All in Non-fiction

CATCH AND KILL

n recommending this book, which I do highly, I had to reflect on the many different aspects of a book that I believe make it a “must read.”  Catch and Kill will punch you in the stomach and leave you breathless with the story Farrow tells.  I knew the book was about Harvey Weinstein – his predatory behavior and how he got away with it for so long because he was a rich and powerful influence in the film industry.  What I hadn’t anticipated was Farrow’s strong evidence that for years, many other powerful men knew of Weinstein's behavior.

SIMPLICITY PARENTING

The subtitle for Simplicity Parenting is “Using the Extraordinary Power of Less to Nurture Calmer, Happier and More Secure Kids,” and that is exactly what it delivers. Payne provides a toolbox of ideas, anecdotes and observations about why so many kids today are experiencing such high stress and anxiety, and how we might go about fixing it.

ALEXANDER HAMILTON

It was exactly one year ago that I had my breakthrough and realized that there are well-written, non-fiction books about history that even I could enjoy reading. It was Doris Kearns Goodwin’s Team of Rivals that opened my eyes. After Goodwin, I solicited ideas from friends and tried Jill Lepore’s These Truths and realized that not all popular history books would be to my liking. Therefore, when I read Ron Chernow’s Alexander Hamilton, I was thrilled to find it so accessible and entertaining.

BORN A CRIME

My co-editor and I so enjoy receiving book recommendations from our readers that we both read Born A Crime this month after our friend Jane Amara endorsed it. I was aware of the book, but unsure of its appeal. Thanks to Jane, I read it and recommend it highly.

THE FOOD EXPLORER

Thank goodness for the twice-yearly “Authors on Stage” program at Wellesley College, which I’ve happily attended for years with my friend, Pam. If not for this wonderful series, which each time features three authors talking about their new books, I may never have found The Food Explorer. As the title suggests, the book tells the remarkable story of David Fairchild, an American botanist, who from the late nineteenth century well into the twentieth, devoted his life to traveling the world in search of new plants and foods that he could bring back to America. He added a vast quantity of foods to Americans’ diets and increased by a huge amount the diversity of what farmers grow.

THE WIDOW CLICQUOT

This amazing book is the true story of the woman who created the Veuve Clicquot empire in France just after the French Revolution when women weren’t generally allowed to own property or run businesses. Upon her husband’s death when she was 27 years old, Barbe-Nicole Clicquot Ponsardin assumed leadership of the wine company she and her husband had run together. With genuine strength and a natural ability for business, she nurtured the company through multiple political and financial firestorms – to become one of the first and most successful business women of her time.

PRAIRIE FIRES

Caroline Fraser has written a fascinating biography of Laura Ingalls Wilder.  Using precious little autobiographical information left by Wilder and supplementing it with a similarly small amount left by her daughter, Fraser adroitly weaves a compelling tale of Wilder’s life. She explains how Wilder came to write her beloved Little House on the Prairie series in the midst of the Great Depression when she herself was in her mid-sixties.

H IS FOR HAWK

H Is for Hawk appeared on many “best books of the year” lists for 2015 and it’s been on my “must read” list since then.  I want to spare all of you any further delay:  pick up this book today and read it.  It is an absolute treasure!  I can honestly state that I’ve never read anything quite like it.

UNBELIEVABLE: My Front-Row Seat to the Craziest Campaign in American History

Unbelievable was recommended to me by a friend and frankly, I wasn’t sure I wanted to read it.   Don’t get me wrong.  I happily spend many an evening glued to MSNBC, following Chris Hayes and Rachel Maddow.  But, the idea of using my leisure time reading about Donald Trump’s successful presidential campaign run seemed potentially anxiety-producing, rather than pleasant.  I decided to try it though, and I am delighted that I did.

BECOMING

In reading a first lady’s memoir you might expect descriptions, perhaps some even heartfelt, about what it was really like spending four, or maybe eight, years in the White House.  Michelle Obama delivers that, hands down. But, in addition she offers her readers much, much more. 

LAB GIRL

One gauge of a great book, I believe, is how long it stays with you after you’ve finished reading it.  Another is how many excerpts you read out loud to your significant other.  A third is how many times you talk about it with everyone you know who likes to read.  A fourth is how many times you recommend it to your friends and family.  By all these standards, Lab Girl is a great read.

BRINGING UP BEBE

I read this book before my daughter Charlotte was born, and it was and remains one of my top two favorite books on parenting.  I know I enjoyed it in part because there is a narrative.  Rather than being an endless list of charts and data, Druckerman tells her own story about raising her three children.  But she is a journalist, and so she supplements her experience with interviews and data, and even a few charts!

TEAM OF RIVALS: THE POLITICAL GENIUS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN

We’re well into our second year of the L & L Review and up to this point I’ve never reviewed a book about history.  Historical fiction, sure.  But reading an entire book about history? Normally that would appeal to me about as much as reading an entire book about math.  So how did I happen to find my way to Team of Rivals?  It’s a selection for my Bates College Boston Alumna book club and is going to be discussed in November.  Since it’s 800+ pages, I thought I better get to it.