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Listeners’ Summer Reads

On the show last Thursday we talked summer books with critics and an independent bookseller. We had a tremendous response to the show from callers and from listeners online. Many people wanted to know more about the books that On Point listeners were talking about. So here’s the rundown of those “listener picks” that you may have heard on air. Thanks to all for contributing.

jury-of-her-peersOne of our regular callers – David from San Francisco —  recently borrowed and read “A Jury of Her Peers,” by Elaine Showalter, from his public library.

wind-up-bird-chronicleFor those who have been recently laid off, listener Germaine in New York City recommended, “The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle: A Novel,” by Haruki Murakami.

First-time caller Beth in Lexington, Massachusetts recommended “A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier,” by Ishmael Beah. [Note: In 2008, questions were raised about the truthfulness of Beah’s memoir.]

[Update, 6/12/09: Ishmael Beah's editor at FSG, Sarah Crichton, points out that questions were raised about certain details of Beah's narrative only by one newspaper, the Australian. See her statement posted below.]

Richard in Framingham, Massachusetts told us that the last thing that he had read was “Indignation,” by Philip Roth. But the reason he called us was to recommend a short story, “The Adventure of a Reader,” from the collection “Difficult Loves,” by Italo Calvino.

pride-and-prejudice-and-zomDrew commented online about the new mashup book, “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies,” by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith. There’s been quite a bit of buzz about it, including on NPR.

Another web commenter, Jean, said that she had recently finished an outstanding but rather depressing book, “The Vagrants: A Novel,” by Yiyun Li, set in China after the Cultural Revolution.

Bruce called in from Bethany, Connecticut to talk about a nonfiction book he recently finished reading… “Getting the Sex You Want,” by Tammy Nelson. He said it’s geared more for women but it opened his eyes dramatically as a man.

seen-the-gloryShauna in Hamilton, Massachusetts was looking forward to reading Martha’s Vineyard writer John Hough’s new book, “Seen the Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Gettysburg.”

Alex called in from Norfolk, Virginia to say that she just read “The Fountainhead,” by Ayn Rand. She’s 23 and just discovered Rand.

David from Hartford, Connecticut made a special note of P.G. Wodehouse and his Blandings Castle novels, in particular “Service With a Smile.” David said that he has to read the book at least once a year, and it’s the only book that makes him laugh out loud uncontrollably when he reads it.

sawtelle“City of Thieves: A Novel,” by David Benioff was another online listener recommendation, as well as “The Story of Edgar Sawtelle,” by David Wroblewski, “Bridge of Sighs: A Novel,” by Richard Russo, and Dust Bowl stories from “The Worst Hard Time,” by Timothy Eagan.

 

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Listener comments
  • Thank you for compiling this list. I loved the show and guests you choose. Keep up the diversity of your shows. I am sharing this link with my friends and my local librarian who runs several reading groups and can’t wait to talk books again.

    Posted by lynn, on June 11th, 2009 at 12:00 am EDT
  • We received this statement from Sarah Crichton of FSG, the editor and publisher of Ishmael Beah’s memoir, “A Long Way Gone,” one of the books listed above.

    Statement from Ishmael Beah’s editor and publisher:

    Back in January 2008, a trio of Australian broadsheet reporters thought they had a hot tip: an Australian mining supervisor in Sierra Leone claimed to have found, alive and well, the father of Ishmael Beah, the bestselling author of A LONG WAY GONE: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier. Not only that, the tipster told them, he thought the mother and two brothers were alive, as well. In his memoir, Beah had written powerfully of the death of his entire family. If the tipster was right, the reporters were onto a major hoax. So reporters flew to Sierra Leone. The problem was this: it turned out Ishmael had written the truth.

    What followed was a profoundly ugly, relentless and scurrilous campaign on the part of these reporters to find some way—any way–to discredit Beah and his memoir. But they failed to do so. And when major news organizations, including the AP and the New York Times, looked into the Australian’s allegations, they found them wanting.

    These are times when all memoirs are scrutinized, and for understandable reasons. There have been too many hoaxes; too many writers have played too loosely with the truth; too many publishers have failed to check out their books before they’ve published.

    But memoirs like Ishmael Beah’s are not only worthy of readers’ trust and respect, they play a hugely important role in helping us understand what is happening in the world. Even at its ugliest, the Australian never questioned the basic authenticity of Ishmael Beah’s story: Beah was a child soldier in one of the most brutal and chaotic civil wars of recent times. And in his stirring and brave memoir, he has given voice to a community—child soldiers—clamoring, desperate to be heard.

    I am proud to have been his editor and his publisher.

    Sarah Crichton

    Posted by Wen Stephenson, on June 12th, 2009 at 3:56 pm EDT
  • “The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle” is fantastic (same goes for Murakami’s short stories). Thank you for these recommendations and I look forward to snatching up a few of the listed reads.

    Posted by Miki, on June 16th, 2009 at 7:46 am EDT
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