23 Comments
Jan 14, 2023Liked by Jeremy Anderberg

I loved "Trust". I read it while I was recovering from Covid. It made the time go by quickly. The structure was unique and engaging. I really enjoy books that tell the same story from various viewpoints.

I am currently reading Cloud Cuckoo Land (I know I am behind the curve on this one!). I am really enjoying it as well.

Thanks for sharing your insights!

Expand full comment
Jan 14, 2023Liked by Jeremy Anderberg

Trust was fantastic!

Expand full comment

Thanks for bumping "Trust" higher up on my TBR! The structure, while not exactly the same, makes me think of Asymmetry by Lisa Halliday--another critic's favorite. Funny how the books that get critical attention don't necessarily overlap with the books that show up constantly on Instagram or in newsletters.

Expand full comment
Jan 13, 2023Liked by Jeremy Anderberg

First books this year... "Children of Dune", and "The Story of Philosophy" by Will Durant carried over. First fully within 2023 books are about to be a Dune break with "The Humans" by Matt Haig (s/o Ted Gioia The Honest Broker) and "A New History of Western Philosophy" by Anthony Kenny, which I hope will be more like what I wanted "The Story of Philosophy" to be.

Expand full comment
Jan 13, 2023Liked by Jeremy Anderberg

A book I have on my shelf for a long time The little coffee shop of Kabul by Deborah Rodriguez. I enjoyed being taken to a place and culture so different than mine. Just started reading the Rocks by Brenda Maddox. About the beginnings of Geology.

Expand full comment
Jan 13, 2023Liked by Jeremy Anderberg

My first book of 2023 was The Family Game by Catherine Steadman; quite gripping and dramatic! And Lonesome Dove, of course. Pappyland and Trust sound both amazing, too.

Expand full comment

Trust sounds like it has a fascinating structure. It’s always interesting to see new ways of organizing novels. I’ve only ever seen a bottle of Pappy once, and haven’t ever tasted it. Someday though.

Expand full comment
Jan 13, 2023Liked by Jeremy Anderberg

I started reading Trust this summer and set it aside because it wasn’t grabbing me. I picked it up again when it was out on so many of the end of the year lists and am so glad that I did. Once I figured out what he was doing in the first book I couldn’t put it down. Such an interesting take on the “great man” stories and on the idea of a memoir generally.

Expand full comment

I started the year with a great read- the Swimmers by Julie Otsuka. Incredible!

Expand full comment
Jan 13, 2023Liked by Jeremy Anderberg

First book on my reading log is year was The River of Doubt by Candice Milliard.

Expand full comment

I have added two more books to my Goodreads list. As my father reaches 80 and my son turns 25, I feel nostalgic and terrified. I may wait until after dry January to pick up Pappyland, though.

Expand full comment

Have been a long-time Wright Thompson fan since reading his Ghosts of Mississippi article on ESPN right around the time I was living in Memphis. Really enjoyed Pappyland as well. Interestingly, I had just finished 'How To Do Nothing' right before this book. Thompson dropped in a Thomas Merton quote that struck me as familiar and I realized that Jenny Odell had used the exact same quote.

“In Louisville, at the corner of Fourth and Walnut, in the center of the shopping district, I was suddenly overwhelmed with the realization that I loved all these people, that they were mine and I theirs, that we could not be alien to one another even though we were total strangers."

We all have those serendipitous moments while reading that tie together authors, perspectives, etc. that we wouldn't have expected. I find those moments hard to explain to others, the coincidence of hearing a piece of trivia or catching a reference in a movie that you would have missed had you not just finished a piece of reading. Your timing of the Pappyland post was the extra coincidence! Cheers and thanks for the reviews.

Expand full comment