Pure Colour, Sheila Heti

I’m weirdly obsessed with Sheila Heti, because I think she does some really unique and fascinating things with voice. I can’t even really assess if I like her books (I think I mostly don’t?) because I’m just so mesmerized by the total strangeness of them — how it’s impossible to tell who is speaking, andContinueContinue reading “Pure Colour, Sheila Heti”

Human Nature: 9 Ways to Feel About Our Changing Planet, Kate Marvel

I finished this over a month ago but we didn’t have our book club discussion about it until this week, and I was a little distressed by how much of the book I’d forgotten — one person in book club said that part of what the book does for him is that it arms himContinueContinue reading “Human Nature: 9 Ways to Feel About Our Changing Planet, Kate Marvel”

The Frog in the Throat, Markus Werner, tr. Michael Hoffman

A fun version of the unlikable male complaint novel — here bifurcated into twin monologues, the frustrations of a middle-aged, disgraced politician and his annoyed farmer father. Absorbing and amusing, and the two voices are wonderfully distinct (credit to Michael Hoffman, who is a terrific translator) and contrast in interesting ways. The ending disappointed meContinueContinue reading “The Frog in the Throat, Markus Werner, tr. Michael Hoffman”

Palaver, Bryan Washington

Read this cover to cover on a flight with great pleasure. Like his other novels, it’s a tender, gentle story of people nursing various harms and finding ways to come together. What I always find so moving in Washington’s work is how beautifully it portrays love, not as an exclusive claim or demand, but asContinueContinue reading “Palaver, Bryan Washington”

A Marriage at Sea, Sophie Elmhirst

I have no idea why this was the year that I read all the stuff that was on Best Of lists. It’s not a thing I usually do, but somehow they were all readily available as audiobooks from the library, so I just… did. And honestly, it mostly confirmed my suspicion that these lists areContinueContinue reading “A Marriage at Sea, Sophie Elmhirst”

The Long Form, Kate Briggs

Look, we all knew I was gonna love this novel — a fragmentary novel about a new mother adjusting to life with a baby and reading Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones and thinking about narrative and time. I mean, come on. Though the novel arguably has broader appeal beyond its ostensibly niche audience, that niche audienceContinueContinue reading “The Long Form, Kate Briggs”

Mother Mary Comes to Me, Arundhati Roy

A lot of books you see on the Best Of lists don’t live up to the hype, but this one really, really does. What a remarkable woman, what a remarkable life. Both Arundhati Roy and her mother. And how skillyfully she recounts their complicated personalities and interactions. When I read Azadi a few months agoContinueContinue reading “Mother Mary Comes to Me, Arundhati Roy”

Is This Thing On?

I was thinking, as I left the theater, that I would love to see a list of movies that involve stand-up comedy, and perhaps especially, most interestingly, stand-up that isn’t especially good, but also isn’t bad. There’s something really intriguing to me about staging an intentionally so-so comedy performance. It seems like an art formContinueContinue reading “Is This Thing On?”