Sunday, January 22, 2023

The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native America From 1890 to Present (notes and quotes)

 Note: My poem review of the book is posted here.

It’s hubris to believe that the American history we learned in high school and college is sufficient.  As foreign area officers, it’s imperative that we be experts in our own nation’s history and be humble enough to acknowledge its shortcomings. The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee’s central thesis is that American Indian history did not end in 1890 (the massacre’s date) but instead was a low point from which modern Indian life emerged.  In its title, the author takes issue with Bury My Heart’s fatalism for the American Indian’s future–he argues that the massacre was NOT a signpost pointing back to an Indian past and forward to an American future.  This is the history of modern American Indian that you never knew.  


“Lost in all accounts of the years between 1918 and 1956 is the knowledge that the only reason there were any Indians left all was that they had fought.  They had fought against the government, and they had fought with it.  Deprived of every conceivable advantage or tool  or clear-heated advocate, they had continued to fight.  Nor just in the ways [Dr. Joseph Kossuth] Dixon and people like him imagined, as warriors astride horse roaming free across the Plains, but rather as husbands and wives and fathers and mothers. As writers and thinkers.  As farmers and soldiers in the Great War.  But what to do when the actual fighting stops and pressures bear down back home?  What to do when you can’t find the fight beyond the one for daily survival?  What to do with that patrimony.” 



  • Strength in this book is his liberal peppering of anecdotes

  • Federal government went around Indian leaders who wouldn’t sign treaties and made up other leaders who would sign. 

  • Successive wars of under and overreach illustrate a lack of relationships and that Indians were treated as a monolithic people.  


Looking for book ideas? Check out our 202320222021202020192018201720162015 and 2014 reading lists!

10 Wounded Knee massacre used as convenient signpost of an Indian past and American Future (i.e., no

Indian future)

11 Authors takes exception to bury my heart at wounded knee’s narrative of the fatalism of 

the American indian’s future of hopelessness and squalor on the reservations

15 Thesis: the last 128 years of Indian history.  1890 (Wounded Knee Massacre date) was 

A low point–but it was a point from which the modern Indian life emerged–often and 

mainly  painfully.  

31 3 constants of 1st contact: spread of disease, attempts at slavery, and the spread of 

Information.  Disease, slavery, starvation and disruption.  

32 2 moments in American Southeast standout: Removal and Seminole Wars

35 the real motive: Birth and growth of U.S. wasn’t driven by superior technology, or 

overwhelming numbers but rather “the chief cause was the colonialist setter-state’s willingness to eliminate whole civilizations of people in order to possess their land.” 

58 Spanish modus operandi: slavery, subjugation, and extermination

62-3 unique southwest: that absorbed every wave of immigation (Spanish, Mexican, and 

American) that shaped “the culture and fabric of the place, so much so that to be in the SW is to feel the continued lived presence of Native America.”

64 CA densely populated: before settlers first arrived more Indians lived in CA than the rest 

of U.S.--500 distinct tribes, 100 different languages–more densely settled than Europe.  Had been that way for 17,000 years.  

80 bison annihilation: pre 1800: 60 million Bison.  By 1900: only 541 left!

82 comanche most feared  and horse: by 1800, 2 million wild horses.  Comanche had at 

least 100K in their care–super skilled at breaking wild horses.  Universally feared by Mexicans, spanish and americans.  

84 Osage exceptionalism: sold land in Kansas and bought their own reservation land in 

Oklahoma to include mineral and underground rights.  Fierce negotiators.

94 How the west was won: by blood, brutality, and terror.

105 Oneida role in american revolution and U.S. betrayal: During washington’s winter at 

Valley Forge, the tribe brought them supplies and showed troops how to prepare Indian corn.  Congress rewarded them with a treaty guaranteeing their lands forever.  30 years later, it was already vanished. 

114 post 1871 Assimiliation policy even worse than treaty breaking and warfare that 

preceded it. 

146 1887 Dawes Act passed without consent of Indian tribes.  In retrospect it sold Indian land  

under the guise of allotting the land, and used that money to create boarding schools that stole indian children.  

149 only indian VP: Charles Curtis from Kansas (Herbert Hoover’s VP from 1929-1933).  He 

also passed the Curtis act which he later regretted: brought allotment to Oklahoma but 

did it differently where they had autonomy living in settlements with ability to levy taxes and hold state level public office

168 singular/unique resistance of Ponemah: even to today it remains absolutely pagan with 

no christian churches there.  This doesn’t appear to be accurate–there’s been a Wah-bun chapel there for 30 years! https://centerforindianministries.org/ministry-outreach/ 

172 4 decades post Wounded Knee: a siege against Indian way of life and life

188 Wounded Knee Medal of Honor Recipients (20! For killing women and children)

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/23/us/politics/tribes-medal-honor-wounded-knee.html 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/11/27/soldiers-got-medals-honor-massacr

ing-native-americans-this-bill-would-take-them-away/ 

Disgusting response: https://homeofheroes.com/remove-the-stain-act/ 

197 Joseph Oklahombi: Most decorated Indian hero of WWI. https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=OK091  One of the original code talkers but also received Silver Star and France’s Croix de Guerre for his valiant action at St. Etienne where he reportedly killed 79 German soldiers.  The most daring, though, was Pvt. Joseph Oklahombi, a Choctaw. At Saint-Étienne, Oklahombi was among a group that rushed across 200 yards of open ground. Together they commandeered a German machine gun and turned it on the enemy, killing 79 Germans and taking 171 prisoners. They held them for four days before reinforcements arrived.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/31/magazine/ojibwe-big-drum.html 

200 1924 all remaining 300K Indians became American citizen but still retained the treaty abrogated aspects of tribal sovereignty–a unique positions.(they weren’t included in the 1868  14th Amendment 

202 “Lost in all accounts of the years between 1918 and 1956 is the knowledge that the only reason there were any Indians left all was that they had fought.  They had fought against the government, and they had fought with it.  Deprived of every conceivable advantage or tool  or clear-heated advocate, they had continued to fight.  Nor just in the ways [Dr. Joseph Kossuth] Dixon and people like him imagined, as warriors astride horse roaming free across the Plains, but rather as husbands and wives and fathers and mothers. As writers and thinkers.  As farmers and soldiers in the Great War.  But what to do when the actual fighting stops and pressures bear down back home?  What to do when you can’t find the fight beyond the one for daily survival?  What to do with that patrimony.” 


217 Acoma story illustrates Indian’s fight to remain Indian and  “American on our terms”

231 On the disease of powerlessness that so many Indians fight “That disease is more potent than most people imagine: that feeling that we’ve lost, that we’ve always lost, that we’ve already lost–our land, our cultures, our communities, ourselves.  But it’s one we’ve managed to beat again and again–in our insistence on our own existence and our successful struggles to exist in our homelands on our own terms.”

244 New deal effects were positive for the Indians in step with rest of the country

246 Post WW2 great migration which brought turkey vulture to the rest of the US as they followed the new interstate system

252 Tribes in the early 20th century began to determine how to navigate and bring suit against the state and federal governments for broken treaties and lost lands but the Ho Chunk case was illustrative of its efficacy–the Court of Claims dismissed their case not because it lacked merit but because the land they lost was too great to place a value to determine a difference from their current reservation!

255 “Indian problem” was always a “federal government problem” 

263 On reservations as both a positive and negative place.  Positive in their function as a home base to promote a sense of community for Indian peoples–however, in the 40s and 50s the fed gov sought instead to terminate–beginning with Menominee of Wisconsin.

277-8 reality of termination: by 1960’s “clearly a catastrophe” with unemployment through the roof and half of Indians living in urban areas by 1970–a huge shift.  Most horrible: 1.37M acres taken out of trust status and 12K Indians losing tribal affiliations.  Later Nixon would say “this policy of forced termination is wrong…”

279 Positives of relocation: mixing of tribes inside cities removes intertribal “bigotry” and helped them to find the common ground they previously ignored.  Intertribe networks strengthened

287 Positives of termination: due to the mixing with other tribes when some returned to reservations, they started to understand themselves as Indians and not just their specific tribe. Previous to 1950, most would never use the term “Indian” to describe themselves

306 In 1972, the American Indian Movement (AIM) tookover the Bureau of Indian Affairs building in DC.  WHile it was highly publicized, it achieved little  but AIM for all its faults was showing that being an Indian was something for to be proud of.

339 “Let me tell you what separates man from beast.  Here it is: salt.”  Indian survivalist Bobby on salt’s necessity when trying to survive, otherwise everything tastes awful.  

364 Many Indians refer to B.C. = Before casinos (i.e., tribal gaming) because it had as profound an effect on Indian life as did the mass migration of Indians to the cities

378 Indian kind of living: “It’s not an American kind of work, but it is an Indian kind: a patchwork of opportunities that are exploited aggressively and together add up to a living.” 

380 On blood quantum: “has always been about ‘the stuff,’ and it has always been about exclusion.” The stuff being offices, annuities, casino profits etc.

401 Language, culture, and religion.  On language: “when a community is whole, language grows out of the web of relationships that make that community; it is a by-product of intergenerational togetherness.”  But many of the these communities lacked the wholeness, generational abuse fracturing them.  “Language has a special role as a carrier of culture.” Some Indian religions could not be separated from their language and couldn’t be practiced in English.  So without a language, there could be no soul, no ceremonies.

405 what we learn from Indians: author posits that the central questions posed and pondered by America’s founding fathers can be found in examining the country’s Indian communities which have always grappled with federal government overreach, individual rights vs. societal ones, how to grow and preserve the middle class etc.  

412 1992 Turning point.  By this point Indians had grown strong enough to resist–physically, politically, and academically.  Indians were harnessing technology, Western education, and wage labor and using them.  “Indians don’t waste what we kill: we use all the parts of the computer.”  p. 417 this was also an inward turn away from the USG and instead occupying “cultural, social, and political space” to 

415 Food–a history/culture.  Sean is an Oglala Lakota (the Sioux Chef)  who is a chef who is making”archival food” –that’s traced and mastered to its roots in Minneapolis through a non-profit that includes restaurants https://sioux-chef.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Eater-Vox-Sioux-Chef-Video-Short.mp4

416 “the story of “the Indian”--has been a story of loss: loss of land, loss of culture, loss of a way of life.  Yes, Indians remain…but inwardly we wonder: How much of our culture remains? “ Sean’s food answer that there is much that remains and only needs to be reached out and grabbed

450 Living and adapt as a central tenet of Indian identity (e.g., Black Elk’s latter years converting to Catholicism etc.

451 Point of the book: “Indians lived on, as more than ghosts, as more than the relics of a once happy people.  We lived on increasingly invested in and changed by–and in turn doing our best to change–the American character.”  Takes issue with Dee Brown’s book that he contends its telling robs the 150 victims of their humanity..they are a tragedy but not a person with dreams and lives…”the victims of Wounded Knee died twice–once at the end of a gun, and again at the end of a pen.”   




Thursday, January 12, 2023

Kruse's Key: Read "The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois" Because It Just May Be The Great American Novel

Acclaimed poet Honorée Fanonne Jeffers’ soaring 800-page debut (!) novel (Kirkus prize for fiction finalist) The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois can also be read as a history of the United States in Georgia.  Over the span of 200 years, she unearths the history of a fictional family beginning with the native American tribe originally living in Chicasetta (The Place-In-The-Middle-Of-The-Tall-Trees at the time).  From there we see the intersections, overlaps and violent collisions with the Europeans–later Americans–all bringing with them African slaves who lived in a constant state of tension, terror, and longing.

The people who lived in The-Place-in-the-Middle-of-the-Tall-Trees knew much about the Seminoles, because the Seminoles had once been a part of the Creek people before they had broken off to form their own nation. And the Seminoles gave sanctuary to Negroes, taking them into their villages. They mated with Negroes, too.

It's to Jeffers’ credit that she peels back the layers of this family’s history to its origins in both Africa and to the indigenous people living in North America.  She lays bare the roots of America’s founding:

For the original transgression of this land was not slavery. It was greed, and it could not be contained. More white men would come and begin to covet. And they would drag along the Africans they had enslaved. The white men would sow their misery among those who shook their chains. 

In graphic, painful detail the reader sees the “sowing” of successive generations in Chicasetta.  The culture of rape, assault, and abuse turns one stomach–I had to put down the book many times in disgust and horror.  While this is fiction, it’s clear that Jeffers  is drawing on the 15 years she spent researching original source archival documents for her 2020 Age of Phillis (longlisted for the National Book Award for Poetry).  Using the modern day descendent of these collisions in the person of Ailey Garfield, the author records her life from birth through her pursuit of a doctorate in history.  In the Age of Phillis, Jeffers examined and corrected the record of the life of Phillis Wheatley–an 18th century poet–the first African American woman to publish a book of poetry.  Previous to Jeffers’ book, all that was known of Wheatley’s life came from what a white woman (purported to be a relative of the woman who owned Wheatley) wrote 50 years after her death.  

Much as Jeffers labored in researching Phillis Wheatley’s life, so Ailey labors in uncovering her own family’s history.  Along the way, addiction, sexual abuse, and racism threaten to unmoor her but it is her parents and family that keep her tethered as she holds on to sacrament that is family.  The novel’s strengths rests in the masterful way that Jeffers tells a story not just about one family but also about a piece of land, and also about Africa, and also about America, and also about the African American struggle for freedom, and also about the civil rights movement, and also about what it means to be a black woman in America. 

Ever since 1868 when novelist John William DeForest coined the term the “Great American Novel”--there has been much debate over which novel should bear the moniker.  Critics and scholars argue about esteemed titles from To Kill a Mockingbird to American Psycho to The Great Gatsby to Moby Dick to The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn to The Invisible Man to Blood Meridian. There will always be debate about this because even the term “The Great American Novel” is impossible to define because it must not only capture the scope of America on the micro and macro level, it must also be personal but also removed, it must encompass both the greatest things about this country but also its cancers.  One would be hard pressed to deny that The Love Songs of W.E.B. Dubois does all of these things–it is a novel of but also’s–it refuses to tell only one story–it strives instead to tell every story.  And who better to have written the “The Great American Novel” than a poet?***  

Because what is America but poetry? 

Something sometimes metered

in perfect rhyming syllables,

leaping

other times and 

Frac

TURED

In tortured mispalld guttural gasps

But always sharp as a steeled knife

As able to slip into our ribs 

Sink into our hearts

As it is to shave aways the callouses of 

Of our differences.

Jeffer’s Ailey endures.  She persists–full of self doubt and accumulated blows–imperfect but buoyant–she strives to triumph.  

Ailey rises on the backs 

No–the wings of her ancestors who fought

across gritted striped generations

The matriarch arriving in chains from Africa for whom Jeffers writes:

She was owned, but her memories were not.

***I wrote this last paragraph on Love Songs as The Great American Novel BEFORE reading the Kirkus review on it

Looking for book ideas? Check out our 202320222021202020192018201720162015 and 2014 reading lists!

Related Reading:

My review of Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi.  

My review of Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates.  

My review of The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson.  

My review of Sing, Unburied Sing by Jesmyn Ward.

My review of Homeland Elegies by Ayad Ahktar

My review of Seasons of the Shadow by Leonara Miano.  This novel explores slavery’s collision with a village in Cameroon.

My Kindle Highlights for Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History

Violence and the Social Compact” by Ta-Nehisi Coates (Atlantic article)

The Lynching of Claude Neal.  PBS article is here.

Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood

The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native America from 1890 to Present

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee


Key quotes:

Location: 150

For the original transgression of this land was not slavery. It was greed, and it could not be contained. More white men would come and begin to covet. And they would drag along the Africans they had enslaved. The white men would sow their misery among those who shook their chains. These white men would whip and work and demean these Africans.

Location: 172

The people who lived in The-Place-in-the-Middle-of-the-Tall-Trees knew much about the Seminoles, because the Seminoles had once been a part of the Creek people before they had broken off to form their own nation. And the Seminoles gave sanctuary to Negroes, taking them into their villages. They mated with Negroes, too.

Location: 383

And then the treaties, the agreements between these intruders and the people, all of which would be broken, and the land that would be taken—and taken again. There was the Treaty of Savannah in 1733. The Treaty of Coweta in 1739. The Treaty of Augusta in 1763. Ten years later, a second treaty in that same place. The Treaty of New York in 1790, and the realization that our land would

Location: 396

The Treaty of Washington in 1805, and our land was no longer what the people called it. Now the white men called us “Georgia.”

Location: 987

Yet battle was different when it occurred on paper and in assaults on the mind. The white men—the Americans—wanted everything and did not respect the ways of the people.

Location: 1,987

The light-skinned woman was a signare, a woman of English and African blood who’d been given by her family as a wife to an Englishman for as long as he stayed in Africa. In this small district, this woman was the only one of her kind, but closer to the coast, there was an entire community of signares and their families. In-between women who were neither true wives nor concubines. They spoke two languages, Wolof and English, or sometimes, Mandinka and English, but were infidels who had left aside Allah and clung to the skinny Jesus that hung on a cross. Like their white fathers and husbands, the signares traded in slaves.

Location: 2,136

She was owned, but her memories were not.

Location: 3,523

To paraphrase the great poet Sterling A. Brown: ‘More Negroes have been ruined by Harvard than by bad gin.’ Only he didn’t say ‘Negroes,’ if you catch my drift.”

Location: 4,255

Before he allowed Geoff to take his great-niece on their northbound journey, Uncle Root gave him a copy of The Negro Motorist Green Book, so they could find diners, hotels, and boardinghouses that would serve them, once they traveled out of family territory.

Location: 4,577

Born in the City, her husband wasn’t familiar with the taste of healthy, green food you had picked only hours before. The sight of earth not taken over by concrete. That in darkness, if there was no trouble, the only sounds came from small beings. He didn’t know that you could ache for a place, even when it had hurt you so badly.

Location: 4,699

“Are the folks down home calling themselves something besides Negro?” “Like what, baby?” “Like, Black?” “Why they want to do something like that? That ain’t a nice thing to call nobody.”

Location: 7,336

How to explain what it was like to be Black to this white woman who wasn’t even southern? That a Black child didn’t have a right to hate their Black mama? Hatred was not allowed against your parents, no matter what had happened. You had to forgive your parents for whatever they had done even if they’d never apologized, because everybody had to stay together. So much had been lost already to Black folks.

Location: 8,737

Then there came warriors, such as Tecumseh of the Shawnee, a tribe in the north of the continent. And there were prophets, such as Tecumseh’s brother Tenskwatawa. Together these men were the Shooting Star and the Open Door, and they rode down to our land to unite our people of the south with our people of the north. Tecumseh held a weapon and Tenskwatawa held a dream, and the dreaming brother’s sights led him to tell the Creek, unite against the white man. 

And our people kept fighting each other, and an American murderer was able to win the Red Stick War. His name was Andrew Jackson and he and his soldiers murdered many hundreds of Creeks, so that his name would become a curse among our people. Indian Killer, he would be called, but somehow he would become a hero among white men. In a new century, statues of him would be built, and his face would be printed upon money.

Location: 8,751

And in time, Andrew Jackson the Indian Killer became the president of his white man’s nation. And in 1830, this murderer signed the Indian Removal Act, after which the Creek people’s hope turned to the mud after a heavy rain, for this law decreed that all Creek people were ordered to leave their homes permanently.

Location: 11,631 On post-reconstruction reality for “freed” slaves

They were frightened of being lynched, now that Black bodies no longer were worth valuable currency on the slave market. 


Monday, January 9, 2023

2023 Reading List

Looking for book ideas?  Check out our 202420222021202020192018201720162015 and 2014  reading lists!

The Overstory (Audible).  My full review is here.

The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois. My full review is here.

The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native American from 1890 to Present. My "poetic review" is here. My notes and quotes are here.

The Murder Rule (Audible).  Great beach read! In early 2022, I took a screenshot of a tweet from crime writer extraordinaire Don Winslow where he recommended this book. I forgot about about it until a year later and promptly downloaded the book to my Libby app.  4 days later I'd finished it--wow-Aussie author Dervla McTiernan can write.  Full of twists and turns and courtroom drama, the reader goes behind the scenes of the Innocence project to find out if the prisoner in question is truly innocent, or if anyone really is. 

Uncertain Ground: Citizenship in an Age of Endless, Invisible War (Libby, Listened.).  Such a great collection of essays.  My review is here.

Afterlives.  Superb writing that traces the lives of three characters against the background of Tanzanian independence.  My full review is here.  

The Passenger.  Don't read Cormac McCarthy's entirely skippable book...180 pages of my life that I will never get back.  My review is here.

City on Fire (Libby, Listened). Master crime writer Don Winslow pens a fast-paced mafia thriller set in Providence, Rhode Island.  The narrative focuses on Danny Ryan and his struggle to find a place between long-warring Italian and Irish families.  I first read Winslow in his SoCal cartel thriller Savages back in 2010 and have followed his work ever since. City of Fire delivers as a classic crime tale--the best part is that its the first of a trilogy!

Khalil (Libby, Listened)  This 2021 novel takes the reader into the mind of a Moroccan/Belgian suicide bomber with his sight set on Paris. Notably, it's author is a former Algerian Army officer living in exile in France who publishes under the pen name Yasmina Khadra (his wife's first two names).  Even more notable, the French Academy awarded him its Henri Gal Grand Prize for Literature in 2011. All that to say, the story is as nuanced as one would expect from such a gifted author.  Khadra delves into the central chracter Khalil's mind as he unveils the history, influences, and methods that turned a young man into a suicide bomber.  Equal parts terrifying and stupefying, the author declines to offer any easy answers but instead paints a complex picture of the immigrant experience and the roots of modern day terrorism.  *Khadra also wrote one of my favorite novels: What the Day Owes the Night which I reviewed at Beyond Achebe.  

Dispatches From a Cowgirl: Through the Looking Glass With a Navy Diplomat's Wife.   Author Julie Tully pulls back the curtain on what it's like to be the wife of diplomat living in Africa.  With so much written about diplomats, attaches, and ambassadors, Tully fills an important void in telling the story of the vital women/spouses that form the foundation of life overseas.  As she takes the reader on the journey of their lives in Nigeria, Cameroon, and Djibouti, it becomes clear just how pivotal her role was to her husband's success. Indeed, the author regales the readers with story after story of her and her husband's lockstep coordination as they developed plans to host dinners and events--it's readily apparent that the attache life is a team sport.  The only area that I wished she'd fleshed out more were her efforts to enshrine the memory of Pilot Officer Maguire, the only American born military buried in Djibouti--I'd hoped for another chapter on that.  Overall, I can't imagine a more important book for any couple to read before heading to an overseas embassy assignment, particularly one with representational duties.  It will ensure they arrive clear-eyed as  to the rmyriad responsibilities and exciting opportunities of life overseas.

The Last PolicemanWinner of the Mystery Writers of America Edgars Award (Libby) for best paperback original in 2013, the novel tells the story of a world facing pending destruction at the hand of a monster meteor.  No one yet knows where on earth it will hit but already it's upended every societal norm.  Among the changes is a huge spike in suicides--they've become so commonplace they are only nominally investigated and processed.  One day, however, Detectice Henry Palace encounters a man hung in the McDonald's bathroom that doesn't sit right with him. Author Ben Winters creates an interesting story that makes for a good beach read (or in my case, a way to break up the Napoli afternoon commute).  

The Midnight Library (Libby, Listened).   A quantum physics take on It's a Wonderful Life.  Engrossing read that will have you second guessing every significant choice you've made in your own life.  In this novel's case, its protagonist has a chance to re-explore different branches and choices that she didn't make.  Ultimately, the authors forces the readers to question their assumptions about determinism and urges each of us to embrace Socrates' directive to seek to "know thyself."

Falling: A Novel (Libby, Listened). Came across this novel via author Don Winslow's twitter feed.  This is a decent beach read thriller that takes the reader onto a plane that comes under an unconventional terrorist attack.  Frankly, I wasn't sure that the author could write an entire book over such a small slice of time but she does an admirable job of stretch out that space through the thoughts of the various characters.

Romantic Comedy: A Novel (Libby).  Superb beach read.  I first read Sittenfield back in 2006 and she struck me with her ability to create the an encompassing and utterly believable boarding school atmosphere.  A product of Woodberry Forest myself (albeit an all-boys school) I could attest to her mastery.  In Romantic Comedy her research is evident as she tackles the world of late night television (a la SNL) and comedy writing.  Through sketch writer Sally's viewpoint, the reader quickly gets the feeling of a clubby insider--privy to the inner machinations of a unique sub-strata of the Hollywood world.  Romantic Comedy is just what its title describes, and each page is a pleasure as Sittenfield pens perhaps the first great post-COVID COVID novel--one that is unflinching in addressing gender-power dynamics but at the same time tender in its description of all the wonderful and awful ways falling in love feels.

The Violin Conspiracy: A Novel (Libby, Listened). I came across this novel through Anne Bagel's Podcast "What Should I Read Next?" In it she spoke with musician Brendan Slocumb as he described writing his first novel, a tale equal parts mystery and commentary on racism in America.  While this debut novel may have some minor pacing and diction issues, don't let that dissuade you from this deep thrilling deep dive into the classical music world.  As an outsider, it was eye-opening to see and experience the the life of a classical musicians, particularly a black one who is not hesitant to share the myriad racist setbacks and attacks he endures (during the podcast he noted that he based all of the racism from the novel on personal experiences).

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (Libby, Listened)  Loved this book! So many layers to this book: video game design, love triangles, disability, friendship, companionship--the author's ability to weave so many major life themes into one arc gives it strong Gen Z great american novel vibes.

Paradise.  

Into Thin Air. Tough, jaw-dropping read.  My son got me this as a birthday present and I tore through it in a few short days.

City of Dreams (Libby, listened). The second book in noire crime writer extraordinaire's "Danny Ryan" series, this one builds on the first books.