
Summer '18 Reading List
Be it a vacation or staycation, we've got the books for you!
Summer is upon us once again! Meaning time off from work, time off from school and time ON with family. From Sunday picnics to group vacations, most of us start logging a lot more hours with our nearest and dearest this time of year. So whether your annual summer vacation with the fam is the thing you look forward to all year – or the thing you’ll work through in therapy all next year – we’ve got a book for you. All of the tomes below have family as a central theme: The good, the bad and the Sedaris.
A Place For Us,' by Fatima Farheen Mizra
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Jon Benjamin is a king to comedy nerds, thanks to cult favorites like Comedy Central’s tragically short-lived “Jon Benjamin Has a Van,” but the rest of us know him as the voice of Archer on “Archer” and Bob on “Bob’s Burgers.” Now, he has come out with a hilarious “Attempted Memoir,” which actually reads more like a catalogue of failures. And like many of us, a decent chunk of Benjamin’s failures fall in the family department. In chapters like “How I Failed to Have a Chinese Dinner While Visiting My Parents in Arizona” and “How I Failed as a New Father,” Benjamin’s memoir will provide a healthy dose of schadenfreude for anyone who habitually falls short with their nearest and dearest. If you doubt us, just read the aforementioned “New Father” chapter, in which Benjamin confesses to going out to dinner solo on the day that his son was born (and having duck…) while his wife recuperated in the hospital.
Calypso,' by David Sedaris
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Tommy Orange’s breakout debut novel focuses on a collection of modern Native Americans in Oakland, California. The tension between tradition and assimilation are handled in different ways by the many characters who traverse the novel and ultimately meet. Many are related (hence the family connection), and you can tell from the way the book is written that the author must have really known these people – or a version of them. In fact, he did; Tommy Orange is a member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes, and grew up in Oakland, California. The book is dense, but worth it. Prepare to pay attention, keep track of characters and learn something you don’t – but really should – know about the Native Americans today. Readers will recognize things they have heard (such as alcoholism among Native Americans, for example), but this book will bring texture to those generalities, and, for many, to a world about they know very little.