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Tag: Shelf Life

  • Judy Blume on Joyce Carol Oates, ‘Writers and Lovers,’ and the Book That Everyone Should Read

    Judy Blume on Joyce Carol Oates, ‘Writers and Lovers,’ and the Book That Everyone Should Read

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    Welcome to Shelf Life, ELLE.com’s books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you’re on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you’re here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too.

    Judy Blume chronicled the agony and angst of navigating puberty, adolescence, and sex for generations of the curious, confused, and clueless, and now comes Lionsgate’s big-screen version of arguably her angstiest, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (Atheneum Books for Young Readers). In addition to her books for young adults (Forever, Deenie), she’s written picture books, children’s and middle grade books (the Fudge series), and adults (Wifey, In the Unlikely Event, her most recent novel from 2015). During the 80s, she received 2,000 letters a month. All told, her 29 books have sold 90 million copies, despite some of them being frequent targets of book bans.

    The New Jersey-born, Key West-based Blume was a producer on the movie, but she can also be seen in front of the camera as the subject of the documentary Judy Blume Forever. Other titles jumping from page to screen include an animated version based on Fudge for Disney+, a re-imagined series based on Forever at Netflix, and Summer Sisters at Peacock.

    Blume, the founder of the non-profit Books&Books in Key West, is the recipient of such literary awards as the National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, the Library of Congress’ Living Legends award, the Authors Guild Foundation for Distinguished Service to the Literary Community, the E.B. White Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Coalition Against Censorship.

    She majored in early childhood education at NYU and has honorary doctorates from Yale and Rutgers, tap dances, led Tayari Jones to her third publisher, likes renovation projects, is phobic about thunderstorms, and has a rest stop named after her: the Judy Blume Service Area on the Garden State Parkway. Fill up on her picks below.

    The book that…

    …made me miss…:

    The book that made me forget to cook dinner was Them by Joyce Carol Oates. It was summer, and my two little kids were playing in our backyard sandbox. I had no idea what time it was until my then husband came home, found the kids still happily playing and me, reading. “What, no bath? No dinner ready? It’s six o’clock!” I vaguely remember smiling, thinking – that’s right. I went on to read and enjoy many books by Joyce Carol Oates. My kids learned to bathe themselves. And eventually they became very good cooks.

    …has a sex scene that will make you blush:

    Who can remember, there were so many? But okay, when I was 12 or 13, I’d go through my parents’ books on the lookout for sex scenes. How else was I ever going to learn anything? One that stands out in my mind is in Saul Bellow’s The Adventures of Augie March. There was a picnic and an eagle (I think it was an eagle), and it was very steamy and satisfying. I read that scene so many times the book would fall open to it. That very copy is on my bookshelves now, with my father’s name stamped on the endpaper.

    …I read in one sitting, it was that good:

    Lily King’s Writers and Lovers. I was in such an emotional state when I finished the book I picked it up and started again. It hit me in all the right places. I laughed, I cried, I cared.

    …I never returned to the library (mea culpa):

    When I was four I hid a copy of Madeline [by Ludwig Bemelemans] so my mother couldn’t return it to the library. If I’d told her I loved that book so much I couldn’t part with it she’d have bought me my own copy. But I didn’t know that then. I thought the copy I hid was the only copy in the whole world.

    …made me laugh out loud:

    The most recent is Elinor Lipman’s Ms. Demeanor. Sometimes a charming, funny story is just what I need.

    …I recommend over and over again:

    I have a bookstore in Key West so I’m always recommending books. I could write you a list that would take up this whole column. I like to turn readers on to writers they’ve never read or heard of. Prep and American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld are two. Then there are some of my favorite picture books – Bark George by Jules Feiffer, Mother Bruce by Ryan T. Higgins, and almost any book by Rosemary Wells.

    …currently sits on my nightstand:

    That’s a dangerous question because my nightstand is very messy. Right now it’s The Netanyahus by Joshua Cohen. I started once, gave up, then started again because it made my husband laugh so hard. And I’m glad I did. Kevin Wilson’s Now Is Not The Time To Panic, Solito by Javier Zamora, Signal Fires by Dani Shapiro, and Janet Malcolm’s Still Pictures.

    …everyone should read:

    Philip Roth’s The Plot Against America. It reminds us what can happen if we remain complacent.

    …I asked for:

    The Betsy-Tacy series by Maud Hart Lovelace when I was nine. When I was a freshman in college, confined to my bed with mono, I asked for Peyton Place by Grace Metalious. I got them because my parents believed in books and reading.

    …surprised me:

    Karen Joy Fowler’s We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves. I was not just surprised, I was stunned. I had to go back to make sure I hadn’t missed something. At our bookstore, I put a plain white sticker over the back of the paperback because the publisher has given away the biggest turn in the story. Please, publisher, give us another edition and soon! And please, reader, resist reading the back of the book.

    …features the most beautiful book jacket:

    Fingerprints of You, a YA novel by Kristen-Paige Madonia. Stunning tattoo art made me want one just like it and definitely made me curious about the story. P.S. I never did get a tattoo but the book was excellent.

    The literary organization I support is:

    National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) because we are in a scary place right now (like the 80s but growing worse every day). The current book banning craze is threatening teachers and librarians who are trying to protect the intellectual freedom of all ages. As always, young readers are the real losers.

    If I could live in any bookstore in the world it would be:

    Books&Books in Key West, because my work there is never done. It’s cozy. The people who work there are a great group of dedicated readers, and I love hanging out with them.

    The Adventures of Augie March

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    Writers & Lovers

    Writers & Lovers

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    The Netanyahus

    The Netanyahus

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    Now Is Not the Time to Panic

    Now Is Not the Time to Panic

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    The Plot Against America

    The Plot Against America

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    The Betsy-Tacy Treasury

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    Riza Cruz is an editor and writer based in New York.

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  • Caroline Kepnes on Parker Posey, ‘The Western Coast,’ and the Book That Sealed a Friendship

    Caroline Kepnes on Parker Posey, ‘The Western Coast,’ and the Book That Sealed a Friendship

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    Welcome to Shelf Life, ELLE.com’s books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you’re on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you’re here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too.

    Having gone from New York to L.A. to the PNW, Joe Goldberg heads back East, this time to Cambridge in For You and Only You (Random House), Caroline Kepnes’s fifth novel and fourth in the NYT-bestselling series about a homicidal bibliophile that was adapted into hit Netflix show You.

    The Cape Cod-born, L.A.-based author is a former magazine journalist (Tiger Beat–which she chose over Conde Nast, Entertainment Weekly) and former E! Online gossip columnist who played blackjack instead of tailing Britney in Vegas as assigned. Before her show, she’d written for TV (7th Heaven, The Secret Life of the American Teenager), and has had her short stories published in numerous horror anthologies.

    Kepnes won honorable mention and a typewriter in a Sassy short story contest; studied abnormal psychology for a summer during high school then created her own college major that combined psychology and creative writing; was inspired to move to NYC (where she lived in the 2000s) by The Last Days of Disco; and has been a Jeopardy! clue twice. Likes: songs on repeat and exclamation points, Knot’s Landing, Fluffernutters. Dislikes: summer camp. Good at: Going down rabbit holes. Bad at: penmanship. Some of her favorite writers below.

    The book that:

    …sealed a friendship:

    I got a bound galley of #FashionVictim by Amina Akhtar. While reading and laughing hysterically, and dog-earing all the pages, I was like…Amina is my friend. She always has been, she just doesn’t know it yet.

    …shaped my worldview:

    It has to be What Do People Do All Day? by Richard Scarry. The visuals and the attention to detail made me feel way less self-conscious about being a curious little child who wanted to snoop in everyone’s house.

    …I’d give to a new graduate:

    I’m gonna pull a Joe Goldberg and say Portnoy’s Complaint by Philip Roth. It mashes smart into stupid, silly into serious and it made me excited about the great big (perverted) world out there, in you, in all of us. Yay!

    …broke my heart:

    I could pick any book by Catriona Ward. Sundial slayed me. It’s a riveting page-turner, an autopsy of a family, a study in generational trauma, a meditation on science. You feel like the whole world is in there tugging at your insides.

    …should be on every college syllabus:

    The Street by Ann Petry. I read it in a class at Brown called “Black Women Writers.” Petry’s style is otherworldly, and this novel should also be mandatory reading in Best Writers 101.

    …has the greatest ending:

    The temperature rises slowly in Sarah Pinborough’s Insomnia. You’re locked in a house and the house is a woman and there is no escape, no sleep. You wonder how this will end and then…. I read the last few pages standing up, biting my nails.

    …helped me become a better writer:

    How do you know that you became a better writer? You don’t, but The Western Coast by Paula Fox transported me to Los Angeles in 1940. When a writer is that powerful and magical, it makes you want to find your own style.

    I read in one sitting, it was that good:

    I am a very repetitive person, so I have told many people about the way A Good Man by Ani Katz kept me glued to a chair for several hours even when the sun was on a mission to make me relocate. Not possible. Nope.

    …fills me with hope:

    Death of a Bookseller by Alice Slater. Inhaling fresh, excellent, quotable, entertaining fiction from a debut novelist is a guaranteed way to breathe a little easier in our world. Red Widow by Alma Katsu. Inhaling fresh, excellent, quotable, entertaining fiction from an established writer is a guaranteed way to breathe a little easier in our world.

    …describes a place I’d want to visit:

    When I make it to Amsterdam, I will reread Spalding Gray’s Impossible Vacation on the plane and let his scratch-and-sniff-ish descriptions of what it’s like to fall apart in that city be my primer.

    …has the best opening line:

    An oldie: “So let me dish you this comedy about a family I knew when I was growing up.” (Rick Moody’s The Ice Storm.) A newbie: “There’s a time and a place for erect nipples, but the back of a Seattle police car definitely isn’t it.” (Jennifer Hillier’s Things We Do in the Dark.)

    …I’ve re-read the most:

    An ideal feast: Rewatch a few episodes of The Middle for the 98,976th time and chase ‘em with yet another visit to Cormac McCarthy’s taut, haunting Child of God.

    …made me laugh out loud:

    You’re on an Airplane: A Self-Mythologizing Memoir by Parker Posey. There’s a famous (to me) scene in Waiting for Guffman where Posey’s character is barbecuing a single chicken wing and smoking a cigarette, noting that she’ll “always have a place at the Dairy Queen.” This memoir feels like that scene. Equal parts out there wackadoodle and no holds barred, grounded fucking fun.

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    What Do People Do All Day?

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    Portnoy's Complaint

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    The Western Coast

    The Western Coast

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    Impossible Vacation

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    You're on an Airplane: A Self-Mythologizing Memoir

    You’re on an Airplane: A Self-Mythologizing Memoir
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    Riza Cruz is an editor and writer based in New York.

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  • Emily St. John Mandel on Jeff VanderMeer, ‘Piranesi,’ and the Book That Has the Best Title

    Emily St. John Mandel on Jeff VanderMeer, ‘Piranesi,’ and the Book That Has the Best Title

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    Welcome to Shelf Life, ELLE.com’s books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you’re on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you’re here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too.

    For fans of Station Eleven (book, HBO series, both), the television adaptations of Emily St. John Mandel’s The Glass Hotel and Sea of Tranquility (coming out in Vintage paperback this month) can’t come soon enough. And this time, Mandel is working on them with Patrick Somerville, who brought the National Book Award finalist Station Eleven to Emmy-nominated life. The NYT-bestselling author is currently at work on a new novel, which, as Mandel has done before, features characters from her previous books, as well as a screenplay of her first novel, Last Night in Montreal, which was rejected by more than 35 publishers.

    The Vancouver Island-born, Brooklyn- and L.A.-based Mandel is a dual citizen (her father is from California); has written four other novels (TGH and SOT were favorites of President Obama); was homeschooled, left high school one credit short of a diploma, attended community college for a year, then attended the School of Toronto Dance Theatre; is descended from William the Conqueror; worked at a cancer lab at Rockefeller University; spends lots of time on Reddit seeing how people interact; would have been named Llewellyn if she’d been a boy; likes Marianne McGinnis art and Anine Bing blazers; was a Jeopardy! clue; and has had short hair ever since she saw Girl, Interrupted. Good at: Piano. Not good at: Driving. Her greenlit titles below.

    The book that:

    …I recommend over and over again:

    Irène Némirovsky’s Suite Française. There’s something kind of miraculous about that novel.

    …made me rethink a long-held belief:

    I was convinced I had zero interest in horror until I read Dan Chaon’s novel Ill Will. I read it twice.

    …I read in one sitting, it was that good:

    Susanna Clarke’s Piranesi. I started reading one evening when I’d just put my daughter to bed, in one of those awkward “It’s too early for bed but I’m too tired to be awake” moments, and was still reading hours later. I found it magnificent.

    …currently sits on my nightstand:

    A novel by Jade Sharma called Problems. I picked it up in Los Angeles without knowing anything about it, and it sucked me in. It’s disturbing and I love it.

    …I last bought:

    I just ordered a few books that I’m picking up later today: Beyond Black by Hilary Mantel for me, and the His Dark Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman for my six-year-old.

    …has the best title:

    Nick Harkaway always thinks of the best titles. I could’ve titled at least three of my novels The Gone-Away World if he hadn’t thought of it first.

    …helped me become a better writer:

    Norman Mailer’s The Executioner’s Song. I find Mailer a bit hit-or-miss, but before I read that book, my prose style was much more ornate. His prose in that book is a marvel of clarity and precision and it had an enormous impact on me.

    …features the most beautiful book jacket:

    I have a gorgeous UK edition of Jeff VanderMeer’s The Southern Reach trilogy—Annihilation, Authority, and Acceptance—that I picked up at Foyle’s in London during one of the Station Eleven tours. I would love those books no matter what they looked like, but this particular set is in shades of white and silver and looks gorgeous on the shelf.

    …I asked for one Christmas as a kid:

    I asked for Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient for Christmas when I was 14. I avoided the film adaptation, and it’s one of those books I’m afraid to reread, because my memories of it are so beautiful.

    …taught me this Jeopardy!-worthy bit of trivia:

    J.M. Ledgard’s Submergence taught me how deep the ocean is. I’ve been thinking about the hadal deep ever since. The deepest trenches go down over 30,000 feet; in other words, the depth is about equal to the distance between an airplane and the Earth’s surface.

    Bonus question: If I could live in any library or bookstore in the world, it would be:

    I wouldn’t mind taking up residence in the apartment at Shakespeare & Company in Paris and maybe just reading for six months.

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    Suite Française

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    The English Patient

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    Riza Cruz is an editor and writer based in New York.

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  • Sofia Coppola on Joan Didion, ‘I’m Glad My Mom Died,’ and the Book That Broke Her Heart

    Sofia Coppola on Joan Didion, ‘I’m Glad My Mom Died,’ and the Book That Broke Her Heart

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    Welcome to Shelf Life, ELLE.com’s books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you’re on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you’re here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too.

    Until Sofia Coppola directs her five-part adaptation for Apple TV+, we have the reissue of Edith Wharton’s The Custom of the Country (Penguin Classics), for which she wrote the foreword. For now, she’s currently directing her next film, Priscilla, based on Priscilla Presley’s book, Elvis and Me (Coppola’s on-set playlist here). Her other movies include: The Virgin Suicides, Lost in Translation, for which she won the 2004 Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, Marie Antoinette, Somewhere, which won the 2010 Golden Lion in Venice, The Bling Ring, The Beguiled, for which she won 2017 Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival, and On the Rocks.

    The Napa Valley-raised New Yorker has lended her talents to fashion (collaborates with Chanel, designed the SC bag for Louis Vuitton; directed projects for Christian Dior); the arts (directed shorts for the New York City Ballet and staged La Traviata for the Rome Opera with costumes designed by Valentino), and photography (including shooting Paris Hilton for Elle).

    She interned at Chanel at 15; would be a teacher if she weren’t a filmmaker; is on the board of the Martin Scorsese’s Film Foundation; bought herself a Cartier watch after filming Marie Antoinette; had cameos in Star Wars: Episode I–the Phantom Menace and What We Do in the Shadows; and has her own wine.

    Loves: revival houses, late ’60s style and the Richard Avedon Foundation IG feed, hotels. Here, the reads that have stayed with her.

    The book that…

    …I recommend over and over again:

    Spring Snow by Yukio Mishima—a beautiful tragic love story set in the Taishō period in Japan.

    …I swear I’ll finish one day:

    On the Shortness of Life by Seneca, by my bed and is very short, but I can only get through a few pages at a time, but great insights and reminders on how to live and the value your time.

    …currently sits on my nightstand:

    David Sedaris’s Happy-Go-Lucky. Love reading this right now while I’m working and it’s a break and a companion I look forward to while away from home. So funny and touching and makes me feel connected.

    …I’d pass on to my kid:

    All About Love by bell hooks. I love her thoughtfulness on this topic

    …I’d give to a new graduate:

    Let Me Tell You What I Mean by Joan Didion. I love [the essay] ‘On Being Unchosen By the College of One’s Choice’ and the line in the introduction by Hilton Als: ‘…Part of the remarkable character of Didion’s work has to do with her refusal to pretend that she doesn’t exist.’

    …I’d like turned into a Netflix show:

    Sorrow and Bliss by Meg Mason. I’d like to see the movie directed by Emerald Fennell and starring Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Riz Ahmed. [Ed. note: New Regency owns the film and television rights to this book.]

    …I first bought:

    Bright Lights, Big City by Jay McInerney. As a teenager, I thought it was the coolest and led me to NYC.

    …I last bought:

    I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy. I couldn’t put it down. It was so moving and funny and hopeful how someone can emerge from that trauma and chaos and find themselves as an artist.

    …has the best title:

    Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham. I loved that book in my youth, I love a tragic romance, that is the ultimate for unrequited love.

    …has the greatest ending:

    The Custom of the Country! I love the ending—the last paragraph is so good! I remember where I was that moment finishing it and the impact it had.

    …broke my heart:

    The Copenhagen Trilogy by Tove Ditlevsen. I was walking around in a daze the day I finished it.

    …grew on me:

    Mouth to Mouth by Antoine Wilson. Vendela Vida told me about it, and it was hard for me to get into (I’m a challenged reader) and takes a while to get into, but when you do, it’s hard to put down.

    …I’ve re-read the most:

    Anna Karenina. I love a tragic love story and torn woman.

    …that holds the recipe to a favorite dish:

    Via Carota by Jody Williams and Rita Sodi—their famous green salad.

    Bonus question: If I could live in any library or bookstore in the world, it would be:

    Three Lives in the West Village, New York.

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  • N.K. Jemisin on Octavia E. Butler, ‘The 1619 Project,’ and the Book That Sealed a Friendship

    N.K. Jemisin on Octavia E. Butler, ‘The 1619 Project,’ and the Book That Sealed a Friendship

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    Welcome to Shelf Life, ELLE.com’s books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you’re on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you’re here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too.

    N.K. Jemisin understands that to build worlds, you must understand this one. The only person to win three Best Novel Hugo Awards in a row (for each title in the post-apocalypse Broken Earth trilogy), the NYT-bestselling science fiction and fantasy author has just published The World We Make (Orbit), the second in her Great Cities duology (first was The City We Became), among her many books. She also won a Best Short Novelette Hugo for Emergency Skin and Best Graphic Story Hugo for Far Sector, a Green Lantern spinoff for DC Comics and wrote the script for the film adaptation of the Broken Earth series, to be produced by Michael B. Jordan’s Outlier Society.

    The Iowa-born Jemisin grew up between Mobile, Alabama and Brooklyn, where she now lives. A psychology major at Tulane who got a master’s in education at the University of Maryland, she was a college career counselor and academic advisor, wrote the Otherworldly SFF column for the New York Times Books Review, and received a MacArthur Fellowship.

    She’s a gamer and gardener, has a ginger cat named King Ozzymandias (Ozzy for short) and tuxedo cat named The Marvelous Master Magpie (Maggie for short), teaches a MasterClass on world-building, has a Patreon, was on Time’s 100 Most Influential People list (write-up by Stacey Abrams), once toasted Spam sushi over a heat vent on a Hawaiian volcanic crater, is into anime, manga, and sentai, is cousins with W. Kamau Bell, and likes candy corn.

    Good at: Writing fan fiction under pseudonyms. Not so good at: Double dutch, texting fast. Her book recs below YW.

    The book that…

    …kept me up way too late:

    Tailchaser’s Song by Tad Williams, which starts like a children’s story and then becomes something Very Dark.

    …shaped my worldview:

    Dawn by Octavia E. Butler.

    …I read in one sitting, it was that good:

    Mechanique by Genevieve Valentine.

    …currently sits on my nightstand:

    The 1619 Project by Nikole Hannah-Jones.

    …I’d pass on to a kid:

    Stamped by Jason Reynolds and Ibram X. Kendi.

    …I first bought:

    Pippi Longstocking by Astrid Lindgren. I have it on good authority that when I was about four, I bought this with gift money.

    …should be on every college syllabus:

    Why Are All The Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? by Beverly Daniel Tatum, PhD.

    …I never returned to the library (mea culpa):

    I scrupulously returned books to the library and must defend myself on this point!

    …sealed a friendship:

    A first edition of The Lord of the Rings, which I lent to a friend who recently contacted me about them, sparking the friendship again after a decade!

    …features the most beautiful book jacket:

    A copy of The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám with a damask cover of grapevines in ruby and black.

    …everyone should read:

    One of the many books by queer and POC authors that are under challenge by conservatives, via your local library. If they’re no longer available at your library because the conservatives got there first, join your local Library Board and fight to reinstate them. Reading–and the freedom to speak truth to power–is part of a framework of equity and justice that is under attack in a way not seen for a generation. Fight for all books. Or else.

    …that holds the recipe to a favorite dish:

    Salt Acid Fat Heat by Samin Nosrat. After a lifetime of food defined by what it didn’t have, this book is a revelation–it’s less about a specific recipe from the book than it was about changing my relationship to ingredients and preparation.

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    Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám

    Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám

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  • Elizabeth McCracken on Brit Bennett, ‘Bel Canto,’ and the Book That She Always Recommends

    Elizabeth McCracken on Brit Bennett, ‘Bel Canto,’ and the Book That She Always Recommends

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    Welcome to Shelf Life, ELLE.com’s books column, in which authors share their most memorable reads. Whether you’re on the hunt for a book to console you, move you profoundly, or make you laugh, consider a recommendation from the writers in our series, who, like you (since you’re here), love books. Perhaps one of their favorite titles will become one of yours, too.

    Elizabeth McCracken’s eighth book, The Hero of This Book (Ecco) follows a writer reflecting on her late mother’s life and on their relationship as she wanders through London. Details may blur the line between fact and fiction, but it is a novel.

    The Boston-born, Austin-based author has also written a memoir, short story collections (two longlisted for the National Book Award), and National Book Award finalist The Giant’s House, which is being adapted for film by Nick Hornby and directed by Andy Serkis. A graduate of and instructor at Iowa Writers’ Workshop, she is the James Michener Chair in Fiction at the University of Texas, Austin and the recipient of grants and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts among others.

    She played candlepin bowling in a league growing up; thought she might be a poet and studied playwriting with Derek Walcott; holds an MLIS (master’s in library information science) and was a public librarian; once won $500 worth of books from Prairie Lights as a grad student in Iowa City; was quoted in freewillastrology.com; Tweets swimming reports from Barton Springs pool; carries an unsmart phone so as not to be distracted by the internet; has lived in France; and read Anna Karenina in 16 hours.

    Likes: hotel rooms, ventriloquism, Kaweco fountain pens, driving in the UK, puppets, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, and semi-colons. Dislikes: elves, having her picture taken, occasional backstrokers. Immerse yourself in one of her book recs.

    The book that…

    …made me weep uncontrollably:

    Our Andromeda by Brenda Shaughnessy. Full disclosure: I have never wept uncontrollably at a book, or at a movie, or any work of art. I am hardhearted. I never cry at things are simply sad; I cry at beauty and strangeness and the human willingness to look for meaning—not transcendence, but meaning—at difficult times. Brenda Shaughnessy’s Our Andromeda, a book of poems, always moves me to tears.

    ….I read in one sitting, it was that good:

    I read Brit Bennett’s The Vanishing Half all at once. It was the first book I read during the early days of the pandemic that showed me a world so vivid, with characters so entirely real, I fell into it and out of my dull life.

    …helped me through a breakup/loss:

    The Art of Losing: Poems of Grief and Healing, an anthology edited by Kevin Young. Poetry is what I require if I’m unmoored.

    …shaped my worldview:

    Before I read the short stories of Grace Paley (first in Enormous Changes at the Last Minute, and then in her Collected Stories, I might have thought a short story could do only one or two things, and not—as Paley’s stories do—move a reader to tears or laughter, describe the way people live and talk, be surreal and true-to-life at the same time, and, above all, ask, quite literally, how we are to live in the world.

    …I recommend over and over:

    Riva Lehrer’s Golem Girl, a brilliant book about an interesting, artistic life, illustrated with the author’s astounding paintings.

    …I’d give to a new graduate:

    Lynda Barry’s What It Is. Useful for anyone who wants to use art—writing, drawing, the pen across the page—to understand life, and then to make things.

    …made me laugh out loud:

    Paul Lisicky’s Later: My Life At The Edge of the World is so good and full of lust and intelligence and understanding of what it means to grieve and find yourself at the same time. It also includes a section about the author being dragooned into a parade while wearing a large hat shaped like a soft-serve ice cream cone that makes me laugh just thinking about it.

    …I’d like turned into a Netflix show:

    Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl by Andrea Lawlor would make a great series: funny, humane, episodic, full of event, and also sex, and also joy and complexity.

    …I last bought:

    Elizabeth Crane’s This Story Will Change, a memoir by a wonderful fiction writer.

    …features the coolest book jacket:

    The Book of Goose by Yiyun Lee, which is every bit as strange and beautiful inside, a page turner about female friendship and the nature of authorship.

    …has the best title:

    My answer for this has held steady for years: David Bowman’s Let the Dog Drive.

    …features a character I love to hate:

    Bastard Out of Carolina. What’s better than a detestable character? A detestable child character. I love everything about Dorothy Allison’s Bastard Out of Carolina, including Shannon Pearl, an awful morbid mean child who lives still in my heart.

    …is a master class on dialogue:

    Richard Price is criminally underrated as a novelist. Lush Life is my favorite of his books, but they’re all full of funny, frightening, fantastic dialogue.

    …has the greatest ending:

    Stephen Kuusisto’s Planet of the Blind is a beautiful book, and the end of it is gorgeous and unforgettable, but what hit me like a gong nearly 25 years ago when I first read it, and still resounds in my head, is the ending of the acknowledgments: “My greatest debt of gratitude is to the Burkett family of Fairfax, Virginia. Bill, Reba, Bill Jr. and his sister Anne Marie raised my guide dog. And then they let her go.”

    …describes a house I’d want to live in or a place I’d want to visit:

    Betsey Trotwood from David Copperfield is one of my favorite characters in all of fiction. I’d like to visit her house (though Dickens is a brilliant writer of interiors, among other things, so in some ways I feel I have).

    …I consider literary comfort food:

    Joseph Mitchell’s Up at the Old Hotel never fails me. He was a New Yorker writer with a fondness for eccentrics and oddballs. Me, too.

    …surprised me:

    I have an imaginary resume of things I’ve done that have touched on the literary world with no effort to myself. My first entry and perhaps favorite: I was the first person to ever read Bel Canto by Ann Patchett. I read it in manuscript while sitting up at a bar in Cambridge, Massachusetts. All of her books are astonishing, of course, but I still remember the feeling of being entirely pinned to my barstool, not knowing what would come next, or how she did it.

    …that holds the recipe to a favorite dish:

    My mother loved the Mary Poppins books so much it’s impossible for me to unwind my own love of them from hers: I love them because she loved them and as she would say, she was always right. She gave me a copy of Mary Poppins in the Kitchen: A Cookery Book with a Story. I cooked its very English recipes all the time: Zodiac cake (chocolate, and decorated with stars), roast chicken. But my favorite recipe was for baked custard, because my mother liked that, too. Sweet, and full of protein—my mother was a great champion of protein—nursery food, but magic, too, the way it set in the oven.

    Bonus question: If I could live in any library or bookstore in the world, it would be:

    The Boston Public Library, with its dioramas and murals. Books will sustain me 98% of the time, but sometimes I require a diorama.

    The Vanishing Half

    The Vanishing Half

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    The Art of Losing

    The Art of Losing

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    Enormous Changes at the Last Minute

    Enormous Changes at the Last Minute

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    The Collected Stories

    The Collected Stories

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    Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl

    Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl

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