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I've read some very good non-fiction recently. Some you might want to consider this summer:
- Lab Girl by Hope Jahren - I've been recommending this to everyone I know. It's so great on so many levels - wonderful writing that's full of science explained simply, an empowering story of a woman battling through a male dominated field, quirky characters and a desperate plea for Earth.
- The Lost City of Z by David Grann - If, like my entire family, you loved Candice Millard's River of Doubt.
- The Soul of an Octopus by Sy Montgomery - Fascinating, easy to read, and highly informative. There are several new books out on octopuses (not octopi) and lots of recent research on their intelligence and neural processing.
- Theft by Finding: Diaries by David Sedaris - A great diversion from any reading rut.

As for fiction, I overwhelmingly recommend News of the World by Paulette Jiles. The only reason I won't pick this short piece of historical fiction for our group meeting is because I don't think we'd get much debate. In the Frontier West of the late 1800s, an old war veteran travels from town to town providing dramatic readings of recent newspaper publications to the locals who have no access. During the course of his travels, he's commissioned to return a young orphan girl who was captured and raised by the Kiowa to her distant relatives in San Antonio. It's evocative, action packed, and beautifully told. It's the story you might imagine if Peter Heller had written The Son.
Until September then, I hope you have a safe, sunny, and enriching Summer! Happy reading.
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My Current Summer Objectives |