Camonghne Felix
[isbn]
This book is like nothing else, both in its radical formal innovation and its bone-deep commitment to being as raw and honest as possible. I don't think I've read anything this open, this real, this unsparing about love and family and desire and pain in a very long time. If you've ever beaten yourself up after a breakup, if you've ever questioned why you gave parts of yourself away to someone or whether it was worth it, this book is for you. Recommended by Tim B.
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Isaac Butler
[isbn]
The Method charts the evolution of what became the dominant acting technique of the 20th century on stage and screen, tracing its journey from Tsarist Russia to HUAC-era Hollywood to the present day. Along the way, Isaac Butler dispels the numerous myths and misconceptions about The Method, but what's powerful in this book is something deeper: how an acting style devoted to the truth of the human condition came to flourish in two... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Maggie Nelson
[isbn]
"Freedom" has never felt so fraught or so complicated as it does in our current moment. In a time when the term is often invoked as an individual right, this book wrestles with the notion that freedom is inseparable from our responsibilities to one another. This is a powerful, rigorous, detailed, nuanced exploration of a concept that is at once central to our self-conception as a society and more misunderstood and misused than any word in our... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Dawnie Walton
[isbn]
The Final Revival of Opal and Nev is stunning — original, formally inventive, fiercely political, and full of unforgettable characters that you won't want to stop spending time with when it's over. The lightly fictionalized past and present of this book feels just as authentic as any reported work about the intersection of music and society would, but this is also a thrilling page-turner that is immensely readable. And perhaps the... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Regina Porter
[isbn]
This book goes all over the place — Georgia, Germany, Coney Island, New Hampshire, France, and back again — looping around two families, black and white, across five decades. The result is a stunning novel that grabs hold of big questions and doesn't let go: What does it mean to be a family? Can you outrun the past, and should you try? Who gets to belong in this messed-up, beautiful country we call America? Recommended by Tim B.
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Elon Green
[isbn]
You can read and appreciate this book as a true crime thriller — it's got plenty of twists and turns, breakthroughs and roadblocks to the investigation at its center. But the real achievement here is capturing the lost queer New York City of the late '80s and early '90s — the bars where men who could not be themselves in public went to loosen their ties and live in the best version of a queer community available to them. Elon Green captures why... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Yaa Gyasi
[isbn]
Transcendent Kingdom is a searching, intimate novel about so many issues: race and the immigrant experience, the twin scourges of addiction and depression and our society's failure to grapple with them, the power and the limitations of religious faith and of scientific inquiry, and how we cope with profound loss and grief. This is a moving, urgent story, and I couldn't put it down. Recommended by Tim B.
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Cathy Park Hong
[isbn]
This book is ruthless and funny, exacting and searching, and will make you question, deeply, your assumptions about race, language, gender, and the interactions you have with the people and the world around you. Cathy Park Hong's essays are sharp and incisive, and she doesn't let anyone, or anything, off the hook. Recommended by Tim B.
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Ben Lerner
[isbn]
We are living in a moment defined by anger — anger at injustice and those who treat it with indifference (or even glee), anger at the gulf of understanding between divided parts of the country, anger at the impotence that many people feel in a society stratified by race, gender, class, and income inequality. The Topeka School journeys into the white-hot center of that anger, exploring its origins and its consequences, both in the 1990s... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Jericho Brown
[isbn]
I don't have words for how amazing this collection of poetry is, except to say that every word in it is a revelation. I read these poems again and again, and the best thing I can say is that it refreshed my heart and made me feel less alone, which is maybe the most important thing we can ask language to do. Recommended by Tim B.
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Jess Row
[isbn]
In these essays, Jess Row interrogates and challenges the "universality" of the literary fiction white writers have written for the last 50 years — everyone from Raymond Carver to Anne Tyler to David Foster Wallace — and how the "absence" of race in these works has prevented white writers (and readers) from knowing "what we mean...when we say the word 'freedom.'" This book is essential reading for anyone who loves the literary fiction of the past... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Emily Nussbaum
[isbn]
This striking book of essays is more than just a collection of sharp reviews or a celebration of the medium. Emily Nussbaum posits a bold way of thinking about television as an art form in and of itself — not on novelistic or cinematic terms, but according to its own specific grammar and visual language. It's a brilliant interrogation of the place that television, both "prestige" and "popular," has come to occupy in American life, and of the ways... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Nafissa Thompson Spires
[isbn]
There's a lot of writing about the intersections of race and class, social media and communication, and the intersection of the personal and the political. This collection of short stories made me think about those connections in ways I had never considered. Every character is unforgettable and like no one we've ever seen before, and these stories shimmer with humor, sorrow, and grace. I can't wait to read what Nafissa Thompson-Spires writes... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Roberto Bolano, Chris Andrews
[isbn]
Want to see why everyone is so excited about Bolaño, but don't want to commit to a 700-page (or even a 1,200-page) book? This is a great place to start — enough poetry and paranoia to understand his unique allure. Recommended by Tim B.
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Jamie Quatro
[isbn]
A powerful, poetic meditation on love and faith, God and sex, and the parts of ourselves we compromise in order to maintain our relationships. Recommended by Tim B.
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Adam Haslett
[isbn]
I have never read a book that treats family, depression, and relationships with more tenderness or grace. It’s also possible that I’ve never read a book this tragic. Adam Haslett follows a family as they grapple with the grave mental illness of their father and eldest brother, and the highs and lows along the way. While much of the book is sorrowful, Haslett is a writer with a masterful grasp of language and character, and the results are a... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Jesmyn Ward
[isbn]
If this book was only what it is on the surface — a memoir of Ward’s experience watching four young men, including her brother, die before any of them turned 25 — it would be among the most deeply felt and moving memoirs I’ve ever read. But this book is also a powerful investigation of how poverty, race, and the history of injustice in the Deep South have all conspired to make simply living one’s life a dangerous proposition for young black men.... (read more) Recommended by Tim B.
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Ben Lerner
[isbn]
Lerner delivers on the promise of his fiction debut, Leaving the Atocha Station, with this stunning exploration of the lines between fiction and nonfiction, audience and creator, and the mortality of the body and the immortality of art. I haven't read a book that better captures how it feels to be alive in the 21st century. Recommended by Tim B.
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