March/April books

April 

Hr

Poppet

Author : Mo Hayder
3/5 stars–I like her mysteries a lot. Oddly I tried reading one and couldn’t get through it but have since read four and liked them all. 

 

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A Friend of the Family

Author : Lauren Grodstein
3.5/5 stars–I felt like I had read this before, and also, it wasn’t THAT great. 

 

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Rise and Shine : A Novel

Author : Anna Quindlen
3.5/5 stars

 

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The Never List

Author : Koethi Zan
4/5 SUPER compelling 

 

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The Witness Wore Red : The 19th Wife Who Brought Polygamous Cult Leaders to Justice

Author : Rebecca Musser
3.5/5 stars I wouldn’t say the writing was fantastic or anything but still. Fascinating (and terrifying and rage making) stuff. 

 

Hr

The Circle

Author : Dave Eggers
5/5 stars. Some of Eggers I can never get into (A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius) and some I think are fantastic (Zeitoun). The Circle is funny, wry, smart, and scary. And very, very cynical. 

 

Hr

The Smartest Kids in the World : And How They Got That Way

Author : Amanda Ripley
3.5/5 stars. I wish she had been more critical of some pieces of US ed reform, but an interesting look at three countries. 

 

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The Dinner

Author : Herman Koch
4/5 stars. one of the most genuinely mean books I have ever read. I kinda loved it. 

 

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Firestorm

Author : Nevada Barr
3.5/5. Reread. I love me some Anna Pigeon. 

 

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Hunting Season

Author : Nevada Barr
3.5/5 stars. Ditto. 

 

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I Fired God : My Life Inside—and Escape From—the Secret World of the Independent Fundamental Baptist Cult

Author : Jocelyn Zichterman
4/5 stars. Clearly this was a month of creepy religious cults. I liked this one more than Witness. 

 

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Gone

Author : Mo Hayder
3.5/5 stars. She’s good!

 

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Skin

Author : Mo Hayder
3/5 stars. 

 

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The Best of Us : A Novel

Author : Sarah Pekkanen
2.5/5 stars. VERY light reading…

 

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Missing You

Author : Harlan Coben
2.5/5 stars. Very compelling but not as funny as the Myron Boltair novels and god I wish Coben would stop trying to make A Point in his books. They are for fun, buddy. 

 

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Destroyer Angel : An Anna Pigeon Novel

Author : Nevada Barr
4/5 stars. A new Anna Pigeon is always cause for success even if this is  not my favorite. 

 

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The Twelfth Department

Author : William Ryan
3.5/5 stars. Very compelling and I love Soviet mysteries.

 

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New England White

Author : Stephen L. Carter
4.5/5 stars . Reread but not for years. So good. 

MARCH 

The Cuckoo’s Calling

Author : Robert Galbraith
4/5 stars. This is, in case you have been living under a rock, JK Rowlings mystery series. I quite liked it. 

 

Hr

Good As Gone

Author : Douglas Corleone
2/5 stars. Eh. 

 

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The Heroes of Olympus, Book Four: The House of Hades

Author : Rick Riordan
3/5 stars. Listen I like a little YA fantasy as much as the next person. 

 

Hr

The Baby-Sitters Club #47: Mallory on Strike

Author : Ann M. Martin
2/5 stars. I was housesitting, OK?

 

Hr

The Winter People : A Novel

Author : Jennifer McMahon
2.5/5 decent ghost story.

 

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The Shadow Tracer

Author : Meg Gardiner
3.5/5 stars. Reread. Love her.

 

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After I’m Gone : A Novel

Author : Laura Lippman
4.5/5 stars. It’s not Tess, but I still love Lippman. 

 

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The Good Nurse : A True Story of Medicine, Madness, and Murder

Author : Charles Graeber
5/5 stars. Fascinating and chilling.

 

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In the Blood

Author : Lisa Unger
2.5/5. Eh.

 

Hr

The Ghost Riders of Ordebec : A Commissaire Adamsberg Mystery

Author : Fred Vargas
4/5 stars. Definitely not as good as some Adamsberg mysteries. But still, Adamsberg!

Jan/Feb books–I started using an app to keep track, so the format is weird.

 

February

Five Days at Memorial : Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital

Author : Sheri Fink
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : 576 pages, book

5/5 stars. a fantastic piece of reporting and a devastating indictment of pre and post Katrina incompetence. It’s mostly about whether or not various medical professionals essentially euthanized patients in the hospital, believing that they could not survive. The bulk of the evidence indicates that they did indeed. The defense is that they did what they thought was right. It brings up a lot of fascinating questions about quality of life (though the circumstances to me indicate that even if there was a situation in which nonconsensual mercy killing is appropriate–and I am certainly not saying that there is–this was not it). 

Hr

MaddAddam : Book 3 of The MaddAddam Trilogy

Author : Margaret Atwood
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : 416 pages, book
ISBN : 9780385537834

5/5 stars

I reread, as you will see the below, the first 2 books in this trilogy first and loved them all over again. The conclusion was thrilling and surprisingly funny and deeply disturbing and quite human. 

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The Year of the Flood

Author : Margaret Atwood
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : 448 pages, book
ISBN : 0307398927

5/5 stars

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Oryx and Crake

Author : Margaret Atwood
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : book
ISBN : 0307400840

5/5 stars

Hr

Takedown Twenty : A Stephanie Plum Novel

Author : Janet Evanovich
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : 320 pages, book
ISBN : 0345542908

2/5 stars

Eh.Diverting enough but once you’ve read one you’ve read them all.

Hr

The Orphan Choir : A Novel

Author : Sophie Hannah
Publisher : Picador
Format : 288 pages, book
ISBN : 1250041031

2/5

I have really liked some of Hannah’s previous work, Little Face in particular, but this just fell totally flat for me. I couldn’t follow the plot and the ending was totally disappointing. 

Hr

The Husband’s Secret

Author : Liane Moriarty
Publisher : Penguin
Format : 416 pages, book
ISBN : 1101636238

3.5/5 stars

Stupid cover, but good book. Compelling.

Hr

Going Clear : Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief

Author : Lawrence Wright
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : 448 pages, book
ISBN : 0385350279

4/5 stars. Fascinating examination of Scientology and the cult of celebrity. The beginning dragged a little for me. 

Hr

What the Dead Know

Author : Laura Lippman
Publisher : HarperCollins
Format : 400 pages, book
ISBN : 9780061796784

3.5/5 stars

Not my favorite Lippman book, and there is no Tess. I reread it because the case it is based on–the Lyon sisters from the DC area–had a big breakthrough this month. Remembering the Big Twist didn’t really spoil the book for me, which was nice.

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The Examined Life: How We Lose and Find Ourselves

Author : Stephen Grosz
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
Format : 240 pages, book
ISBN : 9780393240412

4/5

A short, easy to read but lovely look at some of the analyst author’s cases and what they told him.

Hr

Night Film : A Novel

Author : Marisha Pessl
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : 256 pages, book
ISBN : 9780307368225

3.5/5 stars

Really nicely atmospheric. Too many random italics. 

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The Hive

Author : Gill Hornby
Publisher : Hachette UK
Format : 320 pages, book
ISBN : 9781405521062

3/5 stars

Very funny. 

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Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock

Author : Matthew Quick
Publisher : Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format : 208 pages, book
ISBN : 0316221325

3/5 stars

the only book I read at school in January. YA. Good in many places, but overly simplistic. 

Hr

Wild : From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail

Author : Cheryl Strayed
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : 315 pages, book
ISBN : 9780307476074

5/5 stars

I love Cheryl Strayed. This was a reread but I hadn’t read it in awhile. I loved it. 

Hr

The View from Penthouse B

Author : Elinor Lipman
Publisher : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Format : 320 pages, book
ISBN : 9780547840628

4.5/5 stars

Lipman is one of my favorite authors ever. This isn’t my favorite, but I loved it. 

Hr

The Castle in the Attic

Author : Elizabeth Winthrop
Publisher : Random House LLC
Format : 179 pages, book
ISBN : 9780440409410

4/5 stars

I hadn’t read this in years because my copy vanished. Was a favorite  book as a kid. Also loved it this time.

Hr

Reconstructing Amelia

Author : Kimberly McCreight
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Format : 400 pages, book
ISBN : 9781471129445

5/5 stars

Terrific mystery. Very compelling. 

Hr

Drama High : The Incredible True Story of a Brilliant Teacher, a Struggling Town, and the Magic of Theater

Author : Michael Sokolove
Publisher : Penguin
Format : 352 pages, book
ISBN : 9781101632109

4/5 stars

really good nonfiction look at a school and the incredible drama program. 

Hr

Black Skies : An Inspector Erlendur Novel

Author : Arnaldur Indridason
Publisher : Macmillan
Format : 336 pages, book
ISBN : 1250036844

2.5/5 stars

I have liked his books in the past, but I was not so fond of this one.

Hr

Do You Believe in Magic? : The Sense and Nonsense of Alternative Medicine

Author : Paul A. Offit, M.D.
Publisher : HarperCollins
Format : 336 pages, book
ISBN : 9780062223005

5/5 stars

FANTASTIC. 

Hr

Law of Attraction : A Novel

Author : Allison Leotta
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Format : 288 pages, book
ISBN : 9781439195338

2.5/5 stars

Pretty compelling if not super well written.

Hr

Critical Mass

Author : Sara Paretsky
Publisher : Penguin
Format : 480 pages, book
ISBN : 9781101636503

3.5/5 stars

I really like her

Hr

What Do You Buy the Children of the Terrorist Who Tried to Kill Your Wife? : A Memoir

Author : David Harris-Gershon
Publisher : Oneworld Publications
Format : 332 pages, book

A really interesting look at a man whose wife was nearly killed by terrorists and his journey to find out more about their motivations, as well as his eventual meeting with the family. 

Hr

Hitler’s Furies : German Women in the Nazi Killing Fields

Author : Wendy Lower
Publisher : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Format : 270 pages, book
ISBN : 0547863381

3/5 stars 

Turns out women could be just as brutal as men.

What I Read in 2013

I know I forgot some, but hey.

Total: 182, counting YA. Some of these are also rereads (and I read the fault in our stars twice, I see)

I need a better system for keeping track, though! Most of these don’t even list authors and I am way too lazy to go look them up after the fact.

Best fiction: Life After Life, I think. Also loved Mr. P’s 24 hour bookstore and A Week in Winter

best nonfiction: Far From The Tree, Death at Seaworld

best poetry: Against Forgetting

best YA: i don’t know if i read any new YA this year that really stunned me, most were rereads. I did really like Eleanor and Park.

Dec
Sea creatures Susanna Daniel
English girl
Tomorrow
Night is for hunting
Eleanor and park
Other side of dawn
Divergent
Insurgent
Allegiant
The confessor
The very persistent gappers of frip
Death angel
Tangerine
Kill artist
Death in Vienna
Speak of the devil
Discretion

November
As she left it catriona McPherson
Let me go Chelsea Cain
Perfect family Pam Lewis
The beast Faye kellerman
Cartwheel Jennifer Dubois
Claire Dewitt and the bohemian highway
How our lives become stories
Identity and story

Brene Brown

October
Angry management
The interestings
Never go back
Compound fractures
Period 8
Kind of cruel
Storytelling animal
Against forgetting

September
Kisscut
So pretty it hurts
Taken Crais- eh diverting enough
This town
Flora
One of our Tuesdays is missing
The seven basic plots

July
Sisterland- really lovely
Crime of privilege
The storyteller
Guernsey literary and potato peel society
Unseen
The girl in the blue beret- lovely, an ode to resistance
The book borrowers- quiet and unshowy and quite good at friendship- book in book a good touch this time
Far from the tree
Tricksters queen

August
Egypt game
When you reach me- stead
Telling stories
Lokis wolves
The wanderer creech
Found haddix
The gypsy game
The last Olympian
The gift of magic
Island of the aunts
Secret of platform 13
Step on a crack
The fault in our stars
Telling stories
Storytelling for social justice
Always watching Stevens- eh.
The fire witness Kepler compelling
Big trouble
The last word Spellmans- Check-
Loved
Guide to student teaching

June
Broken Wing
Schooled, Gordon Korman- terrific, made the case against context free homeschooling/isolationism; middle schoolers can suck
Bad Little Falls, Doiron
Butchers Hill
Curse of the Spellmans
Secret Asset
Hp dh
Talking to the dead
The day is dark
The fault in our stars
A week in winter- wonderful and didnt want to leave
Here if you need me
Fearless fourteen
Racketeer
Life after life- liked Sylvie til the abortion story – didnt want it to end- small choices, happenstance add up- wanted to know the truth
The innocence game
If you were here
Bad monkey
Shadow tracer

May
Whitey bulgar
The guilty one
Tuesdays gone – called the bad guy
Notorious nineteen
Hunger games trilogy
The woman upstairs
Evil in all it’s disguises
Davidson tide
Tiny beautiful things
Mr penumbras 24 hour bookstore (lovely ode to the mysteries and wonder hidden on the printed page; very funny; very much of its time; interesting use of the real and fantasy)
Chomp
Bright sided
Beasts and monsters
White heat
The boy in the snow
Accelerated
When Captain Flint Was Still a Good man nick dybeck
Chillwater cove

April
Six Years, Harlan Coben
Let the devil sleep, Verdon (liked hero Dave)
People of pineapple place
Making thinking visible
Childism
Dare Me
Death at seaworld
The family man
The burn palace
Running out of time
Insane city
Boy in the water
Silenced (Ohlsson)
The mysterious Benedict society
Perilous prisoner
Monster of the month
Silent to the bone
Don’t go
Twisted
Collages that change lives
Monster (kellerman)
Vengeance
What happened to Sophie wilder
Island of the blue dolphins

March
Dramarama
True diary
Cam post
All of a kind
Running blind
Death and life of great American school system
Lost in school
Shut your eyes tight (verdon)
The nightmare (keplar)
Outrage (indridason)
The Theban mysteries (cross)
Trust me (Abbott)
Lackburg
Next of kin
What’s the matter with white people
Quentins
Detective fiction–PD James
Nights of rain and stars
Mary Oliver–Thousand Moons

February
The Seige (White)
Speaking from among the bones
The one I left behind
How fiction works
China lake
Number the stars
The hours
The playdate
The casual vacancy
Manhunt
When will there be good news
Teaching reading
The betrayal of trust
The hypnotist
The young unicorns
Meet the Austins (car and no seatbelts, ages)

January
Last king of Texas
Devil went down to Austin
No mark upon her
Nicci French land of the living
The way men act
Mean little deaf queer
A kiss gone bad
Cut and run
Size twelve a d ready to rock
Freud for beginners
Charm city
Ariadnes thread
No easy day
The nightmare thief

August books

a bunch of these are ya or middle grade fantasy because i was housesitting for a family with four kids ages 9-16 so i read allllll their books. 

1. Egypt game–obviously a total classic
2. When you reach me, rebecca stead–it was ok
3. Lokis wolves, armstrong/marr–basically a rip off of various current trends in middle grade ya fantasy but nonetheless fun
4. The wanderer, sharon creech –solid
5. Found, margaret haddix–eh. not nearly as good running out of time
6. The gypsy game–a sequel i’m not sure i’d read
7. The last Olympian–the final installment in riordan’s series. i liked it largely because hestia is my favorite goddess. total HP ripoff in parts
8. The gift of magic, lois duncan–hadnt read since i was a kid. i had a very visceral memory of it. love it, especially the surprise ending 
9. Island of the aunts, eva ibbotson–hehe. i loved it!
10. Secret of platform 13, ibbotson–also delightful.
11. Step on a crack, hahn–the mostly middle grade suspense author’s obligatory hitler novel. i hate how it normalizes abuse–the big non hitler villain beats his kids and the totally normal best friends mom hits her daughters with a wooden spoon. sigh. i know i know historical accuracy but i call bullshit. 
12. The fault in our stars–reread before loaning out. i’ve written about this rather a lot.
13. Telling stories–for my thesis. pretty good
14. Storytelling for social justice–for my thesis. excellent. 
15. Always watching, Chevy Stevens- eh.
16. The fire witness, Lars Kepler compelling
17. Big trouble, dave berry–i laughed.
18. The last word, lisa lutz—a spellman novel. i love these.
Loved
Guide to student teaching

July books

I didn’t read much at all in July. I was at school for a week plus, then I came home and cried for four days and did little else. So it’s a very very short list.

 

1. Sisterland- really lovely new book from Curtis Sittenfeld, though never gets close to the highs of Prep and especially American Wife. 
2. Crime of privilege, walter walker–eh. decent novel. not great.
3. The storyteller–Jodi Picoult. wrote about this earlier on the blog. I liked it quite a bit.
4. Guernsey literary and potato peel society–also written about in the Picoult post
5. Unseen, karin slaughter–i always find her books wildly entertaining while i am reading them and then i don’t tend to hang onto them for too much longer afterwards
6. The girl in the blue beret, bobbie ann mason– lovely, an ode to resistance in WWII
7. The book borrower, alice mattison— quiet and unshowy and quite good at friendship. the “book in a book: was  a good touch this time
8. Far from the tree, andrew solomon–masterful. i’m using it for my thesis, and i’ll post that section of the lit review when it’s done. really quite a good piece of non fiction. HUGE. it took me almost a week. it’s very, very dense, and some parts drooped a bit, but overall, quite good.
9. Tricksters queen–tamora pierce–sometimes middle grade feminist fantasy fits the bill.

June Books

1. Broken Wing–welp, i can’t find this on amazon, so i have no idea who wrote it. i liked it ok though, i think.
2. Schooled, Gordon Korman- terrific YA novel;  made the case against context free homeschooling/isolationism; middle schoolers can suck
3. Bad Little Falls, Doiron–compelling mystery.
4. Butchers Hill –Lippman-re-read that I loved
5. Curse of the Spellmans, Lutz–ditto for this
6. Secret Asset , Stella Rimington–not as good as I thought it would be
7. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows–obvs a reread.
8. Talking to the dead, Bingham–I liked this a lot. Nice protag.
9. The day is dark–yet another dark mystery in a cold climate. it was fine.
10. The fault in our stars, john green–wonderful (reread, i did a lot of rereads this month!) i wrote about it here: https://booksarepretty.wordpress.com/2013/03/30/the-fault-in-our-stars/
11. A week in winter, Binchy–her last book.  wonderful and didnt want to leave
12. Here if you need me, braestrup–a lovely, lovely memoir of a UU chaplain for Maine wardens.reread but not for years.
13. Fearless fourteen, Evanovich–reread I think, i needed something after i finished my book and the kid i nanny was still asleep.
14. Racketeer, grisham–compelling enough.
15. Life after life, Atkinson. really fantastic exploration of how  small choices and happenstance add up. i want to write more about this and maybe i will soon!
16. The innocence game, harvey–ok. not great.
17. If you were here, alafair burke–i really like her a lot. this was super compelling, another word i am using too much.
18. Bad monkey, hiassen–not his best but it’s hiassen so obviously it was fun.
19. Shadow tracer, meg gardiner—ever since i read stephen king hyping her years ago i have been addicted. i don’t like her standalones as much as the evan or jo series but i quite liked it despite that. also it was the second cult book i read in as many days. cults, man. always interesting.
20. The woman upstairs, Claire Messud–i really liked this. i know messud gets grief for having an unlikable narrator-but actually, i didn’t find her that unlikable.

Two Holocaust Novels

Recently I picked up the latest Jodi Picoult novel, The Storyteller. I actually am not much of a Picoult fan, but I find her books reasonably compelling–something decent to whip through in a day. the real problem i have is that Picoult always saves One Big Twist, and once you’ve read a couple of her books you can guess the twist.

But anyway, I liked this new book much more than I’ve liked any of her more recent books. (SPOILERS)

i’m going to ignore the parts that felt much more typical–girl meets boy etc, quarterlife crisis, blah blah blah). the part that i felt was an interesting choice on Picoult’s part was to use some of the chapters in a first-world account of being a Nazi. I found this part incredibly compelling. Gut wrenching and rage making and also compelling. There’s also a narrative of a camp survivor, which was exactly as horrifying and depressing and soul-crushing as you expect. Picoult clearly did her research, and there were details in both of these narratives that I certainly was unaware of. So it was certainly not the sort of light reading I associate with Picoult. It was, instead, well….draining. But I want to say that I really respect Picoult for writing such a book. It’s true taht WWII has been written about a lot, but equally true that there are still Holocaust deniers out there, and quite honestly I think it’s a good idea for popular fiction to include descriptions of this atrocity.

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society is a much different book, told entirely through letters–a concept I often dislike–and it is much lighter. Quite honestly it was a relief. Ever since I read the two books I have been super into WWII, and I listened to some podcasts and a book on tape and now I am watching a documentary, and after this this is going to have be it for me for awhile.

I remain fascinated by the complicity of everyday Germans–SS soldiers and citizens–in the wholesale massacre of other human beings. I think this is the part of the Holocaust that we all find fascinating and terrifying, because it gets to the very fundamental question of humanity. As I was reading especially the narrative “by a Nazi” in Picoult’s book I kept thinking that the asshole should just say NO for gods sake, stop being such a horrible person, etc etc. I wish that I could say that I know for sure that I would not have participated. But I can’t know that. I don’t think anyone can. I suppose I am as sure as I could be that I wouldn’t have participated–but I also know that it is impossible to say that completely. You never know, outside of context, what anyone will do. You cannot.  I think that is part of what leaves the Holocaust so full of ongoing mystery. It is so frustrating to listen to the news on any given day and here about the other mass murders still happening; and yet, sometimes it seems as though isolationism vs interventionism will never be resolved. There is a huge part of me that believes firmly that it is totally unethical to just stand by, and for that reason alone Roosevelt will never be a good President to me. And yet we have seen evidence that outside intervention sometimes makes things worse.

Well. I think what we are learning is that I clearly do not have any good, clear answers. Basically, sometimes people are evil, and sometimes people are complicit in atrocities, and sometimes the rest of us have no good options.

May Books

1. Whitey Bulger, Cullen/Murphy a fascinating account from two Boston Globe reporters about that city’s most notorious gangster, who was finally caught and who will be tried this summer. This is a very well sourced book, rich with info and inside info. I loved it. It also made the FBI and Bill Bulger look very, very, very bad.

2. The Guilty One, Ballantyne–a good mystery that wanted to be more than it is

3. Tuesday’s Gone –Nicci French. I dont really remember it except that it captured my attention. All my notes say is that I called the bad guy.

4. Notorious Nineteen, Janet Evanovich. Eh. I mean, these books are what they are, which is diverting enough for a couple hours.

5. The Hunger Games–reread. I really, really like this book and think its the strongest of the series.

6. Catching Fire–still pretty strong.

7. Mockingjay–I still can’t believe she killed Rue. Although actually I think that brutality is a real strength of the series.

8.  The Woman Upstairs–Messud’s new book. Wonderful. Evocative and challenging in all the good ways.

10.  Dark Tide–Davidson–good mystery–excellent atmosphere

11.  Tiny Beautiful Things, Cheryl Strayed. I will post a longer review of this on my blog at some point. If I could give every high schooler one book, it would be this. Luminous.

12. Mr. Penumbra’s 24 Hour Bookstore–a lovely ode to the mysteries and wonder hidden on the printer page. It’s quite funny and very much of its time, with shouts outs to the market collapse, google…also an interesting use of the real and the fantastical.

13. Chomp–Carl Hiassen–i was in the mood for Hiassen but I’ve read all of his adult novels a zillion times.

14. beasts and monsters–the new denise mina–great as always.

15/16. White Heat/The Boy in the Snow–wonderfully atmospheric mysteries starring a woman who lives in the Arctic. It was a little weird at first reading all about how eats a lot of blood soup and walrus flipper and such but also fascinating. The atmosphere is definitely the biggest draw here though the mystery is quite compelling in both novels (the second of which is set in Alaska). Also a bit of a critique on the vanishing Arctic.

17. When Captain Flint Was Still a Good Man, Nick Dybeck–a suspenseful morality tale. I mostly liked it, but the ending made me angry. Not an unreliable narrator exactly but not one I’d want to be friends with. Ever.

18. Accelerated,Bronwen Hruska– basically a cautionary tale, if a well-written and engaging one, about giving ADD meds to kids. Imagines a whole conspiracy with devastating results. I had mixed feelings. I am definitely a fan of giving meds to kids who legit need them, whether its for cancer or ADD or a headache. I am also definitely NOT a fan of overmedicating kids or of medicating kids who don’t need it. I think that in my hippie ed circles people can conflate any medicating with overmedicating, which is a dangerous mistake to make. So..hmm. Amusing as a book, and it did make me think about the ways in which we shortchange especially boys in the classroom.

19. Chillwater Cove, Thomas Lakeman. A very competent mystery.

 

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Bright-Sided

(xposted Wild/Precious)

You know what bugs the ever living hell out of me?

Pseudoscience. Pseudoscience bugs the ever living hell out of me. The fact that every single day my facebook feed is filled with stuff and nonsense for which no empirical evidence exists–vaccines cause autism! not eating gluten will cure depression! antioxidants will fix your cancer!–bugs the ever living hell out of me.

Barbara Enrenreich’s Bright-Sided, which I cannot believe it has taken me this long to read, is essentially a giant debunking of another kind of pseudoscience: the power of positive thinking.

I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking, well, positive thinking HELPS US! It helps us to be healthier and strengthens our immune systems and that which does not kill us makes us stronger so slap a colored ribbon on your car and lets run a 5K!

God that bugs me.

Ehrenreich’s book, which I tore through in an afternoon, includes a fantastic exploration of the history of positive thinking, which rose, essentially, in objection to Calvinism–I agree constantly monitoring yourself for sin to see whether you are predestined to burn in hell seems a perfectly dreadful way to live. I am just not sure that replacing with the constant self-monitoring for negative thoughts is a whole lot better. A little better, but not a whole lot. And as Ehrenreich shows, there are a lot of parallels between Calvinist thinking that you ought to cast out the sinners from your life and the exertions of positive thinking gurus to stop associating with negative people–even if they happen to be, say, your spouse. There’s a lot of what she calls (heehee) “inescapable pseudoscientific flapadoodle” inherent in much of the guru-led nonsense, like The Secret and its ilk. Tell me “inescapable pseudoscientific flapadoodle” is not the exact phrase you have been searching for to explain your facebook feed!

I’m not even going to try to explain all of the ways in which Enrenreich disproves the various IPFs, but I will say that she provides some damn compelling evidence that America’s over-reliance on positive thinking–with its genuinely fascinating historical and religious roots–contributed significantly to the economic collapse. This is one of the more interesting chapters in a text where no chapter disappoints. For me, though, the highlight was the chapter on cancer. Enrenreich, who had breast cancer, talks about the pervasive belief that getting cancer was somehow a Good Thing: it was meant to happen! It would lead her to better things! She could get a pretty wig and a free makeover! She should look at cancer as an oppurtinity to find her true self!

Well, if you will pardon my French, bullfuckingshit. As Enrenreich discovered, this relentless focus on positivity actually meant that she, and other patients, didn’t have a chance to think critically about treatment options–which in the world of cancer, where chemo can hurt as much as heal, is pretty damn critical. It made it hard to pull out important information from malarky.

America has some weird strains running through it. One of these is our idea that if we just work hard enough we can all become President, or at least a ballerina. This is garbage and we should really stop saying it. Yes, you can achieve a lot of wonderful and amazing things with the right amount of determination–if a lot of other factors are also present. I can dream lots and lots of things. I can do very few of them. This is not a defeatist attitude. This is an attitude that reflects reality. This is part of why I think social programs can be so hard to get through politically–a strain of America believes that people don’t need the government to help them, because if they just worked hard enough, they wouldn’t need health care because they wouldn’t get sick, and they wouldn’t need federally funded early childhood education because they’d make enough money to send their kids to the 30K a year preschool down the road. Again, this entire notion is garbage. That’s not to say that having goals and sticking to them and working incredibly hard and paying your dues are not all important. They are tremendously important. It’s just that in addition we have this thing called reality, and the fact is that there are people for whom the deck is stacked right from the beginning, and for those people the traditional American dream requires more than hard work. It requires luck and help. This is true for everyone, actually, its just that its infinitely truer for some than for others.

So there’s that, and related to that I think is our idea that wishing can make it so. That if we just will ourselves to get better, or assume that we got sick or hurt or poor for a reason, we can Make Something Of It and Come Out Stronger and whatever other cliches you want to throw out there. This is nonsense. I can tell you right now that struggling with chronic depression does not make me a stronger or better person, or more in touch with reality. It makes it harder for me to do the things I want to do. That’s it. Having cancer did not make my father stronger or better or wiser. It meant that he had to go through a lot of pain. That’s it. Sometimes there is no deeper meaning.It is tantalizing to believe that there is.  I get that. I wish that having had depression brought me some sort of special powers of empathy or clarity or artistic talent. But sometimes shit just happens. Oftentimes that shit does not make us stronger or better or wiser. Suffering is part of the human condition, but that doesn’t mean we don’t get to be angry about that suffering. If you have cancer, if you are dirt poor, if your parents beat you, it is okay to wake up in the morning and curse the universe. The universe can take it. The universe is not going to turn into a spiteful third-grader and smite you for cursing it. Some things are not fair and some things never will be. Sometimes there is nothing the fuck up with that.

This isn’t to say that science knows everything. It doesn’t (scientists would be the first to admit that). There are not explanations for everything. There are lots and lots of things about the universe that we don’t know and probably never will. But science is and remains the best way we have to measure actual truth. Actual truth, in the way I am thinking of it, is different from your own truth; actual truth is, say, evolution, or gravity, or the way that the earth is round. You can have all sorts of truths of your own, things that you believe way into the fabric of your gut. You should have those things. It’s just that those things are beliefs. They are not fact. And there are all sorts of things we will discover that may well change the way we currently conceive of the world; chemicals that we think are safe now may prove not to be, for example. Actually I think we can all agree that’s going to happen. But we have to do the best that we can with the science and the facts and the medicine that we have now. I am not going to try to repeat the ways in which the book refutes various studies on happiness but if you are into science I suggest it.

Ehrenreich is not suggesting that we suddenly start looking at the world with mud-colored glasses–in fact, as she points out, depressed folks tend to do just that and it is certainly no healthier than unrealistic optimism. Rather, she is suggesting that perhaps we look at the world as it really is. That we use critical thinking skills–those of us that were lucky enough to learn them in school, and I am not being remotely snarky here–and reality testing and evidence based claims to decipher our world. As she says, “the alternative to both [overly pessimistic or optimistic thinking] is to try to get outside of ourselves and see things ‘as they are’ or as uncolored as possible by our own feelings and fantasies, to understand that the world is full of both danger and opportunity–the chance of great happiness as well as the certainty of death” (Ehrenreich p.196).

So if you are diagnosed with breast cancer and it makes you feel better and more able to face the day and make informed decisions about your own health care to fill your room with pink ribbons, go for it. Just don’t expect it to cure you. It will not.

April 2013 Reads

1. Six Years, Harlan Coben–I like Coben, though I think that we should stop pretending his books generally have Bigger Meanings. they are ripping good mysteries, and that is enough. The Boltair books are my fave though and this alas isn’t one.
2. Let the devil sleep, Verdon–I really like the hero of this series
3. People of pineapple place –a YA novel that I grabbed to read in the bath; one of my favorites as a kid and one of my favorites as a grown up.
4. Making thinking visible–a textbook about making thinking visible, duh. here is a prezi i made about it that explains the concepts better…
5. Childism –one of the most important books i’ve read. here is my annotation.

6. Dare Me–Megan Abbott-eh. I liked it OK, but I didnt love it.

7. Death at seaworld –fantastic. i wrote about it earlier.
8. The family man –elinor lipman, who is one of my all time favorite people. re-read. i love her books and i think this might be favorite. i could read her all day.
9. The burn palace –Stephen Dobyns–Dobyns wrote one of my favorite creepy books, Church of Dead Girls, and this is also excellent though not quite as good. Creepy and freaky in all the right ways.
10. Running out of time-Margaret peterson haddox–re-read of a YA book that I always liked. I often grab these to read in the bath if I am between adult books!
11. Insane city –Dave Barry-fun and funny.
12. Boy  in the water –Dobyns–an older book of his. Good, not as good.
13. Silenced (Ohlsson) –great mystery
14. The mysterious Benedict society –this and the below are both YA books that I really enjoyed
15. Perilous prisoner –see above-sequel
16. Monster of the month-YA in the bath AGAIN! sheesh
17. Silent to the bone –in honor of the author E.L. Koenigsberg, who died this month.
18. Don’t go–lisa scottoline–definitely not her best at all. I feel like she was trying to write a Serious War Novel and she should stick with her fairly lighthearted and funny legal thrillers.
19. Twisted –Kellerman–eh. fine.
20. Colleges that change lives–for the hell of it. its always interesting to see whats out there.
21. Monster (kellerman)–eh. fine. again.
22. Vengeance–Benjamin Black–I liked this one.
23. What happened to Sophie wilder–terrific. here is my review.
24. Island of the blue dolphins–Scott O’Dell. such a classic. i hadnt read it in a zillion years and I was glad to remember it!