Showing posts with label best books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best books. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Jeremy Toungate

Book Your Stocking 2021

Book Your Stocking: Day 22

Welcome to the last Tuesday of Book Your Stocking. As you may or may not know, every day through Christmas Eve, avid readers recommend books that you or your favorite person would be delighted to find in their stocking or sock drawer. 

Today's reader is the most avid reader I have ever met in my entire life. At one point, I opened our car door and removed no less than seventy-five books. He'd read them all. In a few months. 

Please welcome my best friend, Jeremy Toungate.

๐Ÿ“–




Why: Everything around me seems more distinct and visually stunning after I read Toppi's work. 

๐Ÿ“–

About today's reader: Jeremy Toungate lives and writes in Spokane.

Jeremy Toungate



Sunday, December 19, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Mandy Chapman Orozco

Book Your Stocking 2021

Book Your Stocking: Day 19

Here we are, nineteen days into this year's edition of Book Your Stocking. If you haven't stuffed all your stockings, then this is the perfect place to be. If friends give you gift-cards to bookstores, this is an even better place to be. Every day avid readers recommend the book for your stocking (or your favorite reader's stocking).

Please welcome Many Chapman Orozco who is today taking care of socks, stockings, and your booklist.


๐Ÿ“–



Why: I'd love to get this book in my stocking because there's a lot of noise right now, and this book poetry is the opposite of all that--it is thoughtful, powerful, and lovely.

๐Ÿ“–

About today's reader: Mandy Chapman Orozco reads and writes in Spokane.

Mandy Chapman Orozco

Saturday, December 18, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Polly Buckingham

Book Your Stocking 2021
Book Your Stocking: Day 18

Another day, another Book Your Stocking, the somewhat-annual series in which avid readers recommend books for your stocking or the stockings of people you most love. Thanks for returning or discovering us.

Today, Polly Buckingham has the book for you.





๐Ÿ“–



Why: This book is a surreal adventure centering around three generations of women and their gingerbread recipes (what's in that gingerbread, you may ask); it includes talking dolls, unmapped countries, and houses that disappear and reappear elsewhere.
๐Ÿ“–

About today's reader: Polly Buckingham reads, writes, and teaches in Eastern Washington and has recently become the series editor for the Katherine Anne Porter Award.

Polly Buckingham

Friday, December 17, 2021

Book Your Stocking with Tina ลฝigon

Book Your Stocking 2021
Book Your Stocking: Day 17

Book Your Stocking continues, and I'm glad that you continue with it. If this is your first visit, welcome! Each day of December, leading up to Christmas, avid readers recommend books that you or your favorite person would be delighted to find in their stocking or sock drawer. 

Today, Tina ลฝigon is the avid reader with the book for your list (and stocking).



๐Ÿ“–



Why: Because it's been on my to-read forever, and I finally read it this year, and it felt it was just the right time to do so, and it blew my mind.
๐Ÿ“–

About today's reader: Tina ลฝigon grew up in Slovenia, has lived and taught English on three different continents, and currently resides in the Midwest with her husband and son.

Tina ลฝigon

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Rapid Review: So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo

"If a person of color is willing to talk to you about race, even if they aren't very friendly while they're doing it, it's a generosity." ~Ojeoma Oluo, Google Talk presentation
So You Want to Talk About Race (Seal Press/Hatchette, 2018) is a book that functions as a bridge between the lived experiences of people of color and white people to help, primarily, white people align themselves to people of color and Racism. She starts off early in the book by explaining carefully why you (white person) need to read this book. In sum, no matter how "woke" you are on the spectrum of "woke," you're not there yet. 
This is not Racism 101. This is not for people who haven't yet noticed inequality or racism. In fact, Oluo would argue that empathy has little to do with ending racism. Being nice will not stop Racism. Reading diverse books will not stop children of color being disciplined at much higher rates and with more severe punishments than their white peers. Holding the door open for a person of color will not halt the Industrial Prison Complex. This book will, however, explain why these small acts do little to counteract Racism and, thus, how to do much more.

Or maybe So You Want to Talk about Race is Racism 101 for the Twenty-first century and understanding Racism's disease and symptoms and how to identify those now. It's definitely the handbook for all people who have been living and working under an inadequate definition of Racism. Racism is not an individual problem but as a systemic one that infects all who live within the culture of White Supremacy. It is a system created by a culture that normalizes and romanticizes whiteness, typically through the oppression, disempowerment, and portrayals of people of color as violent/inhuman/alien/less-than/absurd/ignorant/stupid/lazy/objects/etc.

And from that definition of Racism comes not only the real possibility of taking part in dismantling that system, but also Oluo's purpose in writing the book: to contextualize this definition, help white readers witness the reality of this definition in action through various anecdotes, statistics, comparisons, connections to institutions and their relationships to each other, and then to provide white readers with suggestions of how to position their imaginations, actions, and understanding of themselves and others in relation to, for example, cultural appropriation or to the school-to-prison pipeline or to communication with people of color in the workplace. Intersectionality, microaggressions, the model minority myth, affirmative action, protest, equity versus equality, the trials of intercultural friendships--and so, so much more.

While reading the book, readers learn about Oluo's own life, from the experience of being a queer woman of color, to being raised by her white mother who didn't understand systemic racism, to the ways in which her body and voice have been censored by white people and institutions in ways that have deeply affected her life and perspective--experiences that are usually hidden but that Oluo shares so that white readers will understand.

For a better idea of all that Oluo's tackling, visit the publisher's page and read all the rave reviews. This is, without doubt, the most helpful book on the relationship between white people's imaginations and Racism and how to reposition that imagination in a way that will lead to effective action. The book also helps contextualize other systems of oppression, from patriarchy/misogny, abelism, homophobia, etc. The world makes much more sense to me now after reading Oluo's book and how to interpret what I'm witnessing, and past experiences.

Put this on the TOP of your book club's reading list, and definitely order it for your local library if it doesn't yet shelve a copy or two. And if you live in a neighborhood that has a Free Little Library, buy a copy for that, too. This is an excellent and NECESSARY read. Today. BUY IT TODAY!
"What we're doing when we're talking about race, usually, is we have people who are trying to come to their own personal goals, and usually people of color who come to talk about race are trying to get other people to understand what is harming them. And, very often, white people come to talk about race to try to make sure the person they're talking to knows that they are not the person who is harming them. Those are two completely different conversations that will never meet. Because you have one person whose lived experience says, 'You are harming me, and I need you to understand,' and you have another person whose lived experience says, 'I am not part of the problem, I am a good person, and I need you to understand.'
"Because we don't state what we're talking about when we talk about race, you can dissolve an entire friendship in a discussion, and if you were to ask why, of each person in that discussion, the reasons would be completely different. So we know it is tough. We know there's a lot at risk. And if you are a white person in this room, and most of you are, and you're thinking, 'What if I get called racist? The last time I tried a couple times, it ended really bad.' Trust me. No conversation about race has ever ended nearly as bad for you as ends for people of color. So, before we launch into why we have to do it anyways.
"If a person of color is willing to talk to you about race, even if they aren't very friendly while they're doing it, it's a generosity." ~Ojeoma Oluo, Google Talk presentation 
Ojeoma Oluo, author picture

๐Ÿ•ฎ



Thursday, December 28, 2017

Book Your Stocking with Polly Buckingham

Book Your Stocking: December 28

As New Year's Eve draws nearer, you might be mulling over the you of 2017 and the you 2018 could bring--from resolutions to recharging, from musings to wanderings--and how much control you actually have over the transformations. 

Because I've returned to reading this year, I look forward to all the change the books this coming year will bring. --How all of these writers sharing their words, thoughts, wishes, fears, and ideas will affect my own. It's slightly exhilarating. 

And joining us today is another reader who is sharing her own book lists, to-give, and to-read, which are also lists of stillness and change, I think. 

Please welcome today's reader, Polly Buckingham.

๐ŸŽ„๐Ÿ“š


Giving List

(When you read something and say, "wow, there's nothing else like this"--and also you're delighted and moved)

Love’s Last Number is a stunning, all encompassing collection, shiny and sad, wise and generous: think owls, King Arthur, and Mahler in a clef-shaped canoe. This is Howell's 10th collection.

Despite the darkness, these stories, linked by an earthquake, are ultimately not so much hopeful as they are spirituality enlightening. 



Wishing List

The master who claimed two adjectives must be hard earned--these stories were long hidden since the the Nazi Pogrom after Babel's unfortunate early death. I've read a handful of the stories: tight and weird and vivid and dark. I look forward to reading them all.

I've read four of five Crace novels, all spectacular, fable-like, weird and beautifully rendered. This one looks more speculative than the others.


๐Ÿ“š๐ŸŽ„

About today's reader:

Polly Buckingham
Polly Buckingham is the author of The Expense of a View (Katherine Anne Porter Award winner) and A Year of Silence (Jeanne Lieby Award winner). She teaches creative writing at Eastern Washington University and is the editor of Willow Springs and founding editor of StringTown Press.













๐Ÿ“š

Check out more recommendations from Book Your Stocking contributors: 

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Book Your Stocking with Shawn Vestal

Book Your Stocking: December 27

Every day of December, readers have been sharing their giving and/or wishing lists. Although it may be after the official day of unwrapping, these days are often the best for the warm-quiet of reading and removing oneself from the crowds. And should you prepare a New Year's reading list, or gift books for that day, if not all year long, here is another wonderful list of possibilities for you and yours.

Please welcome today's reader, Shawn Vestal.

๐Ÿ“š๐ŸŽ„

 This is a list of the books I enjoyed most this year. Whether that makes any of them a good gift is another question.



1 – Ill Will, Dan Chaon – This is for the person on your list who yearns to be wrapped in a brilliant and relentless straightjacket of dread and mystery. Beautifully plotted and written, Ill Will invades your idle thoughts and haunts your dreams. Merry Christmas!

2 – Underground Railroad, Colson Whitehead – A wrenching story about American slavery, with an ingenuous and deftly managed conceit: What if the Underground Railroad were really an actual underground railroad? 

3 – Don Quixote – I’m in the middle of reading this now, and while there is much to admire, it’s also a great value because it might take six or seven years to finish.

4 – The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood – I somehow never got around to reading this until lately. A potent futuristic parable about patriarchy and the sexual purity brigade that’s well-suited for the political moment. I love Atwood, and this one just bristles – from the individual lines to the social commentary.

5 – Norwood, Charles Portis – This is for the person on your list who loved True Grit. If there is a person on your list who hasn’t yet learned to love True Grit, I’d give them True Grit
  
6 – Can’t and Won’t, Lydia Davis – Formally, Lydia Davis just beats the living hell out of the short story: She stretches it, squeezes it, flattens it, drains it of drama and injects it with a new modes of drama. This book is a delight for those who relish that sort of thing. 

7 – Zero K, by Don DeLillo – I stopped reading DeLillo for a few years, and this was a welcome return to those metallic DeLillo sentences coldly navigating the global catastrophes.

8 – Breaking and Entering, Joy Williams – The next book on my to-read list. I don’t know anything about it, except that Joy Williams wrote it. Which is enough.


๐Ÿ“š๐ŸŽ„

About today's reader: 

Shawn Vestal
photograph used with permission
Shawn Vestal is the author of Daredevils, a novel that won the Washington State Book Award in 2017, and Godforsaken Idaho, a collection of short stories that won the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Award for debut fiction in 2014. His short fiction has appeared in Tin House, McSweeney’s, Ecotone, The Southern Review, Cutbank and other journals. His essays and non-fiction have appeared in The Guardian, The New Yorker web site and other publications, and he writes a column for The Spokesman-Review in Spokane, Wash., where he lives with his wife and son. He is a graduate of the MFA program at Eastern Washington University, where he now teaches.

๐Ÿ“š

Check out more recommendations from Book Your Stocking contributors: 

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Book Your Stocking with April Cypher

Book Your Stocking: December 26

After a day's break so that you could find what books appeared in your stocking, we return with more books that readers are giving and wishing for this holiday season. So, if you find yourself wandering the bookstore aisles soon, here are a few more titles to add to your winter reading list.

Please welcome today's reader, April Cypher.


๐Ÿ“š๐ŸŽ„

To Give:
The Book of Bones, Gabrielle Balkan
Euphoria, Lily King
The Tin Drum, Gunter Grass
The Beggar Maid, Alice Munro


๐ŸŽ„

To Get:


๐Ÿ“š๐ŸŽ„

About today's reader:
April Cypher
photograph used with permission

April Cypher grew up in Southwest Montana. She is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop. She lives in Missoula, Montana, where she is at work on her first novel.












๐Ÿ“š

Check out more recommendations from Book Your Stocking contributors: