Need a good summer book? Try one a 窪蹋勛圖厙 community member recommends
For many 窪蹋勛圖厙 community members, summer is a time to settle in with a book theyve been longing to read. Whether that means escaping through science fiction, dreaming with beach reads, expanding perspectives through memoirs and biographies, or researching a topic theyre passionate about, we were curious to learn whats on their shelves.
So we asked: Whats on your summer reading list? Here are their recommendations.
Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler
Recommended by Rachel Roe-Dale, director of the First-Year Experience and professor of mathematics
Parable of the Sower is a deeply interdisciplinary exploration of empathy and community in a world falling apart. It will leave you thinking in new ways about how we can survive and even flourish in the face of problems bigger than ourselves.
Parable of the Sower is also this years First-Year Experience summer reading selection.
Murderbot Diaries, a series by Martha Wells
Recommended by Marta Brunner, college librarian
"This series is written from the perspective of a sentient security robot with human parts. When the initial story opens, we learn that introverted Murderbot has hacked its governor module so it can deviate from the restrictions of its employer: It wants to watch soap operas when it's bored or experiencing social anxiety, which is pretty much all the time given that it has to work with incredibly annoying, super stressful, and perplexingly helpless humans. The stories are sometimes poignant, often hilarious explorations of personhood and social connection.
Giovannis Room by James Baldwin
Recommended by Chris Arnold 24, student Admissions ambassador
A masterful piece of fiction, Baldwins reputation as one of the best writers of the 20th century rings true in Giovannis Room. A heartbreaking tale of gay love, 勳喧s a must read for queer fiction fans.
Will in the World: Becoming Shakespeare by Stephen Greenblatt
Also Founding Gods Nation: Reading Exodus by Leon Kass
Recommended by Marc Conner, president
I have upward of 20 books on my bedside table right now ... 勳喧s frankly turning into a bit of a safety hazard. One 梆m especially eager to read this summer is Leon Kasss recent book, Founding Gods Nation: Reading Exodus. Its a massive study of the Book of Exodus that focuses on the notions of nation, people, and place, which seem to me to be very pressing concepts in America today. Another is Stephen Greenblatts biography of Shakespeare, Will in the World: Becoming Shakespeare. Ive read it several times and always learn more from it. As I prepare to teach the seminar Shakespeare: Comedy and Tragedy this fall semester, 勳喧s helping me rethink the plays, the playwright, and what I want to share with students in the course.
Nowhere Girl: A Memoir of a Fugitive Childhood by Cheryl Diamond
Recommended by Megan Mercier MALS 11, director of alumni and volunteer engagement
Nowhere Girl, a captivating memoir by Cheryl Diamond about spending her youth on the run, is the current Alumni Book Club selection. The offers the opportunity for members of the 窪蹋勛圖厙 community to connect virtually with each other over shared readings and interests. Participation in book club is free and completely flexible. Join us!
The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides
Recommended by Meghan Nicchi, head athletic trainer
I always try to take the down time during the summer to get a couple of good books in before things get super busy again. 梆m partial to the page-turner beach reads that make you think just enough to keep you invested and entertained, but not too much to make it seem like work! The Silent Patient is a great mystery with a medical undertone, which I am always partial to!
Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan
Recommended by Bob Turner, associate professor of environmental studies and sciences and political science
As an aspiring surfer, I appreciate Finnegans obsession with surfing, stories of camaraderie, and the thrill of pushing the edge.
Who Killed Jane Stanford: A Gilded Age Tale of Murder, Deceit, Spirits and the Birth of a University by Richard White
Recommended by Eric Morser, director of civic engagement and the Bridge Experience and professor of history
Richard White is one of the best historians working today and someone who has figured out how to wed innovative research and artful prose. The book is a history and a true crime story. White explores the murder of Jane Stanford, who founded Stanford University with her husband, Leland, to tell an intriguing tale of hubris, religious devotion, and personal vendettas in the Gilded Age American West.
The Quaking of America: An Embodied Guide to Navigating Our Nations Upheaval and Racial Reckoning by Resmaa Menakem
Recommended by Jennifer Mueller, associate professor of sociology and director of the Intergroup Relations Program
The book is premised on the idea that we need more than cognitive political strategies to counter the increasingly antidemocratic and threatening racialized political forces around us. Instead, we need somatic practices that help us temper and condition our bodies so that we can stay present in/with the body in the midst of conflict, more clearly discern when we are in or out of alignment, work toward healing racialized trauma and internalized dominance, and build a living, embodied, antiracist culture.
The Judges List by John Grisham
Recommended by Robert Resnick '88, Alumni Board of Directors president
梆m headed out on a two-week vacation and have the latest from John Grisham in my bag. I enjoy those types of thrillers. They take me outside of the daily grind, and I use reading mostly as an escape.
Gold Diggers by Sanjena Sathian
Recommended by Angela Valden, strategic communications editor
梆m currently reading Gold Diggers, an extremely clever, funny, and imaginative novel that follows Indian American teenager Neil Narayan and centers on themes of community, immigrant identity, and the pressures of living up to family and societal expectations and pursuing the American Dream. Described as a magical realist coming-of-age story, 勳喧s endearing and entertaining, with a very creative twist!
The Big Rock Candy Mountain by Wallace Stegner
Recommended by Deb Hall, associate professor of art
The story follows a constantly moving family through the early 1900s in the upper Midwest, Saskatchewan, Utah, and Nevada. Bo Mason, the protagonist, gets involved in Prohibition activities, and the family endures constant relocation due to money troubles and the law as well as the Spanish flu. It's a dense, descriptive book filled with rich characters and detailed experiences that shed light on a slice of Americas social and cultural history.
Also on my summer list are 'Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future by Ashlee Vance. Like him or not, Musk is a visionary whose ideas are impacting us. Then I plan to read Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter by Ben Goldfarb.