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Jeannette Walls' best-selling memoir, “The Glass Castle,” is now a feature film |
What are you reading? And where? |
I live in Wisconsin, at the crest of a hill that slopes down to a lush valley, right to the doorstep of a cider-red farmhouse with a white silo. The view is both soothing and absorbing in any season, but the green stillness of summer is the perfect backdrop for a great book. I set up a lawn chair at the edge of our patio and tune into the sounds and rhythms of that landscape. I might hear barn swallows or a red hawk calling from distant branches. I can watch bees busy at work in the clover that flourishes in our unkempt lawn. I dally and drift and dream into the pages of someone else’s world. Novelist Luanne Rice has talked about trips to the sea with her mother and sister, and watching her mother slip into a beach chair and open a book. “Of all the life lessons she taught me,” she writes, “that is one of my favorites: to take time at a place I love, restore my spirit with books and the beach.” So, whether you go lakeside to a weathered wooden dock or a shaded cabin porch, or you just plop onto a bench in the city, I’d love to know where you do your best summer reading. Tweet me @KerriMPR and, better yet, snap a picture and send it to me. Let’s make these waning weeks of summer some of our most fulfilling reading moments all year. -K.M. |
This Week on The Thread |
The multiple, terrifying worlds of Ben Percy's writing "The Dark Net" by Ben Percy Buy this book "The Dark Net" is Percy's latest in a series of literary horror fantasies. But the novel is just one of the writing universes Percy inhabits. More |
For sale: The farm that inspired 'Charlotte's Web' The Maine farm where E.B. White penned his beloved classic, “Charlotte's Web," is now for sale. No word on the spelling talents of any spiders on the property. More |
Thread Book Hour: Authors take on American empathy and the edge of the world The Thread features a conversation with novelist Stephanie Powell Watts about race, class, and life in small-town America. Plus, an interview with the author of a new novel about a woman whose quarter-life crisis takes her to the South Pole. More |
Excruciating and beautiful: “Glass Castle” author sees life on screen The film version of "The Glass Castle," Jeannette Walls' best-selling memoir, hits theaters this weekend. She hopes the film will help others deal with their troubled histories. More |
Raunchy but sweet, “Mrs. Fletcher” is one for the ages “Mrs. Fletcher” by Tom Perrotta Buy this book Tom Perrotta's new novel about a divorced mom and her college-aged son addresses some serious issues with dark humor. The result is uncompromisingly obscene, but still somehow good-natured. More |
Author Danzy Senna loves the troublesome character “New People” by Danzy Senna Buy this book Senna's new novel follows a young, interracial couple — Khalil and Maria — whose seemingly charmed life falls apart after Maria becomes infatuated with a mysterious poet. More |
How to become a “superforecaster” “Superforecasting” by Philip Tetlock and Dan Gardner Buy this book Bookseller Jonah Zimiles recommends a business-minded book that can teach readers to be better at predicting the future. More |
Take a pilgrimage to America's sport sanctuaries “The Arena” by Rafi Kohan Buy this book Rafi Kohan traveled all over the country to research stadiums for his new book. He learned the secrets of ground crews and ticket scalpers and explored the economics of tax-funded stadiums. More |
Is the end of the world in a dating app? “After On” by Rob Reid Buy this book Silicon valley entrepreneur and novelist Rob Reid takes on artificial intelligence — and how it might end the world — in his weird, funny new techno-philosophical thriller “After On.” More |
A podcast reopens old wounds in a new novel “Are You Sleeping” by Kathleen Barber Buy this book Kathleen Barber's debut novel is an on-trend mashup of murder, social media and Serial-style true-crime podcasting. More |
Disconnection and climate change at the heart of Kingsnorth's latest In his latest novel and essay collection, writer Paul Kingsnorth explores cataclysmic change through a new lens. More |
New biography of Lincoln's Secretary of War reveals a resilient man, haunted by grief “Stanton” by Walter Stahr Buy this book NPR's Ron Elving reviews a massive new tome on the life of Edwin Stanton, certainly one of the most contentious and controversial figures in Abraham Lincoln's cabinet of rivals. More |
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