The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story, edited by Nikole Hannah-Jones (★★★★★)
Print • Owned (Target) • Nonfiction • 2019
Short synopsis: The year 1619, which is the year up to 30 enslaved people were brought to this country, should be the founding date of our country, Nikole Hannah-Jones posits. In this collection featuring essays, poems, and works of fiction, writers come together to explore the legacy that slavery has had on our past and present.
This book took me a long time to read, as I dipped into and out of it over a period of a few weeks. And I think that’s the right way to attempt this book. It’s nearly 500 pages and the topics are dense, educational, and mostly heartbreaking. It’s a book you want to sit with and not rush through. This book is separated into 18 different topics affecting Black Americans today, everything from healthcare and politics to capitalism and music. Between each chapter are poems and works of fiction. It’s an incredible collection and I think it is a must-read for anyone committed to anti-racism.
This is why the memories and perspectives of Black Americans have so often been marginalized and erased from the larger narrative of this nation: we are the stark reminders of some of its most damning truths. Eight in ten Black people would not be in the United States were it not for the institution of slavery in a society founded on ideals of freedom. Our nation obscures and diminishes this history because it shames us.
To this day, the only Americans who have ever received government restitution for slavery were white enslavers in Washington, D.C., whom the federal government compensated after the Civi War for their loss of human property.
Citizens inherit not just the glory of their nation but its wrongs, too. A truly great country does not ignore or excuse its sins. It confronts them, and then works to make them right. If we are to be redeemed, we must do what is just: we must, finally, live up to the magnificent ideals upon which we were founded.
The Body: A Guide for Occupants by Bill Bryson (★★★★☆)
E-Book • Owned (Amazon) • Nonfiction • 2019
Short synopsis: Have you ever wondered how your body works? Wonder no more! In this book, Bill Bryson takes us on a journey through our bodies: how it functions, how it can heal itself, and how things can go wrong.
This book was so fascinating! Once you stop and think about how many different processes are happening inside your body to keep your heart pumping, your blood rushing through your blood vessels, your brain telling you what you’re seeing and doing, your lungs working, your muscles moving… it’s pretty amazing. This book is broken into chapters that first go through the different systems of the body (i.e., brain, heart, lungs, etc.) and then delves into the ways those systems can break down when we get sick, get cancer, or eventually die. Sometimes the book could be a bit dry, but that had more to do with the subject matter than Bryson’s writing, I think. It also wasn’t as funny as I was expecting, as everyone has told me what a funny writer Bryson is. Not that I needed this book to be humorous—it was fine that it wasn’t—but I’m interested to read other books from him and see if his humor comes through better when talking about other topics. Still, I enjoyed learning more about the processes of the body and even found the last chapter about what happens to our bodies when we die really interesting!
Here are some of my favorite facts from the book:
Every day, it has been estimated, between one and five of your cells turn cancerous, and your immune system captures and kills them. Think of that. A couple of dozen times a week, well over a thousand times a year, you get the most dreaded disease of our age, and each time your body saves you.
The amygdala (Greek for “almond”) specializes in handling intense and stressful emotions—fear, anger, anxiety, phobias of all types … The amygdala grows particularly lively when we are asleep, and thus may account for why our dreams are so often disturbing. Your nightmares may simply be the amygdalae unburdening themselves.
For each visual input, it takes a tiny but perceptible amount of time—about two hundred milliseconds, one-fifth of a second—for the information to travel along the optic nerves and into the brain to be processed and interpreted. One-fifth of a second is not a trivial span of time when a rapid response is required—to step back from an oncoming car, say, or to avoid a blow to the head. To help us deal better with this fractional lag, the brain does a truly extraordinary thing: it continuously forecasts what the world will be like a fifth of a second from now, and that is what it gives us as the present. That means that we never see the world as it is at this very instant, but rather as it will be a fraction of a moment in the future. We spend our whole lives, in other words, living in a world that doesn’t quite exist yet.
In the womb, a fetus’s lungs are filled with amniotic fluid, but with exquisite timing at the moment of birth the fluid drains away, the lungs inflate, and blood from the tiny, freshly beating heart is sent on its first circuit around the body. What had until a moment before effectively been a parasite is now on its way to becoming a fully independent, self-maintaining entity.
Cancer is above all an age thing. Between birth and the age of forty, men have just a one in seventy-one chance of getting cancer and women one in fifty-one, but over sixty the odds drop to one in three for men and one in four for women. An eighty-year-old person is a thousand times more likely than a teenager to develop cancer.
It’s in His Kiss by Julia Quinn (★★★★☆)
E-Book • Libby • Historical Romance • 2005
Short synopsis: Gareth is looking for a translator for his grandmother’s diary, which is written in Italian, a language he does not speak or read. Hyacinth Bridgerton has a passing understanding of Italian and offers to help translate the diary, which leads the two of them on a path neither was expecting.
Julia Quinn’s Bridgerton series has been hit-or-miss for me. I’ve enjoyed some of the books, despised others. Thankfully, this one fell into the “enjoy” category. Is she the best historical romance writer? No, absolutely not. But this book was fun to read and well-paced. I enjoyed the banter between Hyacinth and Gareth, as well as the subplot of Gareth’s grandma’s diary, as it helped unravel a mystery of Gareth’s family. Plus, Gareth is the grandson of Lady Danbury, and getting lots of great scenes with her was well worth the price of admission.
What are you reading?
NGS
I have found Bill Bryson’s travel books to be peak Bryson and all the rest are sort of…dry and boring with occasional bon mots. I read In a Sunburned Country and A Walk in the Woods are excellent and I would recommend reading those if you like Bryson’s voice.
The 1619 Project. Just such a challenging read. I thought some of the essays were stronger than others, but the whole of that book was just so incredibly powerful.
Stephany
I need to read A Walk in the Woods. I always hear great things about that book!
Elisabeth
I read 4 books on vaca and then haven’t touched anything since. Too busy and overwhelmed with life, but really glad I managed to fit some good reads while out of town (ironically I ONLY read while on planes and didn’t touch my e-reader while we were actually vacationing). I have to say that an e-reader is a game changed for trips!!! So convenient to have a stack of books “within” a tiny little hand-held device.
Stephany
Hooray for e-readers! They are truly a gamechanger for vacationing. It’s so nice to have a lightweight item that holds thousands of books. I’m glad you were able to finish four books on vacation, though! Even if you didn’t end up reading much while ON vacation, at least it made the plane rides go by fast (ish).
Lisa of Lisa's Yarns
That Bryson book sounds interesting! Although the thing about the immune system and cancer kind of freaks me out since I’m on drugs to suppress my immune system to manage my RA. Bleh. But hopefully any possible cancer cells still get killed off by my immune system! 😉 Don’t you love how a brain prone to anxiety works! 😉
I finished “We Should Not Be Friends” by Will Schwalbe which I liked. I read it after “Dinners with Ruth” which I preferred. But both are about long-term friendships which are so important to me! Now I’m reading “The Sun Walked Down” which I heard about on a podcast last summer and am finally getting around to reading. It’s historical fiction set in Australia – about a 6yo boy that walks off one day and goes missing in the outback area of Australia. I was a little disappointed when i realized it was set in the late 1800s as I don’t love 19th century historical fiction but I’m liking the book. The writing is really good.
Stephany
Oh gosh, I didn’t even think about how that passage might come across to those with compromised immune systems! Ugh. That’s on me. I’ll just hope that Bryson exaggerated that point for your sake. <3
Lisa of Lisa’s Yarns
Oh gosh, don’t worry! I didn’t give it another thought after reading this post. There are risks that come along with my meds and I have to trust my doctor is making the right decision for me. I get regular lab work, too, so I imagine that would indicate if something was off. Just another example of how sh*tty autoimmune disorders are!!
Nicole MacPherson
I loved The Body! I thought it was so great, although the description of breast cancer and early mastectomies almost made me pass out. Wooooo I just got light-headed thinking about it. But I loved that book so much!
Stephany
OMG yes. I think I maybe blocked out all of that because I didn’t remember it until you mentioned it in this comment. What a wild time to be a woman, between those early births and early mastectomies!
J
I have the 1619 Project in physical form, and it’s just so BIG that I never pick it up. I work from home and have some flexibility in my days, so I think perhaps I will put it on my desk. Might be easier to read than trying to hold it.
My Great Aunt (she turned 99 in April) LOVES the Bridgerton series. Her memory is horrible (but not bad for being 99), so she forgets a lot, and really enjoys reading them over and over again. She told me once, “Honey, if there’s ever ANYTHING you want to know about sex, these books will give you all of the information you need!” HA! Did you watch Queen Charlotte on Netflix? We loved it.
Stephany
The 1619 Project is a very big boy, that’s for sure! It’s definitely one you want to take slowly so it might be a good idea to put it on your desk and read a chapter a day.
I haven’t watched Queen Charlotte yet. It’s next on my list!
Daria
Love me a good Bill Bryson!! Notes from a Small Island, At Home, A Walk in the Woods. Need to add Body to my list!
Stephany
I have At Home on my TBR list and I’m excited to read that one after enjoying The Body so much!
Jenny
Wow, The Body sounds fascinating. I love stuff like that. Whenever I’m tempted to criticize my body for something (any number of things!) I like to remind myself how actually incredible it is. I want to read this book!
Right now I’m reading Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card. My son just finished it and is moving on to the second book in the series, so I can’t wait to finish this one and discuss it! It is sci fi though so not for everyone- I don’t usually like sci fi myself but I’m making an exception here.
Stephany
The Body will definitely give you a renewed appreciation for all the things your body is able to do! It’s really amazing when we sit down and think about everything happening behind the scenes that we don’t have to worry about!
Anne
I have The Body in my TBR! I also just bought one by him on…Shakespeare? The thing I love about Bryson is that he gathers together all of the random facts that you didn’t know you needed/wanted to know. It’s exactly what I would do if I had the time. So I am glad he has it and dedicates his time to it. 🙂 I also think his trip-related books are the ones that showcase his humor best – Walk in the Woods, for sure, but also the ones about driving across the US and England. (The titles have changed, I think. over the years, but you should be able to find them easily…)