My Summer Reading


I haven’t kept up as regularly with these monthly updates as I had hoped, but I did keep reading through the summer. I stayed really plugged into my dissertation reading and research, which really cut down my leisure reading, but I still managed to get through several books that struck my fancy in some way or another.

Books

  • William Langewiesche’s Inside the Sky: A Meditation on Flight. Saw it at a library book sale, and thought I’d give it a try. I’ve always enjoyed Langewiesche’s writing in Vanity Fair and other longform venues, and my father was a navigator in the US Air Force, so I figured I ought to be at least somewhat interested in the topic. A quick but satisfying read.
  • Richard Rothstein’s The Color of Law. The best nonfiction book I’ve read all year. Outstanding look at de jure residential segregation in the United States.
  • Simon Reid-Henry’s The Political Origins of Inequality. A very important topic, but only occasionally interesting. Glad to have an intelligent geographer’s perspective, but little pleasure in his prose or points of real, curious interest for me.
  • David Lagercrantz’ I Am Zlatan. Fun, light reading–I read most of it on airplanes/in airports while traveling this summer.
  • Ann Leckie’s Ancillary trilogy: Ancillary Justice, Ancillary Sword, and Ancillary Mercy, read on recommendation from our friends Josh and Jeff. I liked the first book best, but all three were fast, engrossing sci-fi stories. Read them mainly at night after putting our son to bed.
  • Brandon Sanderson’s Elantris. Read so I could have something to talk with my friend Dave about. Didn’t hate it, but didn’t really like it, either. Better than mindless reading, but only just.
  • Patrick O’Brien’s Master & Commander. I actually really liked my first exposure to the Aubrey & Maturin series. My friend Dave’s been recommending these books to me for years, and I never took the plunge until I went to Chicago for a conference and had 5 hours in a hotel room next to the airport and a shopping mall. Reading was the best way I could have spent my time, and so I read Master & Commander. I’m glad I did. At times, all the 19th century references and nautical terminology were like reading an untranslated work or a work in dialect.

Longform Journalism

I read so much longform over the summer on Pocket (reverting back to bad habits). A fair amount was about sports and politics, which I won’t share here, but I also read pretty widely outside of those two ‘guilty pleasure’ interests. It’s hard to pick just a few of the best pieces, so here’s a longer list of what I’d recommend from the last three months of my reading:

On Technology:

On Higher Education:

On Race, Gender, and Social Issues:

On Literature/History:

Miscellaneous:

Book/Film Reviews:

Writing by friends:

Featured image by Steve Halama