Barack Obama’s summer 2019 reading list
August 27, 2019
Books

It’s
August, so I wanted to let you know about a few books I’ve been reading this
summer, in case you’re looking for some
suggestions. To start, you can’t go wrong by
reading or
re-reading the collected works of
Toni Morrison. Beloved,
Song of Solomon,
The Bluest Eye,
Sula, everything else – they’re
transcendent, all of them. You’ll be glad you read them. And while I’m at it, here are a few more
titles you might want to
explore:
Sometimes difficult to swallow,
The Nickel Boys by
Colson Whitehead is a necessary read, detailing the way
Jim Crow and
mass incarceration tore apart lives and wrought
consequences that
ripple into
today.
Exhalation by
Ted Chiang is a collection of
short stories that will make you think,
grapple with
big questions, and feel more
human. The best kind of
science fiction.
Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel’s epic
fictionalized look at Thomas Cromwell’s rise to power, came out in 2009, but I was a little busy back then, so I missed it. Still great today.
Haruki Murakami’s
Men Without Women examines what happens to characters without
important women in their
lives; it’ll move you and
confuse you and sometimes
leave you with more
questions than
answers.
American Spy by
Lauren Wilkinson is a whole lot more than just a
spy thriller, wrapping together the ties of
family, of love, and of country.
The Shallows by
Nicholas Carr came out a few years ago, but its arguments on the
internet’s impact on our
brains, our lives, and our communities are still
worthy of reflection, which is something we all could use a little more of in this
age.
Lab Girl by
Hope Jahren is a beautifully written memoir about the life of a
woman in science, a brilliant friendship, and
the profundity of trees. Terrific.
Inland by
Téa Obreht just came out yesterday, so I won’t spoil anything. But those of you who’ve been waiting for Obreht’s next novel won’t be disappointed.
You’ll get a better sense of the
complexity and
redemption within the
American immigrant story with
Dinaw Mengestu’s novel, How to Read the Air.
Maid by
Stephanie Land is a single mother’s personal,
unflinching look at
America’s class divide, a description of the
tightrope many families walk just to get by, and a reminder of the
dignity of all work.