I did not read as
much as usual last year. To be honest, I struggled with my phone and all of its
lures: your adorable kids on Facebook; dogs in costume on Instagram; the
endless rabbit hole of Twitter; and Snapchat? I still don’t understand its
appeal, but I am certainly not going to pass up an opportunity to decorate a
photo of myself. I find that those things pull me and pull me, and a whole pile
of my reading time was lost in those mindless ventures.
The question is,
of course, whether I want to continue reading this way, or if I should make
myself become more intentional and focused. I have always said that reading should
not be a grim task, full of rules and requirements. But the internet is my
candy corn, straight sugar to the brain. I always feel gross after I
consume it.
This is not to say that I didn't read some fabulous things over the last twelve months. I don’t have an
easy-to-rank list of favorite books from 2018, so this will not be a
straightforward Top 5. Instead, I will follow the lead of one of my favorite
reading rituals (on the internet! Ack!): A Year in Reading from The Millions. In that feature, authors talk about their reading adventures over the
course of the year. Many of them bring their most pretentious reader selves to
the task, leaving me to wonder, “What did you read in the bathtub? Certainly
not the snooty stuff you list here.” But each entry brings the possibility that
I will find a new title or author or perspective.
When I look back
at my own list, I am most struck by the nonfiction. Educated by Tara Westover was
fantastic, in part because of its novel-like accessibility, but also because of the
questions it raises about the American mythology around pulling oneself up by one’s
bootstraps. Westover grew up isolated in a very religious family, enduring restriction and abuse. What made it possible for this kid to transcend her difficult
circumstances, finding her way to an intellectual life? Was it something about the kid or the circumstances? Two other books I read also grappled with schooling. The Class: A Life-Changing Teacher, His World-Changing Kids, and the Most Inventive Classroom in America
by Heather Won Tesoriero and Ghosts in the Schoolyard: Racism and School Closings on Chicago's South Side by Eve Ewing ask us to consider how and when
and for whom formal education is a pathway to power. Those two books were
particularly interesting to read back-to-back, with Ewing’s discussion of
structural racism in Chicago suggesting all the unspoken variables that might have led affluent Greenwich High
School’s acclaimed science research program to become so special. (In other words,
was it just a “life-changing teacher?”) And finally, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City by Matthew Desmond asks us to
consider the way that our housing polices might further exploit an existing economic divide. The narrative style of his
reporting makes this a particularly compelling read, especially if you are
looking for a gut punch. Maybe that should be a new genre category: The Gut
Punch.
I did manage to recover from the gut punching with some great comedy this year. The Shakespeare Requirement by Julie Schumacher was probably the book I enjoyed the most this year. I’m
a sucker for academic satire, and this one hit all the right notes for me. I’m
not sure if you need to be part of the academic world to enjoy it, but if you
are or ever were, this short novel reveals every absurdity. I also loved – and
was surprised by – Sourdough by Robin Sloan. I wouldn’t ordinarily gravitate
toward a book about magic bread, but this
comedy-skewering-foodie-culture/dystopia-in-which-disruptive-technology-runs-amok
was a true treat.
And finally, my
reading comfort comes from family dramas, and 2018 offered no shortage of
those. The most compelling was probably Behold the Dreamers by Imbolo Mbue. The novel follows two families on the eve of the 2008
financial collapse. One is an immigrant family awaiting asylum and the other is
an affluent family whose husband/father works for Lehman Brothers. The story
explores the idea of the “American Dream” and asks whether it’s attainable (and
at what cost). A Place For Us by Fatima
Farheen Mirza also scratched my family drama itch. In some ways it’s a middle
class drama about parental expectations. In other ways, it’s a specifically
cultural story about being Indian and Muslim in America. And finally, Pachinko
by Min Jin Lee came to me as a surprise. I’m not usually attracted to sprawling historical
fiction, but this account of a Korean woman in Japan over the course of the
twentieth century was unusually captivating. Plus, it pushed me to think about
the economic forces and racist systems that impact an individual’s autonomy,
both in this historical context and generally.
I’ve already
finished my first book of the new year (Our Towns: a 100,000 Mile Journey Into the Heart of America by James Fallows and Deborah Fallows). And I’ve started my
second (Unsheltered by Barbara Kingsolver).
I’d love to hear from you all about what you enjoyed in 2018 and what
books you’re looking forward to in 2019. Also, how do you stay off your phone?
Can you resist the cute animals in costume?
2 comments:
I love this! Thanks for some good ideas for my list this year. My fave book from last year was Born A Crime by Trevor Noah. It's his life story growing up mixed race in South Africa during apartheid. It's eye-opening and witty! I listened to it on audible which I totally recommend because he's the narrator...so he speaks the story in his words, from his perspective and makes the comedic parts flow and hit you as they're meant to. His life story is incredible and told in an extremely entertaining way.
Thanks, Anonymous! I have been meaning to read that one, and the audio suggestion is fantastic. I really like his standup specials on Netflix -- even more than his work on the Daily Show.
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