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Jude's Picks

Book Cover for The Member of the Wedding McCullers, Carson
The Member of the Wedding

Fiction
I love Carson McCullers. I’ve read her Ballad of the Sad Café and found the writing beautiful and the story captivating. The same holds true for The Member of the Wedding, the story of Frankie and her strange and heartbreaking twelfth summer. Frankie’s brother is getting married in another town and leaving the country to serve in the military. Frankie feels lonely and jealous and hatches various plans to deal with this situation. McCullers brilliantly captures adolescent confusion and desire and the pain that they can cause. She also touches on race issues, as one of the main characters is the African-American maid and nanny in Frankie’s 1940s Southern household. This is gorgeous writing.
May 2010

 
Book Cover for Through Another Lens: My Years with Edward Weston Wilson, Charis
Through Another Lens: My Years with Edward Weston

Nonfiction
Charis Wilson and Edward Weston were a couple from 1934 to 1945. They lived together most of that time, and worked together the entire time. Wilson details their photography projects (he photographer, she model and writer), as well as the dynamics of their relationship. It's interesting how gender plays out in this relatively progressive relationship during a time when gender roles were often traditionally-defined. For example, the couple shared housework completely, but equal artistic ownership of collaborations was not always seamlessly achieved.
Recommended March 2010

 
Book Cover for A Place to Stand: The Making of a Poet Baca, Jimmy Santiago
A Place to Stand: The Making of a Poet

Nonfiction
I talk to strangers more than most people. Nonetheless, the fact that this book made me say things like “This book is killing me!” to strangers on the bus means something. Poet and teacher Jimmy Santiago Baca was born in 1952 in New Mexico to a Chicana mother and an Apache Indian father. He was abandoned by his parents and later placed in an orphanage, then sent to a juvenile detention center after running away from that orphanage. At age 21 he was sentenced to six years in a maximum-security prison in Florence, Arizona, on drug charges. A Place to Stand is a powerful example of how cultural identity can ground one, as well as how literacy and the written word can give one a strong sense of voice. Baca’s account makes clear that in the U.S. prison system as it exists today, emotional survival and intellectual and spiritual growth is extremely improbable. He regains the sense of belonging he lost as a person of color (e.g. 90% of the inmates are Chicano) by taking ownership of his peoples’ stories and through telling his own. This is one of the most powerful books I’ve read in a very long time.
Recommended January 2010

 
Wrekk, Alex
Brainscan 21: Irreconcilable Differences

Adult Zine Collection
It can be an extremely difficult process to admit one's partner is abusive. The author writes a detailed description of her experience with emotional abuse. Wrekk shares in great detail how she came to define abuse for herself. This zine is highly recommended for anyone grappling with similar issues. And...
Anonymous
Prescription for Change: Community Response to Substance Use

Adult Zine Collection
Prescription for Change is an incredibly insightful and helpful look at substance use and abuse. Includes critique of 12 step programs and straight-edge moralism; overview of the idea of harm reduction and its applications, not just to chemical addiction but to other acts; and suggestions for community efforts to reduce judgment and isolation of conventionally-defined addicts and raise awareness of abusive behavior by anyone moving at any point on the addiction spectrum. Finally, it's a call to stay connected and safe as a community. A powerful zine.
Recommended August 2009

 
Book Cover for Parable of the Talents Butler, Octavia
Parable of the Talents

Science Fiction
Parable of the Talents is the second in a two-part series of novels by Octavia Butler. She published Parable of the Sower in 1993 (see March Staff Picks), and Parable of the Talents five years later. Parable of the Sower focuses on teenager Lauren Olamina, who is trying to survive life in dystopian California in the 2020s, while founding the religion she created called Earthseed. Parable of the Talents begins in this religious community and chronicles Lauren and her fellow community members’ brutal encounters with Christian Fundamentalists who have taken over the country and federal government in the 2030s. Unlike Talents, Sower gets repetitive in the second half. Nonetheless, like Sower it offers important commentary on current issues by vividly portraying the consequences of environmental destruction and the violence that can stem from religious dogmatism.
Recommended May 2009

 
Book Cover for Parable of the Sower Butler, Octavia
Parable of the Sower

Science Fiction
Parable of the Sower, published in 1993, is the first in a two-part series of sci-fi novels by Octavia Butler. The story focuses on teenager Lauren Olamina who lives in dystopian California in the 2020s. Society has broken down so severely – economically, socially, environmentally – that people either live in walled-in communities trying to defend themselves, or live on the outside in extremely desperate conditions including drugs, crime, prostitution, new forms of slavery and more. The walls come tumbling down and Lauren, at 18, ends up on the perilous road trying to survive. Lauren is a sort of spiritual prophet. For years she has secretly transcribed verses of a religion she calls Earthseed. On the road she recruits devotees to fulfill Earthseed’s destiny of life on another planet. What makes this book worth reading is a captivating story that’s also a powerful commentary on very important issues of our time including race, gender, the environment, religion, community. It reminds me of the way Star Trek episodes could be such good commentary.
Recommended March 2009

 
Pollitt, Katha
Learning to Drive

Nonfiction
Yikes this book is interesting. A lovely patron told me how much she likes Katha Pollit and made me want to give this book a try. Among other things, Katha Pollitt is a thinker, writer, feminist, mother, wife and poet. She’s probably most well-known for her pieces in a column called “Subject to Debate” in The Nation. In this collection of essays, Pollitt writes about the personal, the political, and the intersections between the two, touching on very relevant topics like communism, women and aging, motherhood, pornography and web stalking. She expresses herself so clearly and with so much feeling that I felt that I was gaining some good insight into the topics while also being moved and having fun. These essays reminded me of a warmer, happier Joan Didion. I’m taking out her Virginity or Death next.
Recommended October 2008

 
Book Cover for The White Album Didion, Joan
The White Album

Nonfiction
Joan Didion’s White Album is not unlike the Beatles’ White Album in a number of ways. Some of the similarities are obvious. Both objects are white (the first edition of Didion’s book is white, anyway). The album was originally released in 1968; some of Didion’s pieces in her book were written in 1968. A less obvious and more interesting similarity is that Didion wrote about the 1969 Manson Family murders and Charles Manson was supposedly obsessed with the Beatles’ White Album (the misspelt song title “Healter Skelter” was written in blood at one of the Manson Family murder sites). Paranoia runs through both works, evident in the song “Happiness is a Warm Gun” or in Didion’s account of her struggles with mental illness and irrational fears. They both critique at least some of those in power, in “Piggies” and “In Hollywood”, as well as social movements. Didion’s White Album is harder to swallow, though, since it definitely does not contain any love songs. It’s worth a read, nonetheless, as a smart account of those years. I suggest reading it while listening to the Beatles' White Album for a dose of hope and emotion as counterbalance.
Recommended May 2008

 
Book Cover for Best American Non-Required Reading Series Eggers, Dave ed.
Best American Non-Required Reading Series

Short Stories
I was sooo excited to discover this series, and also sort of ticked off that no one had told me about it before. But since I’m an unusually and extremely nice person, I will let you in on it. This series is awesome. It’s awesome because each volume has such a wide variety of things to read. It has short stories in it, and non-fiction pieces, and each volume also has a graphic novel excerpt. There’s a great excerpt from Lynda Barry’s One Hundred Demons in the 2003 volume. Lynda Barry is so funny and touching. The fiction is so varied that it never bores. Also from the 2003 volume is a piece by Jonathan Safran Foer called “A Primer for the Punctuation of Heart Disease." In it, he uses a symbol like a square or maybe three periods, to represent a way that his family does or doesn’t communicate. Some silences are peaceful, some silences are heavy and angry. Some questions are really commands. His symbols beautifully illustrate the many things that happen in conversations that are wordless, how big our desire to connect with each other is, and how painful our bumbling attempts at it are. Other writers include David Sedaris, Sherman Alexie, Chuck Klosterman, J.T. Leroy, and Michelle Tea. The series starts in 2002 and a 2007 volume was just published. It’s part of the larger Best American series, and according to Houghton Mifflin, it’s now the most popular of the series. So get to it!
Recommended March 2008