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Sunday, November 24, 2024 |
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Celeste Ng, Ann Patchett, Min Jin Lee and others on the books that bring them comfort |
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The Princess Bride, by William Goldman
by Elisabeth Egan and Tina Jordan
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NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Authors are just like the rest of us they like to soothe their anxieties by losing themselves in the pages of a beloved book. Here are some of the ones they turn to when times get tough.
Celeste Ng
The Princess Bride, by William Goldman
In 1987, my sister was halfway through reading me The Princess Bride when she went off to college. The day she left, I cried myself to sleep and then, after I got my bearings again, I read the rest of the book on my own. So this has always been a comfort read for me: a fairy tale that acknowledges that life isnt fair (Its just fairer than death, thats all) yet still manages to make you feel that the good guys might win, that justice will be served, that theres a point to it all. If you only know the (fantastic) film, pick the book up, too its just as much of a delight.
Celeste Ngs most recent book is Little Fires Everywhere.
Elizabeth Gilbert
The Summer Book, by Tove Jansson
I would suggest The Summer Book, by Tove Jansson. This slim, magical, life-affirming novel tells the story of a young girl and her grandmother, who spend their summer together on a small, isolated island in the Gulf of Finland. Absent of sentimentality, full of love and humor and wisdom, this is a tale about how much fun two people can have in the middle of nowhere, when they are practicing social isolation in earnest.
Elizabeth Gilberts latest novel is City of Girls.
Kiley Reid
Bird by Bird, by Anne Lamott
This is a book about writing, but truly, Bird By Bird is about taking your time. Its funny and honest and comforting, and its a wonderful reminder of the glory in terrible first efforts, and the beauty that comes in taking it day by day.
Kiley Reids debut novel, Such a Fun Age, was published earlier this year.
Lily King
I Capture the Castle, by Dodie Smith
It turns out my literary comforts have mostly been brought to me by British women.
When I was younger I always read Pride and Prejudice after a heartbreak, but I think its an all-purpose comfort novel, with so much humor and love of all kinds. I adore Sense and Sensibility just as much, and for the same reasons.
I Capture the Castle, by Dodie Smith, is pure delight, and also a bit of a quarantine book, with two sisters isolated in a small rundown castle in the 1930s with their blocked-writer father and loony stepmother until two eligible young men come to visit their country house down the road. Major Pettigrews Last Stand, by Helen Simonson, is another deep pleasure read set in modern-day England, with occasional nods to Austen and Forster but very much its own delightful story. Speaking of Forster: A Room with A View. Of course. Italy, violets, the mackintosh squares. And I loved Ali Smiths Autumn, a stunning and wrenching celebration of deep and lasting human connection. For warmth and laughs and brilliant observations in nonfiction, you have to read Love, Nina, a collection of Nina Stibbes real letters over a five-year period in the 80s when she left rural Leicestershire to work as a nanny for a literary editor in London. Its laugh-out-loud funny, and would actually be great read aloud.
Lily Kings latest book is Writers & Lovers.
Ruth Ware
Love in a Cold Climate, by Nancy Mitford
For me, comfort reading is as often comfort listening because its so often in the silence of a long car journey or a solo walk that your thoughts start spiraling. Agatha Christie for the reassurance that even murder can be fixed. Patrick OBrian for putting petty, modern gripes into historical perspective. But for sheer comfort reading it has to be Nancy Mitford who laughed and wept her way through love, loss, crippling bereavement and two world wars. When Love in a Cold Climate fails to make me laugh and cry, the end really will be nigh.
Ruth Wares most recent novel is The Turn of the Key.
Bryan Stevenson
The Warmth of Other Suns, by Isabel Wilkerson
In The Warmth of Other Suns, racial terror and violence are overcome with determination, faith, courage and the kind of resolve that some of us have been privileged to experience in our elders and the generation who came before us. The generation who did so much more with so much less have something to teach us about managing a pandemic.
Bryan Stevenson is the author of Just Mercy.
Ann Patchett
Writers & Lovers, by Lily King
Writers & Lovers made me happy. Even as the narrator grieves the loss of her mother and struggles to make art and keep a roof over her head, the novel is suffused with hopefulness and kindness. Lily King writes with a great generosity of spirit.
Ann Patchetts most recent novel is The Dutch House.
Erik Larson
News of the World by Paulette Jiles
Capt. Jefferson Kidd, a hard-traveled Army veteran, makes his living reading newspapers to paying audiences in post-Civil War Texas, ordinarily a reasonably safe pursuit until he agrees to take custody of a young orphan, Johanna, newly rescued from her Kiowa captors, in order to deliver her to her surviving relatives. As Kidd and Johanna travel across an increasingly perilous Texas landscape, the two form one of the quirkiest, most satisfying friendships in modern literature.
Erik Larsons most recent book is The Splendid and the Vile.
Min Jin Lee
Cousin Bette, by Honoré de Balzac
Love is the antidote to fear, and few have written better about love than Honoré de Balzac. Cousin Bette is juicy, immersive and terribly knowing about the feeling which connects us through time and distance.
Min Jin Lees most recent novel is Pachinko.
Luis Alberto Urrea
Winter Morning Walks, by Ted Kooser
When trouble comes, I often turn to poetry. I find myself drawn over and over to Ted Koosers slender holy book Winter Morning Walks. When he was recovering from cancer, he could not be in sunlight, so he walked before dawn that winter and sent Jim Harrison 100 tiny poems about the daily walk. It will bring you grace abundant.
Luis Alberto Urreas most recent novel is The House of Broken Angels.
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J. Courtney Sullivan
The In-Betweens, by Mira Ptacin
The past several nights, during those rare moments not spent refreshing Twitter for the latest news, Ive gotten lost in the pages of Mira Ptacins The In-Betweens. Its the fascinating true story of Camp Etna, a 150-year-old community of spiritualists and mediums, hidden deep in the woods of Maine. Ptacin has a curious, warm, nonjudgmental tone about her, and shes funny, too. She makes for delightful company. She sets a beautiful scene, of women living in gingerbread cottages, hunting ghosts and helping spirits cross into the light. Thinking about past lives and reincarnation and centuries spent on the astral plane somehow makes a month or so of social isolation seem like not such a big deal after all.
J. Courtney Sullivans most recent novel is Saints For All Occasions.
Amy Bloom
Ledger, by Jane Hirshfield
All English mysteries prior to 2005. All of Jane Kenyon. All of Jane Hirshfield, especially her latest, Ledger, especially A Ream of Paper. Both Janes understand the world in all its happiness, melancholy, unpleasant surprise and moments of resilience.
Amy Blooms most recent novel is White Houses.
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Joshua Ferris
Gilead, by Marilynne Robinson
I would suggest a pairing: Emersons essays with Marilynne Robinsons novel Gilead. Both of these bright, kindred voices soothe me like a milk-fed baby, as they shore up against pessimism without ever being timid or false.
Joshua Ferris is the author of The Dinner Party.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner
Sabbaths Theater, by Philip Roth
I was just tag-team rereading Anna Karenina and Sabbaths Theater, mostly because they are soothing reminders to me that beneath all this external crisis, our souls are still wretched and needy and require their own antibiotics and Purell and masks and toilet paper. Everything I see coming out now, including book recommendations, are about pandemics and surviving them. But our personhood is still here underneath it all, and it will be after all of this is over, so lets not forget to tend to that, too.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner is the author of Fleishman Is in Trouble.
Victor LaValle
The Essential Ellison, by Harlan Ellison
Being in the house with our two kids has us digging into the books that made us fall in love with reading when we were younger. The Essential Ellison, a retrospective collection of Harlan Ellisons short stories, is a book I found as a teenager and have returned to ever since. Science fiction, fantasy, horror, the stories are as brilliant, prickly, humane and sometimes problematic as the man himself. I can read one quick, while the kids eat lunch. Then its back into our current apocalyptic reality.
Victor LaValles most recent novel is The Changeling.
Curtis Sittenfeld
Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda, by Becky Albertalli
This YA novel features two boys who attend the same Atlanta high school, start an email correspondence without knowing each others identities and fall in love. Its incredibly warm, romantic, funny and even suspenseful, and the emails themselves are charming. Also, Yes Please by Amy Poehler. Poehlers reflections on life are, not surprisingly, funny, but theyre also insightful, moving and honest about struggles and mistakes.
Curtis Sittenfelds most recent novel is Eligible.
Helen Simonson
Three Men in a Boat, by Jerome K. Jerome
As our lives must temporarily shrink to the confines of home, I search for patience and good sense in the gentle, healthful climes of Jane Austen, where intelligent, witty women must do fierce battle with the constraints of their lives. Persuasion is my favorite, and it never gets old to watch Anne Elliot, considered too old for marriage, balance her sense of honor and duty against a burning desire to rekindle old love.
And for those of us trying to shop a suggested two weeks of food, without resorting to the dreaded hoarding, may I recommend the victualing lists of Jerome K. Jeromes 1889 comic hit, Three Men in a Boat. It takes an entire chapter to outfit a large rowing boat for three bumbling chums about to row up the river Thames for a fortnight. From cold meat and strawberries to butter and pies, not to mention a paper umbrella and a frying pan wrapped in brown paper, the hampers pile up as the local shop boys jeer: Ah! Youd want to take a thing or two with you
if you was a-going to cross the Atlantic in a small boat. Its a salutary lesson in comic excess we can take with us on our search for canned tuna and toilet paper.
Helen Simonsons most recent book is The Summer Before the War.
Tayari Jones
The Color Purple, by Alice Walker
My go-to comfort novel is The Color Purple, by Alice Walker. Even though it touches on difficult subject matter like child abuse and forced marriage, this story believes that human kindness, courage and love can defeat any challenge. Its big, beautiful happy ending is heartfelt and hard-won. Every single time I read this book, I walk away as a slightly better person than I was when I picked it up.
Tayari Joness most recent book is An American Marriage.
Glennon Doyle
Tiny Beautiful Things, by Cheryl Strayed
In stressful times I want the truth, but I want it hopeful and calm. I want to feel both leveled with and wisely guided. So, I come back to Cheryl Strayeds Tiny Beautiful Things when Im panicky. Each digestible response from Sugar slows my heart back down.
Glennon Doyles most recent book is Untamed.
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Madeline Miller
Fingersmith, by Sarah Waters
When Im in need of book comfort, I can never predict which one of my old favorites is going to do the trick. It might be my well-foxed copy of epic rabbit adventure, Watership Down, or I might prefer to escape to Elizabeth von Arnims acerbic and delight-filled story of four women discovering themselves in Italy, The Enchanted April. Or maybe I want something that gives voice to history with strength and courage: Julia Alvarezs potent In the Time of the Butterflies, or the piercing, elegiac beauty of Julie Otsukas The Buddha in the Attic.
But after checking on friends and family, stocking up and canceling everything, I found myself someplace else entirely: in the sweat-seamed stews of Sarah Waters gripping Dickensian masterpiece Fingersmith. Its such a twisty headlong story that I can tell you very little about it without running into spoilers, except to say that it has everything needed to distract you from constantly refreshing news updates: a sweep-you-off-your-feet narrative voice, outrageously effective suspense, Victorian horrors, erotic thrills, complicated characters, mysteries and double-crosses and triple-crosses, and even a hopeful ending. I know every one of its twists from previous reads, but the book never fails to ensnare me, and as a bonus, if isolation starts to chafe, the historically accurate asylum scenes will surely keep things in perspective.
Madeline Millers most recent novel is Circe.
Lucy Kalanithi
Zen Shorts, by Jon J. Muth
Zen Shorts is a childrens book of three short stories, beautifully illustrated, that provides a warm reminder about the generosity and equanimity required in challenging times. My 5-year-old daughter and I both find it perennially comforting and inspiring, no matter the situation, and in these days of shelter-in-place and rapid health-system mobilization, well definitely snuggle up to read it again.
Lucy Kalanithi, a clinical assistant professor at the Stanford School of Medicine, is the widow of Paul Kalanithi, the author of When Breath Becomes Air.
© 2020 The New York Times Company
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