A monthly post about what I've been reading, with aspirations but no real hope of reading down a very tall stack of books. Previous posts from this year:
Don't mind the dust; these books have been stacking up for a long time.
Poetry
In April I picked up this sweet little anthology: How to Love the World: Poems of Gratitude and Hope, edited by James Crewes. It's a lovely collection from poets both familiar and new to me. And we can all use as much gratitude and hope as we can get these days, no?
Fiction
I've been in the mood for light fiction, and my mom had sent me a stack of mysteries earlier in the year that fit the bill: The Body on the Train by Frances Brody, a historical, traditional mystery with rhubarb and coal mining; Death of an Unsung Hero by Tessa Arlen, also historical and traditional, with World War I PTSD (not what it was called then) patients and false identities, and Read and Buried by Eva Gates, a contemporary cozy with a lighthouse library and a treasure map. All feature amateur sleuths, which I prefer to police procedurals, and I think my favorite of the three was The Body on the Train.
Nonfiction
I've been rereading certain books for a new writing project I'm working on: We Took to the Woods and Happy the Land by Louise Dickinson Rich, about Rich's experiences living in a very remote spot in the Maine woods with her husband and young son (and later daughter) in the 1930s and 40s--a funny, poignant, beautifully drawn, and thoroughly entertaining description of her wild life. On the opposite side of the country, Margaret Murie's Two in the Far North, about traveling in the wilds of Alaska beginning with her journey there at age nine in 1911, followed by her honeymoon with her husband Olaus aboard a variety of boats and then dog sled, a boat trip into the interior with their infant son, and several subsequent trips after their family was grown (I also read Margaret's chapters of Wapiti Wilderness, not pictured, which she wrote in collaboration with Olaus, about their life in Wyoming raising kids in the mountains). Beautiful descriptions of the people and landscape of Alaska and the challenges and joys of making a living in such a remote region before the advent of modern technology.
One of the things that's fun about publishing a book is getting to know other writers in the same genre. Nancy East is one of these. Her book, Chasing the Smokies Moon, tells the story of hiking, with a friend, all of the trails in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (more than 900 miles of them) in under 30 days, for the fastest known time, as a fund raiser for search-and-rescue training. It made me think it would be fun to do something similar in Acadia (although, as you know if you've read Uphill Both Ways, not for any kind of speed record!). East overcomes a lot of difficulties, including injuries and being separated from her children for a whole month, to reach a goal she set for herself, raising money for search-and-rescue training along the way. She is an inspiration to hikers and mothers alike.
I'm training to be a book coach, and one of the books recommended in the course is Creativity, Inc. by Ed Catmull, the founder of Pixar. Funny story: there is another book of this same title, which was written not by an animation pioneer but rather The Harvard Business Review, and that's the book I accidentally purchased at first. The case study in the book is a company that designs office furniture. Now, I've worked in a lot of offices, and I can say that without exception office furniture is universally ugly, uncomfortable, and dysfunctional, and if there is one iota of creativity that goes into its design, it is in the service of ensuring that the furniture enhances the misery of its users. I was relieved to figure out that I'd bought the wrong book before I got too far into its dusty pages. Once I got the right book, it was entertaining to read about the early days of Pixar and the evolution of that company, and it made me want to go back and watch some of their movies, most of which I never saw, because our kids were always like, "We already watched that at day care. Waah!" I don't often read books about business management (which is what, mainly, this book is about; there's one small section relevant to the work of a book coach), but whenever I do, all I think about is how badly managed almost every place I've ever worked at is. The same was true in this case as well. Do you think actual managers ever read these kinds of books?
Don't forget you can order a copy of my book, Uphill Both Ways: Hiking toward Happiness on the Colorado Trail from any of the vendors listed here.
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