Categories
True Story

Nonfiction for Hispanic Heritage Month

Happiest of Fridays, nonfiction friends! We are in Minnesota’s beautiful, brief season of “second summer,” which means I’m wearing hooded sweatshirts with sandals and trying to soak up the fact that we still have a few hours of sunlight after work.

This week I’d like to share some recent books to help recognize Hispanic Heritage Month, which is celebrated September 15 – October 15 each year. Although the name of the month is problematic, it’s still a good excuse to celebrate nonfiction by Latinx authors and storytellers. Here are a few recent-ish gems:

book cover an african american and latinx history of the united stats by paul ortiz

An African American and Latinx History of the United States by Paul Ortiz

This book offers a revolutionary history of the contributions African American, Latinx, and Indigenous people have made to the history of the United States. By looking at history through those stories, the book “transforms US history into one of the working class organizing against imperialism.” This book is part of Beacon Press’s amazing Revisionist History series, which I just love.  

Ordinary Girls: A Memoir by Jaquira Díaz

Jaquira Díaz grew up in housing projects in both Puerto Rico and Miami Beach, trying to balance her family’s disintegration (and her mother’s schizophrenia) with the connections she felt with her friends. Her story explores sexuality, mental illness, sexual assault within the context of trying to understand Puerto Rico’s colonial history and one girl’s place in it. This one is really beautiful!

book cover the hispanic republican by geraldo cadava

The Hispanic Republican: The Shaping of an American Political Identity, from Nixon to Trump by Gerardo Cadava

When it comes to politics and political prognostication, it can be easy to lump entire groups of people into a single type or voting bloc. In this book, a Northwestern University professor explores how some Hispanic Americans have impacted national politics since the 1960s, particularly after being courted by Republicans during the Cold War. He also looks at how different cultural identities within the Latino community affect voting patterns.

book cover undocumented by dan-el padilla peralta

Undocumented: A Dominican Boy’s Odyssey from a Homeless Shelter to the Ivy League by Dan-El Padilla Peralta

Dan-El Padilla Peralta came to the United States with his family, seeking medical care for his mother. When their visas ran out, his father returned to Santo Domingo while Peralta and his mother remained in New York City. This memoir is about his experiences growing up homeless, getting a boost into private school, and navigating his dual life between Harlem and Manhattan as an undocumented immigrant.

Finding Latinx: In Search of the Voices Redefining Latino Identity by Paola Ramos

One of my favorite nonfiction storytelling techniques is heading out on a road trip to gather stories from people around the county as a way of exploring big and complicated questions. In this book, journalist Paola Ramos sets out to understand how people define the term “Latinx” – particularly those who have been overlooked when we think about Latinos more generally. It’s a big group, and the stories she gathers are very moving. 

Weekend Reading

I’ve felt overwhelmed and scattered lately, which reminded me of a book that’s been on my TBR for a couple of years – How to Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy by Jenny Odell. The book is about how to live in a world where “technology is designed to buy and sell our attention,” and our worth is determined by how productive we are. Odell argues that we need to protect our attention as our most valuable resource and connects this way of being with larger and more radical forms of political action. I am here for all of that.


For more nonfiction reads, head over to the podcast service of your choice and download For Real, which I co-host with my dear friend Alice. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @kimthedork. Happy weekend! 

Categories
True Story

Emmy Winners and Big Book Deals

Happy Friday, nonfiction fiends! I have spent much of the last week assisting my amazing family with a badly-needed bathroom renovation project. We’re right in the messy middle of painting and cleaning, but the end is in sight thanks to my supremely dedicated parents who will be visiting us again this weekend to put everything back together again. 

Thanks to the project I’ve been doing very little reading of books or articles online, but I still have some interesting nonfiction-related news to share this week. Let’s get to it!

cover of Misfits: A Personal Manifesto by Michaela Coel, blue with white and gold font

Author and TV star Michaela Coel won an Emmy! She made history as the first Black woman to win an Emmy for Outstanding Writing for a Limited Series, Movie, or Dramatic Special for her comedy-drama series I May Destroy You. Her first book, Misfits, came out just a couple weeks ago. The book is an adaptation of a speech Coel gave at the Edinburgh International Television Festival back in 2018. Congrats, Michaela!

The longlists for the National Book Award have been announced! The 10-book lists will be narrowed to shortlists on October 5. The winners will be announced during a live ceremony on November 17. The nonfiction list is awesome, with heavy-hitters like How the Word is Passed by Clint Smith, as well as lesser-known titles like Covered with Night by Nicole Eustace. This is one of my favorite book awards, so I can’t wait to see what moves on!

Historian Martha S. Jones has signed a four-book deal with Basic Books. The first book, still untitled, will be an exploration of the history and legacy of slavery’s sexual violence. The linked article from the New York Times is a fascinating interview where she discusses the role of historians and how she’s connecting her family history to her writing. Jones’s latest book, Vanguard, was a look at the political history of Black women that “challenged popular narratives of the suffrage movement.”

And of course I have an Elizabeth Holmes trial update this week, former Defense Secretary James Mattis, also a former member of the Theranos Board of Directors, testified about his experience with the company. Mattis invested $85,000 with the company, but eventually started to question the efficacy of the technology. Mattis is the seventh witness to be called in the trial.

Weekend Reading?

book cover of the sum of us by heather mcghee

I’ve been on a real fiction kick lately, but the National Book Award announcement has inspired me to pick up a book on the longlist that I started earlier this year, The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together by Heather McGhee. In the book, McGhee looks at how racist ideas impact the American economy, leading it to fail the public in significant ways. There’s a fascinating chapter on the history of public pools and how segregation ultimately led to almost no freely available public swimming facilities for anyone. It’s such an interesting look at how we’ve shifted from public goods to private luxuries, and how race plays into why that happens. I’m not sure if I’ll get much reading in this weekend, but I want to try!


For more nonfiction reads, head over to the podcast service of your choice and download For Real, which I co-host with my dear friend Alice. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @kimthedork. Happy weekend!

Categories
True Story

Animals and Entrepreneurs on Trial

Hello hello, nonfiction friends! If you haven’t already, I urge you to pop into your podcast service of choice to listen to this week’s episode of For Real. Alice and I got to do something we’ve never done for the podcast before – interview Mary Roach! That’s right, Mary Roach!

cover image of Fuzz- When Nature Breaks the Law by Mary Roach showing an iron on patch with a bear, a cougar, and an elephant

If you’re still not convinced, I can tell you she is just as funny to talk with as she is to read. In the interview we covered everything from her use of footnotes to how she almost wrote a chapter about tiger penises, with several great detours along the way. Her latest book, Fuzz: When Nature Breaks the Law is out this week. It’s a great read about what happens when nature and humans have conflict, and the people who are trying to find ways to improve those interactions. It’s really fun.

This week I’ve got some great news from the world of nonfiction to share – an update on Elizabeth Holmes’s trial, an exciting upcoming adaptation, and an early nonfiction prize list! 

This week in the trial of Elizabeth Holmes, the jury has been selected and testimony has begun:

  • One early witness was Erika Cheung, a former worker in the Theranos lab, who testified she was concerned about the reliability of the lab’s testing equipment.
  • The Daily Beast also shared some of the text messages exchanged between Holmes and her boyfriend/business partner, Sunny Balwani, that have been entered as evidence.
  • But my favorite story of the week is this one, about a “concerned citizen” who attended early parts of the trial, networked with reporters… and then turned out to be Holmes’s father-in-law, hotelier Bill Evans. What kind of a person do you have to be to try and trick reporters at a trial where someone in your family is facing decades in prison for tricking investors? Bananas.

Paramount+ may be planning an adaptation of Yellow Bird by Sierra Crane Murdoch. The series is described as “a true crime show, a family drama and an immersive look at modern Native American life.” The main character, Lissa Yellowbird, returns to her reservation after time in jail, then finds herself investigating the disappearance of a young oil worker. That description is giving me real Mare of Easttown vibes and I am here for it.

The finalists for the Kirkus Prize have been announced! The Kirkus Prize is awarded annually for fiction, nonfiction, and young readers literature and has a prize of $50,000 (yowza!). This year’s nonfiction finalists are: 

The winners will be announced at a virtual ceremony from the Austin Public Library on October 28.

Weekend Reading

book cover of sometimes i trip on how happy we could be by nichole perkins

I’ve had a great few weeks of picking up unexpected read from my local library. My grab from the new releases shelf this week is Sometimes I Trip on How Happy We Could Be by Nichole Perkins. This book is a collection of essays on pop culture and how big issues like “racism, wealth, poverty, beauty, inclusion, exclusion, and hope” are part of the media we consume. I’m just 100 percent in for all of those topics, especially when they’re being explored from a perspective that’s different from my own. I’ve already LOL’d quite a bit at this one, I can’t wait to finish it!


For more nonfiction reads, head over to the podcast service of your choice and download For Real, which I co-host with my dear friend Alice. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @kimthedork. Happy weekend!

Categories
True Story

Nonfiction eBook Deals for Your Weekend Reads

Welcome to Friday, nonfiction friends! Kim here, hoping you’ve survived a short week and are ready for a beautiful fall weekend. If you happen to be looking for your next read, look no further than one of the ebook deals I’ve gathered up for this week. Prices were accurate as of Wednesday, but hope over quick to make sure you don’t miss out. 

If you want to learn about the women of Pan Am World Airways… Come Fly the World by Julia Cooke for $5.99. 

If you want to learn more about Afghanistan… The Broken Circle by Enjeela Ahmadi-Miller for $1.99. 

If you’re an Anne Boleyn fan (or hater)… Anne Boleyn: 500 Years of Lies by Hayley Nolan for $0.99.

book cover the disordered cosmos by chandra prescod-weinstein

If you want a memoir about particle physics and the cosmos by a woman of color… The Disordered Cosmos by Chanda Prescod-Weinstein for $4.99.

If you want to read about some of the first female doctors… Women in White Coats by Olivia Campbell for $2.99. 

If you want to read some true crime about the illegal gold trade… Dirty Gold by Jay Weaver for $3.99.

If you want to read about escaping from North Korea… A River in Darkness by Masaji Ishikawa for $6.99. 

If you have feelings about anxiety… Welcome to the United States of Anxiety by Jen Lancaster for $4.99. 

If you’re trying to better understand racial trauma and psychology… My Grandmother’s Hands by Resmaa Menakem for $4.99. 

If you want to read a memoir of traveling the Amazon and befriending a big cat… The Puma Years by Laura Coleman for $1.99. 

Weekend Reading

book cover paradise by lizzie johnson

I’m going to cheat a little bit and tell you about the book I finished reading last weekend because it was so great I’d feel bad not telling you about it. I am a former journalist, so I have a real soft spot for well-reported and well-written nonfiction by journalists. In that respect, I cannot say enough good things about Paradise: One Town’s Struggle to Survive an American Wildfire by Lizzie Johnson. 

The book is a definitive recounting of the 2018 Camp Fire, one of the deadliest wildfires in California history. Less than two hours after it ignited, the fire had decimated the town of Paradise, killing 85 people. Johnson was a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle, so was in the community reporting almost immediately and stayed there much longer. All of that is so evident in the book, which manages to be comprehensive and empathetic, while also connecting the fire to larger issues like climate change and public utility regulation. Her portraits of survivors and victims are beautifully done, I couldn’t stop turning the pages. 

Paradise reminds me a lot of Five Days at Memorial by Sheri Fink, a similarly devastating account of human choices in the wake of natural disaster, so if that book was up your alley this one will be too. 


For more nonfiction reads, head over to the podcast service of your choice and download For Real, which I co-host with my dear friend Alice. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @kimthedork. Happy weekend!

Categories
True Story

A True Crime Trial Has Begun

Hello and happiest of Fridays, nonfiction friends! Kim here, with some updates on my favorite “nonfiction in the news” event of the last several years – the Theranos trial is about to begin!

Elizabeth Holmes was the founder of Theranos, a medical technology company that claimed to have developed a machine that could run a range of common medical tests on a single drop of blood. Holmes founded the company after dropping out of college and was a huge star in Silicon Valley because of her age, gender, quirky habits, and breakthrough tech she claimed to have developed. She also had many famous investors who vouched for her technology, helping secure contracts from companies like Walgreens while bringing in billions. 

cover image of Bad Blood by John Carreyrou

Much of what is known about Holmes and Theranos came out in a blockbuster nonfiction book by Wall Street Journal reporter John Carreyrou, Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup. It was one of my favorite books of 2018, and I recommend it a lot for people who love non-violent true crime. 

Three years ago, Holmes was indicted on multiple conspiracy and fraud charges. This week, jury selection began ahead of a potential trial start date of September 8. The trial is expected to last several months, and may even include testimony from Holmes herself, who has said very little since Theranos fell apart.

There’s so much more to this story, and this trial is going to be absolutely bananas. But I’ll let the experts do the explaining:

If you want to keep up with the trial in real time, Carreyrou is following along with the trial and sharing additional reporting in a new podcast, Bad Blood: The Final Chapter. It looks like you can stream it across podcast services – amazing!

I promise that I won’t turn each Friday edition of True Story into a Theranos trial recap newsletter… but I definitely will keep you posted on the biggest developments!

In Other News

book cover taste makers mayukh sen

The New Yorker will be publishing a series of columns about famous female chefs, inspired by chapters in Mayukh Sen’s upcoming book Taste Makers: Seven Immigrant Women Who Revolutionized Food in America. I’m jazzed about this book and this series!

George Floyd’s aunt, Angela Harrelson, is writing a memoir about her nephew. Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer in May 2020, kicking off nation-wide protests around racial justice and police brutality. I loved everything Harrelson had to say in the article linked above, please check it out!

I really liked this New York TImes profile of actress Michaela Coel, creator of HBO’s I May Destroy You and author of the upcoming book Misfits: A Personal Manifesto. Misfits is the text of a 2018 speech Coel gave at the Edinburgh International Television festival that sounds just incredible.

Weekend Reading

book cover the quiet zone by stephen kurczy

This weekend I’ll be heading up to my parent’s house in Wisconsin for a few days at the cabin. The weather looks like it’s going to be great – sunny and a little cool – which means plenty of time to read outside without feeling like there’s some other activity I should be doing. I’m already planning to bring way too many books, but the one I’m excited to finish is The Quiet Zone: Unraveling the Mystery of a Town Suspended in Silence by Stephen Kurczy.

The book is about the town of Green Bank, West Virginia, “the last truly quiet town in America.” The town has no WiFi, cell service, or other radio frequencies that may interfere with the telescopes at the Green Bank Observatory. To write the book, Kurczy embeds in Green Bank, living amongst the people who call this extremely isolated place home. It’s a fun read so far, definitely the balance of memoir and reporting that I love to read, along with some interesting exploration of what it means to live in a place without much of the technology we rely on today – perfect for a cabin in the woods.


For more nonfiction reads, head over to the podcast service of your choice and download For Real, which I co-host with my dear friend Alice. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @kimthedork. Happy weekend!

Categories
True Story

True Stories Like Mare of Easttown

Hello, nonfiction friends! Kim here, with some confessions about how much TV I watch on a weekly basis. I spent much of last weekend marathoning Mare of Easttown on HBOMax. I’m only a little late to the party on this one, a dark crime drama about a detective, Mare, investigating the murder of a teenage girl in a suburb of Philadelphia. Mare’s a local hero – she led the high school basketball team to a state championship – who is struggling with this case, an unsolved disappearance she can’t put to rest, and turmoil in her personal life. 

The show is full of trigger warnings – murder, suicide, drug use, violence – but is also beautiful in the way it’s filmed and, I thought, in the way it explores trauma, grief, close-knit communities, and complicated families. Kate Winslet, who plays Mare, is incredible, as are many of the supporting actresses – Julianne Nicholson, Jean Smart, and Angourie Rice, in particular. 

Because my brain is in gritty crime drama mode, I thought this week I’d share some books that remind me of Mare of Easttown. These aren’t exact readalikes – and none involve murder – but all capture something that struck me from the show. Let’s go!

book cover downeast by gigi georges

Downeast: Five Maine Girls and the Unseen Story of Rural America by Gigi Georges

In this book, journalist Gigi Georges tells the story of five teenage girls as they come of age in Washington County, Maine, one of the most isolated communities on the Eastern seaboard. Near Acadia National Park, the town is adjacent to a lot of wealth, but residents are distant from that opportunity. The girls Georges profiles – a photographer, a writer, a softball player, a basketball star, and a valedictorian – struggle to find their place, thrive amidst poverty and drugs, and celebrate where they are from. Mare of Easttown has so many great female characters and explores the lives of teenage girls, so this felt like a great connection.

book cover somebody's daughter by ahsley ford

Somebody’s Daughter by Ashley Ford

Growing up Ashley C. Ford always wished she could turn to her father for guidance and support – particularly when her relationship with her mother was at its most fraught. The problem was that Ford’s father was in prison, no one in her family would tell her why, and she didn’t know when he’d get out. This beautiful memoir is about growing up poor, female, and Black in the Midwest, with family close by but always feeling on the outside. Mare’s relationship with her daughter, Siobhan, is complicated but loving, and I think Siobhan’s journey has a lot in common with what Ashley writes about. 

book cover american fire by monica hesse

American Fire: Love, Arson, and Life in a Vanishing Land by Monica Hesse

For months, the people of Accomack County, Virginia, went to bed each night wondering which abandoned building in their community would burn down next. The volunteer firefighters took turns sleeping at the station and vigilante groups started hunting the arsonists, as local police struggled to investigate and protect the buildings. Poverty and what happens when people feel left behind are a big part of Mare of Easttown, themes that this true crime book explores with a lot of compassion. 

Weekend Reading

cover of seeing ghosts by kat chow

Seeing Ghosts by Kat Chow

This weekend I’m excited to jump into a new memoir out this week, Seeing Ghosts by Kat Chow, the story of how Chow lost her mother when she was 13 years old. Chow used to work for NPR, so I remember her from being on podcasts like Code Switch and Pop Culture Happy Hour, and have been waiting anxiously for her book to come out. I love memoirs about complicated families, and the reviews of this one so far have been really good – USA Today, Shondaland, Kirkus.


For more nonfiction reads, head over to the podcast service of your choice and download For Real, which I co-host with my dear friend Alice. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @kimthedork. Happy weekend!

Categories
True Story

New Book Clubs and Techie Biographies

Hello, nonfiction friends, this is Kim! In case you missed the news last week, I’ll be returning each week to write the Friday edition of True Story, while Alice will continue to share the best new nonfiction with you each week on Wednesdays.

A little bit about me… I’ve been writing for Book Riot since the site was formed. I helped launch this newsletter back in 2017, and currently co-host Book Riot’s bi-weekly nonfiction podcast with Alice. Before Book Riot I was a book blogger and community journalist. Today, I work in communications for a public library system. It’s still stunning to me that I get to spend so much of my waking time writing and talking about books. 

My taste in nonfiction is pretty wide-ranging, although tends to lean towards current affairs, journalism, and memoir – I love beautiful writing and a good story nearly as much as Alice loves FACTS!

My goal with the Friday send of the newsletter is to mix things up each week, sharing news from the world of nonfiction books, themed book lists, nonfiction book deals, updates on the nonfiction writing over at Book Riot, and more. I hope you’re as excited as I am because I am done with the preamble – on to some nonfiction news!

Nonfiction in the News

Cover Unbound by Tanara Burke

Soccer legend Megan Rapinoe is starting a book club! The first pick for her “new and exclusive” book club with Literati will be Unbound by Tarana Burke, founder of the #MeToo movement. In an interview with People, Rapinoe said she plans to read the books right alongside book club members, choosing titles that will help readers learn from experts in a variety of areas. I haven’t dug into Literati subscriptions much, but I can’t help but be a fan of Megan Rapinoe – awesome first pick!

Walter Isaacson is writing about Elon Musk? According to Musk, Isaacson has already been shadowing him for several days… but at this point there’s no other real news on the book. Isaacson has written several enormous biographies, including one about Apple founder Steve Jobs. Listeners of the podcast will know that giant biographies are not really my thing… but I am intrigued by Isaacon’s latest book, The Code Breaker, about Nobel Prize-winning scientist Jennifer Doudna. Elon Musk? Not so much.

Huma Abedin has revealed the cover of her upcoming memoir. Titled Both/And: A Life in Many Worlds, the book is, I believe, the first time Abedin will share at length about her ex-husband’s sex scandal and her time working for Hillary Clinton. Abedin is the daughter of Indian and Pakistani intellectuals and advocates, and has worked with Clinton since 1996 as a college intern. I’m most curious about how forthright Abedin will be in this book – memoirs by politicians can be bland, but she’s not exactly in politics anymore. It could be fascinating! Both/And will be released on November 2.

Weekend Reading

Cover of An Ugly Truth by Sheera Frankel and Cecilia Kang

This weekend I am hoping to finish up An Ugly Truth: Inside Facebook’s Battle for Domination by Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang. The book is a behind-the-scenes look at the reasons Facebook has come under fire over the last five years – everything from data privacy issues to election manipulation. Frenkel and Kang are both reporters for the New York Times, and bring their extensive knowledge of cybersecurity, technology, and regulatory policy to the table, along with some really extensive and knowledgeable interviews with Facebook insiders.

It’s an absolutely fascinating read that really shows the extensive and fundamental flaws with Facebook as a platform and a tool. I’ve been feeling a lot of ambivalence about social media lately, and this book has just reinforced that the true goals of the people running the company go deeply against the public good in a whole host of ways.


For more nonfiction reads, head over to the podcast service of your choice and download For Real, which I co-host with my dear friend Alice. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @kimthedork. Happy weekend!

Categories
True Story

15 More Go-To Fun and Fascinating Nonfiction Reads

Hello hello, nonfiction friends! As promised, I’m here with something a little special for my last edition of True Story – an update of the very first edition I wrote back in January 2017. For the inaugural issue of the newsletter, I shared 15 of my go-to fun and fascinating nonfiction reads, a collection of some of the nonfiction I recommended most often to other readers.

Given how much I’ve read since then, I thought it would be fun to close my time as editor with an updated list – 15 more of my go-to fun and fascinating nonfiction reads. Let’s dive in!

bad blood by john carreyrou cover imageBad Blood by John Carreyrou – This book has become one of my go-to nonfiction recommendations, especially for people who are not avid readers but want something really page-turning. In the book, Carreyrou chronicles the rise and fall of Theranos and the company’s enigmatic founder, Elizabeth Holmes. The level of deception and willful ignorance at play through the whole scandal is astounding – you can’t help but keep reading to watch the whole house of cards fall apart.

Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann – This is one of my top recommendations for people who don’t think they want to read nonfiction. This true story of the murder of multiple members of the Osage Nation in Oklahoma and the founding for the FBI reads like a thriller, which makes it great for readers who gobble up mysteries by Vince Flynn or James Patterson. Several members of my family (who are not nonfiction readers) have loved it.

 

all you can ever knowAll You Can Ever Know by Nicole Chung – As a child, Nicole Chung was put up for adoption by her Korean parents, then raised by a white family in a small Oregon town. When she was pregnant with her first child, Chung launched a search for her birth parents to understand whether the story she’d been told about her adoption was true. I’m not sure if I’d call this memoir fun, exactly, but it is a beautifully written meditation on family, race, and community. If I were more of a re-reader, I am sure that I’d pick it up again.

Educated by Tara Westover – I don’t think I’m surprising anyone by telling you that this memoir is amazing. Westover is the daughter of Morman survivalists in rural Idaho, and experienced a childhood full of violence and misogyny. Despite not regularly attending high school, Westover manages to get into college, a move that estranges her from her family and sets her on a path to question everything she thought she knew. I just cannot tell you how good this memoir is, please go pick it up!

 

Maybe You Should Talk to Someone by Lori Gottlieb – I’m fascinated by books that explore careers that I’ll never really get to experience. In this case, it’s therapy and how therapists work to help their patients move through difficult experiences and personal development. Gottlieb also writes about her own experience going to therapy, and her experience working with patients, in a way that’s open, vulnerable, and moving. This book made me think and gave me a lot of feelings, a potent combination.

I'll Be Gone In The Dark cover imageI’ll Be Gone in the Dark by Michelle McNamara – For years, McNamara was part of an online community of true crime enthusiasts trying to uncover the identity of the Golden State Killer. In this book, published posthumously, she tells the story of the GSK and the hunt to bring him to justice. What makes this book better than most true crime books is the way McNamara always keeps her eyes focused on the victims and their stories – there’s nothing that feels exploitative about it in the way that many true crime books can feel. This might be the best true crime book I’ve read in the last five years, and that’s really saying something.

The Power of Meaning by Emily Esfahani Smith – I have read a lot of books about finding meaning in life, and this is one of my favorites. Rather than pursuing happiness, Esfahani Smith looks at how cultivation connection, working with purpose, telling stories, and seeking mystery can bring depth and joy to our lives. She gets at these ideas through an array of approaches like psychology, sociology, philosophy, neuroscience, and more, in a way that feels comprehensive and empathetic. I really liked this one.

Portage by Sue Leaf – This book is probably the biggest oddball on this list. I picked it up on an impulse while on a trip up North, devoured it in just a few days, and then spent months talking about how I wanted to take up canoeing to anyone who would listen. Leaf writes about her family’s experiences as canoeists, beginning with early trips to the Boundary Waters with her husband and ending with local river excursions with her grown children and their families. It’s a fascinating book about nature, wild places, relationships, and lessons we can learn when we let ourselves explore somewhere new.

Dark Money by Jane Mayer – In the last three years, there have been SO MANY books about politics and political life, but this one is probably one of the best. Mayer, a journalist for the New Yorker, takes a deep dive into “the hidden history of the billionaires behind the rise of the Radical Right,” to show how money has absolutely corrupted our entire political system. This book made me angry and sad and fired up – not exactly fun, but absolutely vital.

 

hidden figuresHidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly – I am so jazzed about the number of books coming out that explore the previously unacknowledged role that women (especially women of color) have played in some of the major events and achievements of the last 200 years. This book, one of the first, looks at the female mathematicians who served as “human computers” at NASA and helped win the Space Race. This book is such a good read (and much more nuanced than the movie, although I loved that too).

From the Corner of the Oval by Beck Dorey-Stein – The last three years have also resulted in a lot of books about life in the Obama administration, which I have read as a way to soothe my soul and remind myself that politics can be rational and aimed towards the greater good. In this memoir, Dorey-Stein writes about her time as a stenographer, coming into the Obama administration as an outsider and eventually finding her place there. It’s also a coming of age story about finding purpose and making terrible romantic choices, which I thought was really funny. I remember seeing this one described as “Bridget Jones goes to the White House,” which sounds like a dig but is exactly correct and why I liked it so much.

The Class by Heather Won Tesario – In this book, Won Tesario spends the year inside an innovative high school science class, one without curriculum, tests, textbooks or lectures. Led by a former corporate scientist, the students in this class spend the year working on projects to compete on the high school science fair circuit, regularly bringing back top prizes to their school and themselves. The students in this book are bright, funny, brilliant, and also completely teenagers, which makes them really fun to read about. If you don’t mind going back to high school, this book is a total treat.

Notes from a Young Black Chef by Kwame Onwuachi and Joshua David Stein – Food memoirs for the win! In this book, Kwame Onwuachi writes about how he went from being a kid in the Bronx to a celebrated chef in Washington D.C. His path took him all over, from New York to Nigeria to the Gulf of Mexico and beyond. I loved how honest he was about his choices (both good and bad), and appreciated hearing about his perspective and experiences as a Black man in a largely white industry. I’ve recommended this one many times.

Catch and Kill cover imageCatch and Kill by Ronan Farrow – I read a couple of books about Harvey Weinstein and the #MeToo movement, but this one is arguably a little more fun. In it, Farrow chronicles his experiences trying to break this major story, including the nefarious ways that rich and powerful men found ways to obstruct, intimidate, and embarrass victims and those who tried to tell their story. Farrow narrates the audiobook where he does some truly amazing accents – it’s ridiculous.

 

My Own Devices by Dessa – Dessa is a Minneapolis-based singer, songwriter, and writer who seems to be able to do it all. In this memoir, she “stitches together” stories about love, science, language, and life on the road. She has a background as both a technical writer and a rapper, which means she can write some absolutely gorgeous sentences. But she’s also curious and funny and lovesick and full of the kinds of random facts you expect someone who loves the things she loves to know. I really loved this one.

And that, my friends, brings me to the end of my time writing this newsletter. Thank you, thank you, thank you for inviting me to your inbox twice a week, it’s truly been an honor. You can continue to find me on Twitter and Instagram as @kimthedork and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. Happy reading! – Kim

Categories
True Story

A New #OwnVoices Memoir From the Southern Border

Hello, nonfiction friends! Before we get into new books, I have some personal news to share – this will be my last week putting together this newsletter. While I’ve enjoyed writing it immensely, after three years of weekly and twice-weekly editions, it felt like it was time to pass the ship off to someone else with some fresh energy and ideas. And I am SO HAPPY to say that True Story will be in excellent hands when Alice, my co-host of the For Real podcast, takes over in February.

For now, I have one more selection of new books to share today, and then a special edition of the newsletter to close out my time as writer/editor at the end of the week. Keep reading, and be sure to click through on Friday!

Children of the Land by Marcelo Hernandez Castillo – Given the ongoing discussion related to #OwnVoices stories about immigrants and the southern border, this book is especially relevant. In this memoir, poet Marcelo Hernandez Castillo writes about what it was like to grow up undocumented in the United States. Castillo and his family crossed the border from Mexico when he was five, so the young boy grew up hiding in plain sight in California. In the book he writes about their experiences being visited by ICE, how he made a fake social security card, his father’s deportation, and more.

Further Reading: If you need a primer on where the #OwnVoices discussion is coming from, this post at Book Riot lays it out well. If you want more about this book, Hernandez Castillo had a great interview on NPR.

Black Wave: Saudi Arabia, Iran, and the Forty-Year Rivalry that Unraveled Culture, Religion, and Collective Memory in the Middle East by Kim Ghattas – In this book, journalist Kim Ghattas looks at how the modern Middle East unraveled, beginning with a rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran that helped spark the Iranian revolution in 1979. Ghattas uses historical research and her own reporting to address myths about the region, including how religion split Saudi Arabia and Iran, and how U.S. policy contributed to chaos in the region. I love Kim Ghattas’ writing, so I’m excited about this one.

Further Reading: Ghattas was interviewed for Bloomberg about why Iran was in trouble even before the killing of military commander Qassem Soleimani.

Uncounted: The Crisis of Voter Suppression in America by Gilda R. Daniels – This book looks at the issue of voter disenfranchisement “through the lens of history, race, law, and the democratic process.” Gilda R. Daniels, a former official in the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice, looks at the cycles of voter suppression and how methods adapt to find new ways to keep people from voting. Voter suppression feels like one of the most important issues going into the 2020 election, so this book is a must read.

Further Reading: Last summer, Daniels was interviewed by Detroit Today about how voter suppression is real and has been happening for more than 100 years.

And finally, a few other books I am excited about this week:

That’s all the new books for this week! You can find me on Twitter and Instagram @kimthedork and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. Be sure to check back on Friday, I’m excited for what is coming! Happy reading! – Kim

Categories
True Story

Anthony Bourdain’s Last Book Coming This Fall

Hello, happy Friday! We’ve survived another week, my nonfiction-reading friends – that is something to cheer about!

I’m also cheering about the fact that I finally finished a book! Last weekend I practically flew through The Magical Language of Others, a beautiful memoir by E.J. Koh. When Koh was 15, her father accepted a lucrative position in South Korea, leaving Koh back in California in the care of her older brother. Over their separation, Koh’s mother wrote her weekly letters in Korean – letters Koh couldn’t fully understand until she learned enough Korean to translate them as an adult. Koh accompanies her own story with those of her mother and two grandmothers, creating a memoir about family, loss, trauma, and what it takes to find the language to tell our own stories. It was difficult to read in places, but very beautiful.

For this week’s newsletter, I’ve got a smattering of nonfiction news to share with you. Let’s get into it!

Anthony Bourdain’s final book is set to be published in October (sob). Titled World Travel: An Irreverent Guide, will be “an illustrated collection of Bourdain’s reflections on his favorite places to visit and dine around the world.” The book was finished by Bourdain’s longtime assistant, Laurie Woolever, and includes writing from his friends and family, along with the writer’s thoughts on places to visit and eat around the world.

The Jewish Book Council has announced this year’s winners of the National Jewish Book Awards, which includes several different awards for nonfiction in food writing, Jewish education and identity, autobiography and memoir, biography, and more. The biggest winner is Pamela S. Nadell, winner of the Everett Family Foundation Book of the Year for America’s Jew­ish Women: A His­to­ry from Colo­nial Times to Today.

Fraudster Caroline Calloway said she’s writing two books that will come out this spring. The infamous Instagram influencer will release a memoir (sold only on her website) called Scammer sometime in spring 2020. She claims to also be working on a second book, And We Were Like, about her time at Cambridge University. So… that’s news, I guess? (If you don’t remember anything about Calloway, this piece from The Cut will get you all caught up).

Mindhunter, Netflix’s true crime series about the formation of the FBI’s Behavioral Science Unit in the 1970s and ‘80s, doesn’t appear to be getting a third season. According to Deadline, there’s been no movement from Netflix or David Fincher, the series’ director, to move ahead with the next season. Mindhunter is based on the book Mindhunter: Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit written by John E. Douglas and Mark Olshaker.

And finally, a few links over at Book Riot you definitely don’t want to miss:

And that’s a wrap on yet another week! You can find me on Twitter and Instagram @kimthedork and co-hosting the For Real podcast here at Book Riot. Happy reading! – Kim