Because I, in turn, will humor you, with my best book recommendation of late.
Over Christmas, my librarian brother-in-law, Jon, gave me a book I'd never heard of. This is always a Good Sign. Jon is a master of the well-selected book, and I'm always excited when it's a complete unknown to me.
As I hoped, he hit this one out of the park. So I'm sharing it with you, and I hope you'll have a chance to read it soon, so I can talk about it with someone other than my long-suffering husband who hasn't had time to pick it up yet.
The book is The Fiddler in the Subway by Gene Weingarten.
I should note that I greatly enjoy journalistic writing, and for a brief time in a past life I considered becoming a features writer, so there's a part of me that essentially wants to be Gene Weingarten, without the facial hair. And damn, people, the man can write like I've never seen before. These essays made me laugh out loud and cry... more quietly, only because I didn't want to startle people around me. The essays about his father managed to do both at once, perfectly. The final essay - and the title piece - made me think about life.
I mean Think. About Life.
(Though I have to throw out that DC is a crazier town than Chicago. Things would have been different here, I just know it. I'll leave it at that.)
Oh, and don't skip over the introduction. Weingarten gives some insight into his way of looking at life, and you can see how that informs his writing. It also offers some of the best writing advice I've seen since Stephen King's On Writing. Which is saying plenty.
I feel that I should also note this: the essay entitled Fatal Distraction - Weingarten won a Pulitzer prize for it - is extremely difficult to read. I had heard about this essay from a few folks who read it when it was originally published because the subject matter is troubling. Weingarten gives a warning before the piece, and if you have a small child in your life, or, hell, if you're human, you may have some difficulty getting through it.
But you should try. Because he manages to find some redemption there, in a painfully arbitrary, irredeemable situation.
And then he follows that up with a funny essay, because he knows what he just did to you. He's a man who respects his readers, that's what he is.
So please, go check out this book, and read the whole thing, and when you've finished, and then after you re-read a few of the essays three times (that's not just me, right?) - let me know what you think of it.
This sounds like something I will absolutely love. I do not have the attention span lately for a full blown novel. I just put this on reserve at the library. Thanks for the suggestion!
ReplyDeleteI will definitely check it out. I can't wait! I would like to find some good writing of this type for my classroom.
ReplyDeleteI just read the article "Fatal Distraction." It was very powerful. I was entranced by the writing as well. He has a good grasp of language and yet uses a light touch. I will definitely be picking up a copy of this book. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteSorry about my slow response time.
ReplyDeleteYes, the great thing about "Fatal Distraction" is that he handles such a fraught topic so delicately. He acknowledges the elephant in the room - the automatic presumption that these people are all "bad" parents - by just stating it. And then telling the rest of the story. It's frank and humane all at once. Great stuff.
I just finished Fatal Distraction today. That was very powerful. I remember hearing a story about this on the news when it happened to an assistant principal. I really like how this author includes all sides of the story along with an explanation for how the brain runs on autopilot.
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