for so many millions of Americans.

The story is infuriating and scary and doesn’t suggest much hope for America, but for all that, it is absolutely necessary to hear/read.

I wrote to Kendzior on Twitter, “How did you get through even a single take on this without breaking into tears?” She responded, “A few parts were tough going…”

If you read/listen, you’ll understand why

The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir (592 pages)

After listening to Kendzior, I decided to follow up her outsider perspective on Donald Trump and his cronies by reading John Bolton’s memoir of his 453 days as President Trump’s National Security Advisor.

I hesitated before getting this book. Like many people on the left, I first heard of John Bolton  after President Bush named him as our country’s 25th Ambassador to the United Nations in 2005. Bolton had already served in the previous two Republican administrations, first in the Justice Department for President Reagan, then in the State Department for President George H.W. Bush, but when the second President Bush used a recess appointment to make Bolton our ambassador, the Democrats threw a tizzy, bringing his name out of the hallways of Washington and into the living rooms of regular Americans such as me.

Since then, I’ve learned to loathe John Bolton and his leading voice in the neoconservative movement that conquered Republican (and moderate Democratic) politics in the early part of this century, and which reached its apotheosis in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

After serving as the ambassador for four months (because he was appointed during a congressional recess, he had to resign before a newly empowered Democratic majority in the Senate could reject his official nomination), Bolton went on to become a leading pundit for Fox News and the rest of conservative press.

The Room Where It Happened starts with Bolton finding his name on the list of individuals being considered for employment in the Trump Administration. He wouldn’t join the administration until Gen. Michael Flynn’s ignominious removal from the role of National Security Advisor  in February 2016. 

President Trump loved the negative reaction to Bolton’s appointment, telling him, “Some of them think you’re the bad cop.”

Bolton joked that when the president and the NSA advisor work together, the president is always “the good cop.”

The president laughed, “The trouble is we’ve got two bad cops.”

The rest of the book reveals just how terrible President Trump was for our country: his lack of a basic understanding of world affairs, his woeful management skills, his narcissism and delusions, his impulsiveness, etc.

Bolton’s book doesn’t contain a lot of surprises, but it does provide a day-to-day picture of the ineptitude of the Trump Administration. It’s also written by a relatively charismatic writer who is quite sure of himself, and who I’m also quite sure is wrong on most things, which makes for a relatively fun read despite the subject matter directly resulting in the deaths of more than 330,000 Americans, a shameful period of American foreign policy, and the ushering in of what might be the last era of the Republic and/or the American Republican Party.

A necessary read, though if you can find a way to pirate a copy to refrain from putting money into Ambassador Bolton’s pockets, I highly encourage it.

The Starless Sea (487 pages)

In a lot of ways, this book seemed tailored just for me. As the protagonists uncover the mysteries of a secret organization, they are both hunted and led deeper by various factions of that organization. The chase leads them to a fantasy location that combines the wonders of House of Leaves and a vast Borgesian library, a world based on secret doors, time travel, and an endless depth. The tone of the narration strikes a balance between the timelessness of One Thousand and One Nights; a contemporary, casual conversation; and the whimsy of literary poststructuralism. In short, it strikes all the right notes when it comes to my taste in books.

If you share those tastes, give it a read.

Duty (640 pages)

Bolton’s epilogue quotes liberally from Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary at War, by Robert M. Gates. I enjoyed the quote enough to make his memoir my next audiobook. 

Secretary Gates would prefer the world to think of him as the 22nd President of Texas A&M University, but his history of public service goes back to 1966 when he was recruited by the Central Intelligence Agency. He would later serve as a CIA-sponsored officer in the Air Force before becoming an analyst with the Agency. In 1987, President Reagan tried to appoint him as Director of the CIA, but potential questions about his role in the Iran/Contra Scandal forced him to withdraw his name from consideration. President Bush  repeated the nomination in 1991, and this time it passed the Senate. He served until 1993 when voters decided they wanted the Clinton Administration to take over the Executive Branch.

During the Clinton years, Gates found refuge in academia, lecturing at most of the country’s top universities and serving on the board or as a trustee of two more academic institutions, until finally being named the President of Texas A&M in 1999. 

In 2006, after launching two wars and beginning to lose one of them, President George W. Bush nominated Gates to replace Donald Rumsfeld as the nation’s Defense Secretary. Gates had earlier turned down the opportunity to join the Administration as the Director of National Intelligence, but with so many young Aggies choosing to do their duty in the military, he couldn’t stomach the idea of not living up to their ideals, and so against his better judgment, he said yes. 

In Gates’ version of this period of his life, he focused on two major goals: giving his soldiers (and he very much considered them his soldiers) everything they needed to achieve their mission and erasing every penny from the Defense Budget that was not intended to help the soldiers achieve their mission. 

He believes he ignored Washington’s partisan politics as much as any Defense Secretary can without failing at their duty. His faith is supported by President-elect Obama’s decision to ask him to remain in the Cabinet despite the two of them being in opposite parties and sharing very few political values. 

The President had other reasons, of course. It was 2008, immoral financial professionals had just flushed the global economy down the toilet, and the United States was engaged in two wars of counterinsurgency and a global war of counterterrorism. As the new president, Obama needed to focus on the economic crisis, and Secretary Gates had already demonstrated his ability to prioritize the needs of the front line over the needs of some general’s fantasy of a future war. The new president could trust him to work in good faith on the new administration’s priorities, and the Secretary promised that if he wouldn’t do the President’s work, he would be the first to say so.

His unique experience as a Cabinet-level insider in both a Republican and a Democratic Administration makes this political memoir a must-read. You just have to force your way through the Secretary’s myriad references to his preference for red meat.

Like…for real…he brings up his penchant for burgers and steaks a lot.

Between the World and Me (176 pages)

Read by the author, Ta-Nehesi Coats’ epistolary essay, personal memoir, historical analysis, and first-rate journalism makes for an emotionally-charged political denunciation of America’s systemic racism.

As you probably have heard, this short book is written as a letter to Coats’ adolescent son. That framework allows him to tell the story of his life as both a confessional and as an indictment, decrying the racism that has forced him and the people he loves to live a double life, one that celebrates all of their beauty and power while mourning the tragic centrality of racism in American life. 

Having recently finished Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, I thought Coates intended to follow the same structure of Ellison’s bildungsroman (though with none of the latter’s taste for the picaresque), but it seems Coates actually intended to follow the structure of James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time, which I have never read. By all accounts, he was successful.

This book killed me. As I walked the five miles from one edge of my village to the other and back, Coates’ reading frequently brought tears to my eyes. I felt his pain, his rage, his wonder, and his love, and the experience reinforced my sense of this writer’s importance on the contemporary stage. 

Year of the Rabbit (380 pages), A Fire Story (154 pages), and Poppies of Iraq (120 pages)

These three nonfiction book-length comics tell the stories of, respectively, the Khmer Rouge, a Californian wildfire, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq. 

I picked up the first book because I realized this year that I knew little to nothing about the Khmer Rouge, and wanted to correct that mistake. The book covers the real-life escape of the author’s family that began when the artist was just three days old. While there are some examinations of the Khmer Rouge, it’s mostly a vivid depiction of life as a refugee: depending on neighbors, bartering for goods, living in work camps, suffering from hunger, etc. 

Where Year of the Rabbit tells the story of political refugees in Cambodia, A Fire Story focuses on climate refugees in Northern California. A wildfire forced the artist and his wife from their home in 2017. In the days that followed, the Eisner Award-winning nonfiction comic artist went to work capturing the experience in the form he knows best, and he shared it with the world a couple of weeks later. The comic went viral, and then his local radio station turned it into an animated video that went on to win an Emmy. In this book, the artist expands the story to capture not just own his tragedy, but that of his neighbors, providing a fuller picture of the damage wrought by the wildfires. 

Poppies of Iraq was my least favorite of these three. It felt like an unfocused memoir that maybe had something to say, but couldn’t quite figure out what it was. It’s the story of a family of middle-class Orthodox Christians living in Iraq under Saddam Hussein’s regime. The family finally escapes to Paris, where the protagonist doesn’t feel at home. 

I recommend the first two. The last, not so much.

Stitches (329 pages)

This book-length comic memoir was crazy. The artist’s father was a physician in the 1950s who decided to treat his fourteen-year-old son’s health problems with heavy doses of radiation, possibly resulting in the artist’s throat cancer. He undergoes a strange operation, and when he wakes up, he’s mute. 

The story continues with an examination of the artist’s parents, both of whom are incredibly repressed. The story is accompanied by shadowy and surreal images that communicate the emotional tragedy of the household. 

I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and as a teacher, I was aghast, once again, at the horrors that some children call home.

Caste: The Origins of our Discontents (496 pages)

For an audiobook, I followed up Between the World and Me with Caste,  by Isabel Wilkerson. Published in August of this year, Caste demonstrates that the racist policies of the United States are best understood through the lens of caste, rather than race. She compares the experience of blacks in the United States with the Dalits in India and Jews in Nazi Germany.

While I enjoyed the audiobook, I wish I had read it as a regular book because the highlights I would have made would have been really helpful right now. Luckily (I guess), every time something in the book blew me away, I pulled out my phone while in the middle of my walk and texted some version of the passage or fact to a group of friends.

Here are just a few of the items that caught my attention:

  • The reigns of Andrew Jackson’s horse were made from the flesh of indigenous Americans (a fact to which one of my friend’s responded, “Your walks are detrimental to my mental health)
  • In 1921ish, the Supreme Court ruled that a Japanese man with white skin was not white because his blood did not originate in the Caucasus Mountains, thereby making “Caucasian” the intellectual stand-in for white. However, in 1923, when a member of India’s upper caste applied for immigration as a white person since it was common knowledge that the upper caste in India derived from Aryans who had immigrated south from the Caucasus mountains (thereby making the applicant even more Caucasian than the men on the bench whose origins lay in Western Europe), the White justices said no.
  • In the U.S., a member of the dominant caste’s purity could be tainted by one drop of blood from the subordinate caste, whereas in South Africa, a subordinate member’s blood could be cleansed by dominant blood. The resulting South African child would be put in the middle caste, whereas in the U.S., the resulting child would be seen as a member of the subordinate caste, and hence, a slave. South African whites were in the minority, and so they needed more people on their side, while in the US, it was the opposite: Whites held the majority and needed more slaves.
  • For much of American history, the dominant caste of men eliminated competition for their women and, in fact, for all women. Laws and punishments forbade lower-caste men from even showing a hint of interest in dominant-caste women, but the laws also allowed dominant-class men (the ones who made the laws and carried out the punishments) to rape and impregnate all subordinate-caste women. In other words, only dominant-caste men could impregnate dominant-caste women, and dominant-caste men could also rape and impregnate subordinate-caste women. Thus, for most of our country’s history, the dominant gender of the dominant caste controlled the genetic makeup of our citizens.
  • Even though the courts ruled miscegenation laws unconstitutional in 1967, Alabama didn’t officially repeal theirs until 2000 in a public referendum, where 40% of Alabamians voted in favor of retaining them.
  • The Nazis looked to the U.S. as a model for their Nuremberg laws, which resulted in a long debate between the Nazis about how many Jewish grandparents a child needed to be considered Jewish. Their final decision was that three Jewish grandparents made the child Jewish, while two Jewish grandparents opened up the “association” clause, which assigned the child’s ethnicity to whichever culture the family belonged to, Aryan or Jewish). This was a victory for the moderate Nazis at the table. The radical Nazis wanted to copy the United States’ “one-drop” law. In other words, our homegrown racists were more racist than the majority of Nazis.

There’s a lot more to the book. It’s well written, powerfully presented, and thorough in its history and its analysis.

I not only recommend Caste to you, but I endorse it as required reading (or listening).

The Undertaking of Lillian Chen (430 pages)

This graphic novel tells the story of a young Chinese man named Deshi Li whose brother has died a bachelor. In Li’s culture, a man who dies without a wife will be lonely forever in the afterlife, but there’s a loophole: if Li can find a woman who will marry his dead brother and agree to be buried with him, then Li can save his sibling’s fate.

He sets out to bring either a recently deceased female body or an agreeable live woman. Enter Lillian Chen, a young woman who needs money and a way to escape the arranged marriage her father is trying to force her into. 

This was a great story. The characters are rich, the plot feels unique, and the watercolor-style artistry is a feast for the eyes while also serving the story.

The Dreamblood Duology (960 pages)

A collection of two novels, The Killing Moon and The Shadowed Sun, this duology from N.K. Jemisin (who is quickly becoming one of my favorite contemporary authors) explores a fantasy city where dreams have the force of magic and an entire religion has arranged itself around them.

The first novel tells of the Gatherers, a group of priests who are responsible for two things: first, gathering the souls of those who are about to die into the eternal dream of the afterlife, and second, enforcing the moral laws of the society by gathering the souls of criminals while they sleep. 

The novel covers a political conspiracy between the royal house that rules the society and the priesthood, a conspiracy that could result in the end of the world.

The second novel takes up the story a generation after the first, and it expands the scope of the world to include the hinterlands outside of the city and the political opponents who took command of the city in the aftermath of the first novel’s climax. 

I enjoyed the two books (though the second was better than the first), but not as much as I’ve enjoyed Jemisin’s other works. If you’re on the Jemisin train with me, you’ll definitely want to check these out, but if you haven’t gotten on board yet, you’re better off starting with her Broken Earth Trilogy

All The Birds in the Sky (317 pages)

I just said to my wife, “Christ, I just read this book like a month or so ago, and from the title, I have no recollection of it.” But then I read the short synopsis on Goodreads, and boom, it clicked. I’m glad it did because I really enjoyed this book.

This two-pronged story follows two young prodigies from the time of their friendship in childhood to the time of their adulthood when they stand on opposite sides of a growing war. The conceit, however, is that one of the prodigies is magical (she’s a witch) while the other is scientific and technocratic (he’s a mad scientist).

I really, really enjoyed this book. It takes place in the near future, which is always a fun setting for books, and it explores the nature of reality from both a scientific and magical perspective, also a fun theme for books. 

At just 317 pages, it’s definitely a nice one to add to your list. It won a bunch of awards, including the Nebula Award for Best Novel. Again, definitely add it to your list.

Thrawn Ascendency: Chaos Rising (336 pages)

Last year’s reading list included three books about the STAR WARS character, Thrawn, who was created by Timothy Zahn back in the early 1990s as the first entries in STAR WARS’ expanding universe. As I wrote last year, “Once Disney bought LucasArts, they exiled the Expanded Universe from the official timeline, relegating its stories to non-canonical ‘Legends’ to give themselves a blank slate from which to build the Disney version of the STAR WARS galaxy. Some ‘Legends’ characters refused to remain in exile, however, and the entire STAR WARS fandom reacted with joy when…Grand Admiral Thrawn rejoined the canon in the third season of the animated STAR WARS show, Rebels. With Thrawn back in the fold, LucasArts commissioned Zahn to bring the rest of Thrawn’s story into the canon.”

 The trilogy I read last year was more like three separate novels that covered different aspects of Thrawn’s life in the Empire, but this book brings us back to the days and years before Thrawn left his home galaxy, the Ascendency, to venture into the Empire.

This first book in what I will be another trilogy sets the ground rules. It explores how Thrawn’s civilization compares to other civilizations in the chaotic outer regions beyond the rim of the Empire’s “galaxy far, far away.” It continues developing Thrawn’s character, revealing more of his cold, observational mind as well as the emotional aspects of his soul. 

I love the Thrawn novels, and if you enjoy STAR WARS, you will too.

Mother American Night (288 pages)    

My last audiobook of the year, Mother American Night came highly recommended by one of my friends. It is the autobiography of John Perry Barlow, one of the Grateful Dead’s lyricists (he wrote “Cassidy,” “Mexicali Blues,” “Black Throated Wind,” “Estimated Prophet,” “Hell in a Bucket,” “Looks Like Rain,” etc.). But to say that Barlow was just a lyricist is to miss the Forest Gump-like life that he had.

He was also a pioneering thinker of cyberspace (and is directly responsible for the creation of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Internet’s most important defender of digital privacy and free speech), a dedicated Wyoming political activist who once worked for Dick Cheney, a committed acid freak who mentored a teenage John F. Kennedy, Jr., and the man who introduced Timothy Leary to the Grateful Dead. 

The guy seems to have known virtually everyone in the latter half of the twentieth century and he was as equally comfortable getting drunk on his ranch as he was in a conference room with Steve Jobs.

You know those Dos Equis commercials for “the most interesting man in the world?” Well, John Perry Barlow wasn’t fictional. And whether you like the Grateful Dead or not, everyone should know his life.

Black Against Empire: The History and Politics of the Black Panther Party (568 pages)

After listening to or reading a lot of African-American history this year, I decided to end 2020 with “the first comprehensive overview and analysis of the history and politics of the Black Panther Party.”

Reading this work, I continually asked myself why the Black Panther Party for Self Defense was no longer active, and sure enough, the book explains why.

The first thing to know is that the Black Panthers interpreted Black America as a conquered colony within the bounds of the United States, and they found commonalities with the North Vietnamese’s rejection of the American empire. They believed that the police forces in the United States actively worked to keep Black people down, and the Panthers organized armed self-defense to hold police accountable.

Think of the Black Lives Matter movement, except instead of wielding smartphones to record police beatings and murders, the Panthers came to the scene with shotguns, handguns, and assault rifles to defend themselves and their communities from the extrajudicial atrocities of the police.

Did the Panthers fire at the police, killing some of them in the process? Yes. But they did it in response to warrantless invasions of their private property and in response to being physically and lethally threatened by the “pigs.”

The book charts the development of Panther ideology from the influence of Malcolm X through the factional split between Huey Newton and Eldridge Cleaver, the former of whom wanted to moderate the violence of the Black Panther Party and the latter of whom wanted to ramp it up. 

Marxist-Leninist ideology calls for a vanguard of radicals who will lead the masses against the capitalist-imperialist state.  During its heyday between 1968 and 1971, the Black Panther Party was, objectively speaking, the vanguard of the radical left in the United States, and Cleaver wanted to take that even further, believing that the time was ripe for a true revolution, but Newton and the rest of the party leadership recognized that their influence would decline if they ramped up the violence. 

This ideological split doomed the party, as did the Nixon Administration’s capitulations to the moderate left in the early seventies (the ending of the draft and affirmative action, to name two). Of course, the United States’ counter-intelligence operations against the Black Panther Party didn’t help (on June 15, 1969, J. Edgar Hoover declared, “The Black Panther Party, without question, represents the greatest threat to the internal security of the country”).

If you have any interest in 20th century American history, this book is a must-read. The Black Panther Party represents the last credible attempt to revolutionize the United States in a leftist direction. As the authors write at the end: 

“No revolutionary movement of political significance will gain a foothold in the United States again until a group of revolutionaries develops insurgent practices that seize the political imagination of a large segment of the people and successively draw support from other constituencies, creating a broad insurgent alliance that is difficult to repress or appease. This has not happened in the United States since the heyday of the Black Panther Party and may not happen again for a very long time.”

Charlotte’s Web (184 pages)

The final novel I read aloud to my daughter this year, Charlotte’s Web continued to amaze me. I’m assuming you’ve already read it, so I won’t get too deep into it, but I loved White’s depictions of the barn’s downtime and the passing of the days and seasons. It feels so perfectly described.

I’d been trying to read this to the kiddo for years, but it wasn’t until this winter that she finally relented, and once we got a couple of chapters into it, she was hooked. She didn’t have the emotional response to the ending that I was hoping for, but she did enjoy the book…just not as much as I did.

Final Stats for the Year

  • Total Number of Books: 37
  • Total Number of Pages: 12,780+
  • Total Number of Book-Length Comics: 14
  • Total Number of Fiction Books: 26
  • Total Number of Nonfiction Books: 11
  • Total Number of Audiobooks: 8
  • Favorite Nonfiction Book of 2020: “Hiding In Plain Sight
  • Favorite Fiction Book of 2020: “Exhalation: Stories”