[Busy with a
bunch of book talks at the moment—on which more in a few weeks—so a series of
brief posts highlighting great new books I’ve read this year. Add your own
recent reads, whether new books or otherwise, for a crowd-sourced weekend
reading list!]
Colson Whitehead
has long been a favorite contemporary author of mine, and his The
Underground Railroad remains one of the best and most unique historical
novels I’ve ever read (and it taught
very well too). To a degree his follow-up, The
Nickel Boys (2019), is a more conventional novel than Underground, perhaps because the
constantly genre-shifting Whitehead has settled this time on a more traditional
genre (a bildungsroman, set
at a boarding school no less). But conventional doesn’t necessarily mean
less compelling (indeed, conventions endure in part because they continue to
compel us), and Nickel is one of the
most powerful novels I’ve read in years. So much so, in fact, that in many
cases I had to stop between chapters, so potently were Whitehead’s words and
images, characters and settings, events and reflections affecting me. This isn’t
a book I’d feature on my annual Beach Reads list—but it’s also not a book any
American can afford to miss.
Next recent read
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Thoughts on
this book? Other recent reads you’d share?
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