Hear Them Roar

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All this month we’re featuring a selection of fantastic summer reading selected by the experts at O: The Oprah Magazine. See more topics here.

The women at the center of these six essential titles are united in their attempts to navigate a host of fresh-off-your-Twitter-feed issues including but not limited to sexism, sizeism, public exhibitionism, boring boyfriends, violent boyfriends, cocaine, the internet, date rape, family secrets, judicial corruption, writer’s block, hookup culture, and Eastern European sex slavery. In genres ranging from memoir to crime thriller to short fiction, the scenes–even those that, on the face of it, seem far-fetched–are achingly familiar and all too real.

I’m Just a Person by Tig Notaro (Ecco)

Tig Notaro Im Just a Person cover crop SF2Girl meets girl, girl gets life-threatening intestinal infection, girl’s mother dies, girl breaks up with girl, girl gets breast cancer, girl performs ground-breaking comedy routine about said tragedies, girl sky-rockets to pop-culture stardom. Notaro’s story is funny not because it’s true (although it is), but because it’s told by the world-class stand-up with wit and vulnerability. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

Dating Tips for the Unemployed by Iris Smyles (Mariner)

Dating Tips Unemployed Cover SFThe prodigiously inventive Smyles melds novel, autobiography, and all manner of asides as she flails at art, love, and friendship with the wry intelligence of someone just wise enough to realize they have no idea what they are doing. A flat-out joy to read.  Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Hot Little Hands by Abigail Ulman (Spiegel and Grau)

HotLittle Hands Cover SFIn this sardonic, smart, and thoroughly modern debut collection, Ulman presents nine stories about young women on the verge of adulthood, motherhood, and more who make momentous decisions while delirious with desire. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Wilde Lake by Laura Lippman (Morrow)

Wilde Lake Cover SFLippman draws on two decades-worth of crime reporting to produce a heart-stopping new thriller, which pivots on a state attorney’s drive and cunning as she unravels a puzzling murder case with personal implications. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Sex Object by Jessica Valenti (Dey St.)

Sex Object Valenti cover SFA zesty, zeitgeisty memoir in three acts—bodies, boys, and babies—from the cofounder of the trailblazing blog Feministing.com. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

 

Shrill by Lindy West (Hachette)

TLindyWest SF crophe literary debut of a critic unafraid to knee the patriarchy in the groin—to wit, her slogan: “Silence is not an option.” West takes no prisoners, whether on the topic of rape culture, internet trolls, or loud-and-proud fat activism. We’re all ears! Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Looking for more inspirations for your summer reading? Explore more of The Best Books of Summer from the editors of O: The Oprah Magazine, in the B&N Review or in the pages of this month’s issue of O: The Oprah Magazine.

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29k46BG

Icons

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All this month we’re featuring a selection of fantastic summer reading selected by the experts at O: The Oprah Magazine. See more topics here.

They say don’t meet your heroes, lest they disappoint you…. We say you should bring them along on vacation. These vivid portraits of rock luminaries, poets, provocateurs, and literary lights will provide scintillating companionship wherever summer finds you.

Paul McCartney: The Life by Philip Norman (Little Brown)

McCartney Cover Crop SFWhat’s left to reveal about one of the most chronicled musicians of the 20th century? As it turns out, a great deal. With the notoriously guarded McCartney’s “tacit approval,” Norman sheds new light on well-known Beatles stories and then goes further, forging a thoroughly absorbing account of McCartney’s life after the group’s breakup: business ventures, parenthood, personal tragedy, the struggle to live and create beyond the legacy of his fabled band. The result is a tantalizing trip down the legend’s own long and winding road. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Everybody Behaves Badly by Lesley Blume (HMH)

Everybody Behaves Cover SFFew writers mythologized their own misbehavior with more gusto than Ernest Hemingway. In this history of the Spanish sojourn that inspired The Sun Also Rises, we encounter Hemingway before his fame—a charming, at times cruel social climber on the cusp of brilliance. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

A Loaded Gun by Jerome Charyn (Bellevue Literary Press)

A Loaded Gun SFStill obsessed with his subject years after writing the 2010 novel The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson, Charyn converts his preoccupation into a magnetic nonfiction reevaluation of the mystifying, radical, perhaps bisexual, and maybe greatest-ever American poet. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

Diane Arbus: Portrait of a Photographer by Arthur Lubow (Ecco)

Diane Arbus Cover Crop Face 2 SFA magnificent biography of an artist who trained her lens on unconventional subjects drag queens, circus performers, dominatrixes—knowing there were “things that nobody would see unless I photographed them.”  Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

The Sun and the Moon and the Rolling Stones by Rich Cohen (Random House)

Sun Moon Rolling Stones Cover SFA “rock-’n’-roll monotheist” riffs with revivalist fervor on the sacred relics of his devotion: Mick, Keith, and their music, “a saga in which a handful of musicians stand for the longings of a society. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Critics, Monsters, Fanatics, and Other Literary Essays by Cynthia Ozick (HMH)

Ozick cover SFAudacious, outrageously erudite, trenchant, and cranky as ever, one of our leading women of letters fixes her steely gaze on the essential role of the critic in witty, absorbing essays that encompass such literary heroes as Saul Bellow, W.H. Auden, and Franz Kafka. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Looking for more inspirations for your summer reading? Explore more of The Best Books of Summer from the editors of O: The Oprah Magazine, in the B&N Review or in the pages of this month’s issue of O: The Oprah Magazine.

 

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29mijdo

The Gilded Cage

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All this month we’re featuring a selection of fantastic summer reading selected by the experts at O: The Oprah Magazine. See more topics here.

Givenchy gowns. Penthouse apartments. Black Escalades. Private jets. The trappings of the 1 percent may seem as enticing as they are elusive, but is there something corrosive about überwealth? This mélange of titles (five novels and a memoir) look beneath the sheen of affluence to lay bare its not-so-appealing side–say, Park Avenue as prison, or a Dickensian alternate reality perfectly drawn for our status-obsessed era–and underscore the truth that in the end, mortality gets us all.

Smoke by Dan Vyleta (Doubleday)

Smoke Cover Crop SFIf Bernie Sanders wrote a Victorian thriller, it might read something like this—a stunningly inventive social novel in which your economic class is revealed not by the car you drive or the school your kids attend, but by whether your body emits smoke when you think an impure thought. The poor are covered in soot, while the rich remain clean even when they think dirty—proof that the aristocracy has a divine right to rule. Or so it seems, until three teenagers risk their lives to expose the gritty truth. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

Sons and Daughters of Ease and Plenty by Ramona Ausubel (Riverhead)

Sons and Daughts Cover SFIn 1976, amid the cloistered estates of Martha’s Vineyard, an idyllic vacation is cut short when a couple learns that the trust fund they’ve been living off of is kaput. Ausubel’s timely, sophisticated tale explores what happens when a charmed life loses its luster. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

This is Not My Beautiful Life by Victoria Fedden (Picador)

This is Not My Beautiful Life Cover SFThe author was nine months’ pregnant when the feds raided her parents’ home and arrested her mother for fraud. A scandalously funny memoir about starting a new family while taking care of the felonious one you’ve already got. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

We Could Be Beautiful by Swan Huntley (Doubleday)

We Could Be Beautiful SFA novel that is deeper than its heiress-meets-man-of-her-dreams setup. The reason: Huntley’s uncanny ability to detect the fault lines in Manhattan’s glitterati as if flaws in a precious diamond—and make us laugh about them. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Rich and Pretty by Rumaan Alam (Ecco)

Rich and Pretty cover small SFSarah, daughter of socialites, is rich. Career-driven Lauren is—you guessed it—pretty. Their sisterlike friendship is put to the test when one gets married and becomes a stay-at-home mom while the other remains in the fray. Can they find a new way of fitting together?  Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Before the Fall by Noah Hawley (Grand Central)

Before the Fall SFA struggling painter is inexorably drawn into the lives—and fiery deaths—of two moguls, one financial, the other media, in the suspenseful new novel by the showrunner for FX’s darkly humorous hit series Fargo. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

 

Looking for more inspirations for your summer reading? Explore more of The Best Books of Summer from the editors of O: The Oprah Magazine, in the B&N Review or in the pages of this month’s issue of O: The Oprah Magazine.

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29k4651

Love Affairs

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All this month we’re featuring a selection of fantastic summer reading selected by the experts at O, the Oprah Magazine. See more topics here.

If you’ve ever dropped everything to follow your heart, been betrayed or betrayed your own vows for lust, or magically found (or refound) “the one” after giving up hope, feast on these six delectable books, all celebrating the soul-reviving, hormone-pumping, faith-renewing power of love.

I Almost Forgot About You, by Terry McMillan (Crown)

I Almost Forgot About You Cover Crop2 SFMeet Georgia Young, a 50-something optometrist whose comfortable life is upended by news of her first boyfriend’s death in a car accident. Georgia reacts to the jolt by chucking her career, putting her house on the market, and resolving to track down all her past sweethearts. Lucky for her, two of her college friends and her daughters are always there to catch her if she falls. McMilllan paints relationships in joyous primary colors; her novel brims with sexy repartee, caustic humor, and a fluent, assured prose that shines a bright light on her memorable characters. Her very best since Waiting to Exhale. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

Love Wins, by Debbie Cenziper and Jim Obergefell (William Morrow)

Love Wins Cover small SFA galvanizing real-life account of how devotion in the face of terminal illness and disenfranchisement brought together a widower and a group of ferociously principled lawyers who waged and won the legal battle for marriage equality. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

What We Become by Arturo Perez-Reverte (Atria)

What We Become Cover SFThis riveting, intricately layered historical novel follows two paramours: Mesha is the beautiful wife of a famous composer, and Max is a charming con artist and spy. Their illicit affair begins aboard a luxury liner traveling from Lisbon to Buenos Aires. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

The Blackbirds by Eric Jerome Dickey (Dutton)

The Blackbirds Cover SFA hot-as-all-get-out novel about four women and the relationships—a fling with an older man, a toe-curling afternoon with another woman—that could end their friendships once and for all. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Modern Lovers by Emma Straub (Riverhead)

Modern Lovers Cover SFEven gentrifiers get the blues in this bittersweet novel following the intertwined lives of now-middle-aged Oberlin graduates, complete with historic homes, farm-to-table restaurants, and adolescent children who have—typically, yet shockingly—started sleeping with each other. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

Invincible Summer, by Alice Adams (Little, Brown)

invincible summer cover SFFour college besties are separated by time, experience, and geography, but when the chips are down, these friends with benefits find one another again, in a fun and frothy debut novel set in England, India, Spain, and beyond. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Looking for more inspirations for your summer reading? Explore more of The Best Books of Summer from the editors of O: The Oprah Magazine, in the B&N Review or in the pages of this month’s issue of O: The Oprah Magazine.

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29k4ekY

War & Peace

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All this month we’re featuring a selection of fantastic summer reading selected by the experts at O: The Oprah Magazine. See more topics here.

In a world consumed by wars of all kinds, how do we make sense of the madness? Through peerless on-the-ground reporting, inquiries into the impact of “sanitized” modes of warfare, and fictional adventures and misadventures, these six books invite us to swim against the tides of violence and ask why we so often fail to give peace a chance.

Grunt: The Curious Science of Humans at War, by Mary Roach (W.W. Norton)

Grunt Cover SFOur most consistently entertaining science journalist wanders into the “corners and crannies” of military technology. Roach goes where other writers wouldn’t dare (witness her classic take on cadavers, Stiff), here eyeing “the parts no one makes movies about—not the killing but the keeping alive.” And her search produces images—a kind of techno poetry—that are hard to forget: a cannon firing chickens into airplanes, urethra replacement surgery, a “brief history of stink bombs.” Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

The Way to the Spring, by Ben Ehrenreich (Penguin Press)

The Way to the Spring SFAn American Jewish writer resides in the West Bank off and on for three years. What follows is an impassioned and humane story of Palestinian resilience in the face of daily humiliations, bloodshed, and a decades-long struggle for home. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Native Believer by Ali Eteraz (Akashic)

NativeBeliever Cover SFM.’s life spins out of control after his boss discovers a Qur’an in M.’s house during a party, in this wickedly funny Philadelphia picaresque about a secular Muslim’s identity crisis in a country waging a never-ending war on terror. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Love, Sex and Other Foreign Policy Goals by Jesse Armstrong (Blue Rider)

Love Sex and Other Foreign Policy SFFrom the Oscar-nominated cowriter of the British film comedy In the Loop comes a blistering satire about a London theater troupe attempting to end the Bosnian conflagration of the mid-’90s, wielding only the weapons of youthful idealism and an unfinished script. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging, Sebastian Junger (Twelve)

Tribe SFDrawing on his extensive reporting in Afghanistan and marrow-deep empathy for veterans afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder, Junger argues with candor and grace for the everlasting remedies of community and connectedness. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

A Hero of France, by Alan Furst (Random House)

CHero of France Cover Crop SFonsidered one of the premier writers of historical spy fiction, Furst delivers a vivid portrait of a French Resistance fighter in World War II Paris and of a city still alive and very much itself—even as the Nazi grip tightens. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Looking for more inspirations for your summer reading? Explore more of The Best Books of Summer from the editors of O: The Oprah Magazine, in the B&N Review or in the pages of this month’s issue of O: The Oprah Magazine.

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29michV

Odysseys

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All this month we’re featuring a selection of fantastic summer reading selected by the experts at O: The Oprah Magazine See more topics here.

A hero or heroine embarks on a voyage and in the process is transformed.  It’s the oldest story we tell.  Whether it’s the tragedies of the African diaspora, a scientist decoding the mysteries of medicine while unearthing family secrets, or a gourmand’s gastronomical quest among the cities and villages of China, these enthralling titles explore how personal journeys can mirror dramatic developments in the world and in our hearts.

Homegoing, Yaa Gyasi (Knopf)

Homegoing Cover Crop SFSpanning two continents and three centuries, Yaa Gyasi’s luminous debut evokes the tortured legacy of the slave trade through the story of two half sisters and their descendants. The novel toggles between plot lines: one set along Africa’s Gold Coast, the other against the brutality of American racism. The author thrillingly depicts her characters’ migrations from mud hut villages to Harlem’s jazz clubs to Ghana’s silvered beaches, celebrating how place and fate shape us all. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

The Noise of Time, Julian Barnes (Knopf)

The Noise of Time Cover SFBarnes’s exquisite new novel charts the peripatetic career of Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovich (1906–1975), Stalin’s almost victim—spared so he could show the world the power of Soviet culture even as he grapples with troubling questions about politics and art. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

The Gene, by Siddhartha Mukherjee (Scribner)

The Gene Cover SFThe Pulitzer Prize winner weaves an epic history of human speculation, error, discovery, and wonder about our genetic code in a close-to-the-bone story of hereditary mental illness in his own family. An unexpectedly enthralling inquiry into the realm of bioethics. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

The Nordic Theory of Everything, by Anu Partanem (Harper)

Nordic Theory Small Cover SFAfter Newsweek declares Finland “the best country in the world” and the United Nations names it the second happiest, a Finnish transplant to the U.S. sets out to find a cure for her anxiety by looking homeward, in an engaging fusion of reportage and memoir. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Double Cup Love, by Eddie Huang (Spiegel and Grau)

Double Cup Love Cover SFWhen a Chinese-Taiwanese-NYC celebrity chef falls in love with an Italian girl from Scranton, Pennsylvania, he resolves to retrace his family’s migration to reconnect with his roots. From the enfant terrible behind Chairman Mao’s Cherry Cola Skirt Steak recipe and the hit memoir Fresh Off the Boat. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

In the Darkroom, by Susan Faludi (Metropolitan Books)

Faludi SFWhen a feminist writer learns that her once-abusive father is now living as a woman, she flies to Hungary to meet the parent she never really knew and investigate urgent new questions of identity. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Looking for more inspirations for your summer reading? Explore more of The Best Books of Summer from the editors of O: The Oprah Magazine, in the B&N Review or in the pages of this month’s issue of O: The Oprah Magazine.

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29ig61j

American Pastoral

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All this month we’re featuring a selection of fantastic summer reading selected by the experts at O: The Oprah Magazine. See more topics here.

Somewhere in the endless vistas of our wide and deep country are young girls becoming indigenous berserks, little towns slowly and silently fading away, fruited plains and ferocious rivers, natural disasters and man-made ones, wild horses and their even wilder masters – all coexisting on a vast, mystic frontier.

The Girls by Emma Cline (Random House)

Evie is like most 14-year-olds: slightly The Girls Cover Crop SFawkward, beginning to be sexually curious, and constantly measuring herself against other girls. But it’s California in the summer of 1969, and these other girls are members of a Manson-like cult that Evie does not have the sense of self to resist. A mesmerizing debut from an author on intimate terms with the blood, sweat and tears of American adolescence. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

Lions, by Bonnie Nadzam (Black Cat)

Lions Bonnie Nadzam Cover SFHow long can a man believe he lives in a country that doesn’t actually exist…?” This is the question the people of the isolated fictional town of Lions, Colorado, must ask themselves in this story of haunted histories and broken promises. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

The Sport of Kings, by C.E. Morgan (FSG)

Sport of Kings Cover SFThe splendor and barbarism of horse racing and the legacy of slavery are just two of the threads in this sprawling, magisterial Southern Gothic for the 21st century. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

 

Nitro Mountain, by Lee Clay Johnson (Knopf)

Nitro Mountain Cover SFThis darkly stunning tale of stark dramas and tragic lives plays out against a backdrop of mournful country music and Appalachia’s lush, lonely peaks. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

 

Marrow Island, by Alexis Smith (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Marrow Island Cover SFA faltering journalist returns to an island abandoned after an earthquake released a toxic spill. That’s the beautifully wrought setting of this novel, which reunites two childhood friends, one of whom has joined a sect claiming it can heal the land. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Buffalo Jump Blues, by Keith McCafferty (Viking)

Buffalo Jump Blues Cover SFA small herd of bison stampede off a cliff. Among the carcasses is the body of a Native American man killed by an arrow shot. Enter P.I. Sean Stranahan and his ex, Sheriff Martha Ettinger, trying to find out whodunit without driving each other over the edge in this Montana-flavored mystery. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Looking for more inspirations for your summer reading? Explore more of The Best Books of Summer from the editors of O: The Oprah Magazine, in the B&N Review or in the pages of this month’s issue of O: The Oprah Magazine.

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29lByWZ

Born in the U.S.A.

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All this month we’re featuring a selection of fantastic summer reading selected by the experts at O: The Oprah Magazine. See more topics here.

What is America made of? Is it the landscape? The people? An idea? What we revolt against? What we produce? These nonfiction titles tackle those questions from exhilaratingly different angles—culture, crime, the natural and the bureaucratic—each enriching our understanding of our roots, our appreciation of home.

 

The Hour of Land , by Terry Tempest Williams (FSG)

Hour of the Land Crop SFOur national parks are memory palaces where our personal histories reside,” muses naturalist and activist Williams in her ode to the sacred spaces —millions of acres from Alaska to Maine—that are the legacy of Abraham Lincoln’s 1864 Yosemite Grant Act. Whether contemplating the spiritual life she finds “inside the heart of the wild” or marveling at the peaks and monuments that comprise “our best idea”—the National Parks system—Williams movingly urges us to remember that “heaven is here.” Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

Never A Dull Moment: 1971 – The Year That Rock Exploded, by David Hepworth (Holt)

Never a Dull Moment Cover SFA revelatory account of the bombshell 365 days that gave birth to what the author dubs “the rock era”—12 months when Marvin Gaye, Joni Mitchell, Sly Stone, and a host of others broke with convention to give us the music that made us. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

The Lynching, by Laurence Leamer (Morrow)

the lynching SFMorris Dees, a civil rights attorney who cofounded the Southern Poverty Center and his landmark 1983 lawsuit on behalf of a slain black man’s family, are at the heart of this stirring true story of racial politics and the legal takedown of the KKK. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

 

Witness to the Revolution by Clara Bingham (Random House)

Witness to the Revolution Cover SFA gripping oral history of the centrifugal social forces tearing America apart at the end of the ’60s—Nixonian corruption, the war in Indochina, the Black Panthers, psychedelic drugs, Cointelpro, youthquake, domestic terrorism—with recollections by Bill Ayers, Jane Fonda, and Carl Bernstein, among others. This is rousing reportage from the front lines of U.S. history. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

Under the Stars by Dan White (Henry Holt)

WUnder the Stars Cover SFhether sharing the backstory of everyone’s favorite fireside dessert (s’mores, of course), roughing it in the buff, or braving the wilderness amenities in tow, the disaster-prone White revels in a cherished national pastime—camping—with curiosity and humor. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

How the Post Office Created America, by Winnifred Gallahger (Penguin Press)

How the Post Office Cover Crop SFWithout a postal service linking far-flung territories together like “a central nervous system,” our country’s story would have been radically different. Including American originals like Ben Franklin (the first postmaster general) and the young riders of the Pony Express, this invigorating book tells the unlikely story of snail mail—not at all dull, though perhaps soon to be extinct. Start Reading Now on B&N Readouts.

 

Looking for more inspirations for your summer reading? Explore more of The Best Books of Summer from the editors of O: The Oprah Magazine, in the B&N Review or in the pages of this month’s issue of O: The Oprah Magazine.

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29lBAy4

Thoreau’s Human Nature

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Henry David Thoreau moved into his Walden Pond cabin on July 4, 1845. In Walden, Thoreau claimed that his living experiment began on Independence Day only by accident and that others should find their own time and path to personal freedom:

I would not have any one adopt my mode of living on any account; for, beside that before he has fairly learned it I may have found another for myself, I desire that there may be as many different persons in the world as possible; but I would have each one be very careful to find out and pursue his own way, and not his father’s or his mother’s or his neighbor’s instead.

In The Adventures of Henry Thoreau: A Young Man’s Unlikely Path to Walden Pond, Michael Sims tracks “the Judge” — Thoreau’s boyhood nickname, earned for his habit of observant nondisclosure — through his earlier years in and about Concord, as he discovers who he might have, and then emphatically did, become. The possibilities included teacher, pencil maker, even husband, and the solemnity in the personality, Sims notes, was balanced by a love of singing and camaraderie. But as Huckleberry Finn’s adventures lead him to his river raft, Henry’s travels — often into the woods in search of huckleberries — lead him inexorably toward solid ground:

Over the years, he had sometimes looked for a hut and sometimes for land on which to build a hut.” I only ask a clean seat,” he had written in his journal as early as April 1840. “I will build my lodge on the southern slope of some hill, and take there the life the gods send me.” “I have thought,” he sighed to his journal in late 1841, “when walking in the woods through a certain retired dell, bordered with shrub oaks and pines, far from the village and affording a glimpse only through an opening of the mountains in the horizon, how my life might pass there, simple and true and natural . . . “

Thoreau offers an important lesson for us today, says Duke law professor Jedediah Purdy in After Nature, although perhaps not quite the lesson we’d expect. As we now live in the “Anthropocene Age,” on a planet so marked by our boot print that we must “add nature itself to the list of things that are not natural,” there is a dangerous tendency to romanticize Thoreau and his cabin experiment in some Before-the-Fall fashion — a life not just “simple and true and natural” but now permanently and tragically impossible. In fact, says Purdy, pure nature was impossible for Thoreau, too, as he knew:

Thoreau tells us that the woods around the pond have been cleared, that boats have sunk to its bottom, that it is regularly harvested for ice. His Concord is full of the artifacts of old and new settlement, down to the soil itself, seeded with stone tools and potsherds that tinkle against the hoe as he works his bean-field. There is nothing pristine in this place, no basis for a fantasy of original and permanent nature.

Purdy’s book, in the Thoreauvian spirit, is a call to action at the most fundamental do-it-yourself level. With all paths now interconnected, the only way forward is by group compass:

Everyone living today is involved, intentionally or inadvertently, in deciding what to do with a complicated legacy of environmental imagination and practice, now that all simple ideas of nature are irretrievably gone. Losing nature need not mean losing the value of the living world, but it will mean engaging it differently . . . [T]his will require a vocabulary, an ethics, an aesthetics, and a politics, for a time when the meaning of nature is ultimately a human question.

The Barnes & Noble Review http://ift.tt/29jl5Ey

Tanner 2016

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If only we could cajole Robert Altman back to life at this surreal moment in American politics. Even for fifteen minutes. Five minutes would be spent on the pitch: Listen, Bob, it’s 2016, and Donald Trump has somehow become the Republican presidential nominee. He wants to be the King of America. He has promised a ban on Muslim immigrants and was endorsed by Charles Manson and David Duke. There have been riots at his rallies, and he has encouraged people to beat up protesters. He alluded to his penis in one of the debates.

A minute or two for Altman to finish laughing and absorb the shock. Then the remaining minutes for him to level some devastating, trenchant commentary. Maybe he’d come up with a spontaneous idea for a twenty-first-century super-meta mockumentary that would put the whole bewildering phenomenon in perspective.

The reason to imagine such a scenario is part of the prehistory of our current “golden age of television.” Back in 1988 Altman released Tanner ’88, a brilliant, kinetic miniseries that originally aired on HBO, running right up to election time that year. Altman himself called this faux political documentary “the most creative work I ever did.” Even so, many Altman fans never got around to seeing it at the time. The series ran a fictional candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination named Jack Tanner and followed him on the campaign trail. Tanner is sincere and intent on cutting the crap. He’s a progressive democrat from Michigan, running on legalizing drugs, divesting in South Africa, and helping the inner cities. As played by Michael Murphy, he’s got an earnest manner and honest teeth — in some ways he resembles a younger Bernie Sanders, albeit with more polish and movie star looks.

There’s a crucial scene in the first episode of Tanner, when a cameraman catches Jack giving a spontaneous, impassioned speech to his campaign team. Jack doesn’t know he’s being filmed. The angle is surreptitious — it’s shot from the cameraman’s vantage point while he’s lying on the floor, upward through a glass coffee table. Tanner is rhapsodizing about “honest inquiry . . . We’ve got to keep asking the [pertinent] questions. That’s what the American experiment is about.” He’s grappling and searching, and Altman shows him to be genuinely invested, not for ego’s sake. And Tanner is a little reckless. After he gets arrested for trespassing at the South African embassy, his campaign manager (played by Pamela Reed) says with exasperation, “When is this candidate ever going to grow up?”

Tanner’s campaign slogan is “For Real” — two simple words that resonate with an almost eerie quality for a viewer looking back through decades of Survivors, Housewives, Jersey Shores, and — yes — Apprentices. Real was always relative, of course, and even back then, Altman was playing with the notion of real versus fake. Altman’s “documentary” is constantly sliding between real and contrived. Real people show up to interact with the show’s fictional characters: Pat Robertson, Bruce Babbitt, Bob Dole, and Kitty Dukakis make appearances, seamlessly worked into the action. One of the most audacious elements is the way Altman and his troupe infiltrate actual events. Often you can’t tell if the scenarios have been set up or intruded upon. The camera work is kamikaze. And this is years before mockumentaries became a Netflix genre and Sacha Baron Cohen (along with his less gonzo colleagues on venues like The Daily Show or The Colbert Report) made the fake interview a satirical trope.

Is it true that real was realer in 1988? More easily accessed, buried beneath fewer layers of simulacra? Even discounting the haze of nostalgia, it seems so: the Trump persona is too many funhouse mirrors removed from the actual person to keep track of any longer. He was the star of a reality show, after all, and this latest incarnation doesn’t seem to be much of a departure. Yet for all of the obvious fakery in his campaign, Trump’s supporters insist he’s the truly authentic one, unafraid to “tell it like it is.” Are we, the voters, just the larger audience to a political process that plays out like writer’s room dreck?

The funny thing is that Tanner ’88, back in its day, was itself a joyous screw-you to the establishment. It came at a time when Altman hadn’t yet had his Hollywood comeback with The Player, in 1992, and Short Cuts, in 1993. Political cartoonist Garry Trudeau was handpicked by HBO to write Tanner, and it was only after he insisted that Altman direct that he officially signed on. Altman was persona non grata in the film world anyway, so why not do it the way he wanted. He felt he was reinventing television, he later said, and looking at it now you see where he busted through the walls.

Altman’s work was always essentially American. Nashville was about American celebrity. McCabe & Mrs. Miller, American greed and progress. Short Cuts, American self-destruction. After I fell in love with his movies, I always knew that even in a more or less failed project (Prêt-à-Porter comes to mind) he would show me something important about myself and my fellow Americans. I would always feel somehow implicated, yet still not judged. I was no better and no worse than his greatest flawed characters. So now, I wish there were some way for Altman to help me find my place in this current spectacle. Am I — are we — as insane as I think? I’m looking, more than anything, for a moment of respite and clear thinking, and the sort of moment of grace his films allowed even his most hapless characters.

For a show that is sometimes ridiculously comical and now so obviously dated — look at the shoulder pads, the giant telephones, the terrible eyeglasses — Tanner has its share of grace. Even twenty-seven years after it was made, parts of it can still tear your heart out. In the eighth episode, Tanner is campaigning in Detroit, where he meets with a black community group devoted to addressing the senseless killing of kids in the inner city. Urban areas are being forsaken, crack is everywhere, and mothers who have lost children to gun violence are giving speeches. After the event, Tanner sits surrounded by people telling their stories and speaking their piece. It seems these could not possibly be actors — it sounds so unscripted and passionate — and the effect is to connect the story with the real losses being suffered in these communities, in a way that few political dramas manage.

Some truth is captured there, something meaningful transpires. When Altman said he was reinventing television, maybe that’s what he meant: In between the genres, he got reality. I won’t reveal if Jack Tanner wins the nomination in this alternate universe. But I will tell you it was sweet that Altman even let him try.

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