Lists
by Gigi Little, November 25, 2020 8:09 AM
This year, as we celebrate the holidays remotely to help stem the surge of COVID-19, my thoughts can't help but turn to the subject of family. Thanksgiving often evokes disparate images: of the warm family gathering and the contentious afternoon stuffing down mounds of mashed potatoes to keep from blurting what you really want to say to Uncle Ralph. But whether you miss them like crazy or will enjoy a little holiday quiet this year, our families — biological and created — are the foundations of our lives. In honor of that, here are some favorite books that celebrate what it means to be part of a family, in various, often hilarious, ways...
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Lists
by Powell's Books, November 23, 2020 8:38 AM
Still in need of some holiday inspiration? Sixteen of our favorite writers share the books they're giving away this year.
Rene Denfeld: Survivor Café
by Elizabeth Rosner
To: All my friends who care about the future, and how we can gently, and with compassion for each other, reconcile with the past to create a better world...
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Lists
by Rachel Marks, November 20, 2020 9:26 AM
Aside from Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Is You,” dessert is my favorite part of the holidays (if anyone from my family is reading this, sorry and I promise I love you more than dessert). While I love my grandma’s schnecken and my cousin’s Oreo cheesecake bars, pie takes the cake for me in the holiday dessert realm. And what better way is there to take a break from the family drama than with a slice and a good book?
Although I can’t offer any recipes, I can offer you a book recommendation from 2020’s new releases for wherever you fall on the pie spectrum.
Pumpkin
I couldn’t not start with the holiday heavy-hitter. If pumpkin’s your go-to slice, I get it. You’re a traditionalist and love a comforting read to accompany your dessert...
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Lists
by Jeremy Garber, November 12, 2020 8:24 AM
This year, perhaps especially, it is easy to see just how small and interconnected our world really is. 2020, despite its myriad challenges, dramas, heartaches, tragedies, and hard-won battles, has proven to be one when historically marginalized voices received the wider attention, amplification, and critical ear they have always deserved (and have had to fight so vehemently for). So it is with books, too. Increasingly, readers are turning to tomes written by authors who share backgrounds, perspectives, and stories different from their own.
Research from psychologists has shown a link between reading literary fiction and the deepening of a reader’s capacity for empathy, as it allows us to better understand other human beings — as well as what it may be like for them to navigate our shared world...
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Lists
by Powell's Books, November 9, 2020 9:22 AM
Has there ever been a year when we’ve needed the forget-the-world embrace of an excellent novel more than in 2020? The Year-That-Must-Not-Be-Named has given us a lot to cry over, it’s true, but because there’s a modicum of kindness in this indifferent universe, it has also brought us a host of brilliant stories by a diverse range of writers. The 24 novels below are comforting, challenging, upsetting, humorous, intellectual, and unique. They have nourished us and given us hope, and we offer them to you with love.
The Pull of the Stars
by Emma Donoghue
Emma Donoghue's luminous story of three days in an Irish maternity ward at the height of the Great Flu is a tale of death and life, of history, of feminism, of determination, of all kinds of love, painted in gorgeous prose that at times made me stop to copy down passages — not just because of their beauty but because of the heart-in-the-throat feeling of being reminded that, in the midst of such brutal reality, can be stunning moments of joy...
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Lists
by Emily Brodowicz, November 2, 2020 8:51 AM
In 2020, the year of endless doomscrolling (and doom-reading), it is sometimes easy to despair. Through that lens, the theme that encapsulates the best nonfiction books of the year is “ending”: The end of the human epoch via global warming. The end of privacy via invasive tech. The end of our country via autocracy, oligarchy, racism and white supremacy, and economic inequality. The final end of the universe. But there is also a less cynical thread running through these books: they can represent turning points. These books inform us, they give us the sometimes-uncomfortable knowledge necessary to understand our past, inform our present, and actively create our future...
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Lists
by Rhianna Walton, October 30, 2020 11:36 AM
It’s almost All Hallows’ Eve: Light some candles, play some mood music, and summon your inner Willow for a deep communion with the history and practices of witchcraft. From green witchcraft to colonial history to friendship charms for underage spell-casters, these books demonstrate that witchcraft is smart, feminist, green, fun, and not wearing a pointy black hat.
Waking the Witch
by Pam Grossman
Both a memoir and a survey of witchcraft, Grossman guides the reader through the ways witches have been received throughout history and portrayed in modern popular culture. A great introduction for folks seeking to expand their own spiritual practice...
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Lists
by Powell's Books, October 30, 2020 9:56 AM
Whether you opt for poetry, horror, fantasy, environmental nonfiction, or folklore, the 14 new books below will expand and enrich your understanding of the diverse Native communities in the United States, and introduce you to phenomenal writers whose work is art, activism, and wholly astonishing.
The Only Good Indians
by Stephen Graham Jones (Blackfeet)
Bookseller Tove H. insists that sharing too much of the plot will spoil this deliciously creepy novel, but we’ll say this: Four Native men are being stalked by an ancient entity bent on punishing them for a childhood infraction against hunting traditions...
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Interviews
by Rhianna Walton, October 28, 2020 4:00 PM
I spoke with Rumaan Alam on the same day that his third novel, Leave the World Behind, made the shortlist for the 2020 National Book Award for Fiction. The dark — and darkly funny — story of how an upper-middle-class white family from Brooklyn and a wealthy Black couple from the Upper East Side cope with the possible end of humanity, while accidentally sharing a vacation home, Leave the World Behind uses the tropes of horror to explore the real effects of race, class, and technology on relationships and survival. Chillingly plausible, critical, and generous, Leave the World Behind is a gripping combination of can’t-put-it-down thriller and a meticulous excavation of the ways adults perpetually succeed and fail in creating a just and stable world. It's a delight to present Alam's riveting novel as Volume 89 of Indiespensable.
Rhianna Walton: I read Leave the World Behind during an especially bad wildfire season in Oregon that kept us housebound, and that coincided with ongoing COVID-19 restrictions, political violence downtown, a windstorm, and a blackout. It made me second-guess calling the novel dystopian because that implies future doom…
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Original Essays
by Jess Walter, October 28, 2020 11:01 AM
Editor's note: Catch Jess Walter's event at the Portland Book Festival on Thursday, November 5, at 6 p.m. Buy the preorder and event ticket here.
A novelist should never say never.
As soon as you make a hard-and-fast rule about writing (for instance, never use the second person) you quickly find yourself longing to break that rule.
I remember once chiding a college class over their love of zombie stories, only to get so worked up, I started writing one that very night.
I think writers are prone to making these empty aesthetic pronouncements and arbitrary rules because we don’t like to admit there might not be any rules. It’s terrifying, staring at a blank page with nothing but disorder and insecurity to rein us in. So we cling to genre and to various schools and styles. We herd ourselves into meaningless pens: I’m a realist, a modernist, a minimalist; I write speculative fiction, crime fiction, autofiction...
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