A Few Good Books

On our blog, we talk about our favourite books and authors, old and new, books that stayed with us long after we were done reading, the ones we might gently press into the hands of other readers. 

Book Recommendation: Second Nature by Michael Pollan

Book Recommendation: Second Nature by Michael Pollan

Sapna Sudhakar

This is one of Michael Pollan’s earliest books, written more than thirty years ago. By his own account, he’s always been a keen gardener, and though this is the only book that he’s written about gardening, it is (as tends to be the case with most of his writing) one of the best books about gardening you could possibly read...

Favourite Reads: All the Beauty in the World

Favourite Reads: All the Beauty in the World

Shilpa Sudhakar

This is a memoir that recounts the ten years that the author spent as a museum guard at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. It's a book about the museum and all the wonderful treasures that it holds, while also being a reflection on the importance of sometimes slowing down and taking a beat to look around us....

Favourite Reads: 84 Charing Cross Road

Favourite Reads: 84 Charing Cross Road

Sapna Sudhakar

This is a book about books, and about the best there is of this genre. It's a collection of letters written over a period of twenty years...a correspondence between a reader and a bookseller. The reader is Helene Hanff, a freelance writer living in New York City, and the bookseller is Frank Doel, who worked for Marks & Co, a second-hand bookshop located at 84 Charing Cross Road, London...

Book Recommendation: Superbloom by Nicholas Carr

Book Recommendation: Superbloom by Nicholas Carr

Sapna Sudhakar

Nicholas Carr has been writing about technology and the effect it has on us for more than a decade. In this book he traces the development of communication technologies right from the letters that people began writing to each other millennia ago, to the development of printing and newspapers, to the telegraph and telephone, to mass media like radio and TV, all the way to the internet and social media...

Book Recommendation: The Diary of a Bookseller

Book Recommendation: The Diary of a Bookseller

Sapna Sudhakar

This book, as it says in the title, is a diary, a day-to-day record of one year in a bookshop written by the owner Shaun Bythell who runs a second-hand bookshop in Wigtown which is Scotland’s book town. His shop is called, very simply, The Bookshop...

Favourite Reads: The Swerve by Stephen Greenblatt

Favourite Reads: The Swerve by Stephen Greenblatt

Sapna Sudhakar

The Swerve is a book about a book, On the Nature of Things by Lucretius, a work of philosophy that attempts to explain the nature of the world that we live in, and tries to lay out what it is that makes for a good human life. This was a work that was well known in Ancient Greece, but was since lost. It was rediscovered six hundred years ago, at a time when most of the wisdom and knowledge of the ancient word had been lost....and it became one of the many forces that inspired the renaissance...

Writers in Profile: David Sedaris

Writers in Profile: David Sedaris

Sapna Sudhakar

David Sedaris is one of my favourite writers. He has the rare ability to write comedy and pathos with equal skill. His writing is autobiographical and deeply personal. He writes about his family, his complicated and somewhat difficult relationship with his father, his middle-class upbringing in the American South, growing up gay in the seventies, his partner, Hugh and their life together, the years he spent living as an expat in France and England, and more...

Book Recommendation: Alone by Daniel Schreiber

Book Recommendation: Alone by Daniel Schreiber

Sapna Sudhakar

This is a memoir, a meditation on life for a single person in a couple-dominated world, the generally accepted but questionable notion that having a spouse and kids is the only path to happiness, the role of friendship, the necessity of solitude, and the importance of building a true acquaintance with oneself...

Book Recommendation: Did Ye Hear Mammy Died?

Book Recommendation: Did Ye Hear Mammy Died?

Shilpa Sudhakar

In this poignant and hilarious memoir, the author recalls his childhood in Northern Ireland after the death of his mother when he was just five years old. Raised by his beloved but often overwhelmed father alongside his ten siblings (divided into three classes - the Big Ones, the Middle Ones, and the Wee Ones ), O'Reilly, one of the Wee Ones, paints a vivid picture of growing up in a large, grief-stricken, eccentric, and fiercely loving family during the tail end of the Troubles...

Book Recommendation: Ben & Me by Eric Weiner

Book Recommendation: Ben & Me by Eric Weiner

Sapna Sudhakar

This is a book about Ben Franklin. It’s a biography, but the writer focuses not just on what Franklin said and did in his life, but on what he thought about life, and how it should be lived, so it is philosophy as well. What makes it even better is that Eric Weiner doesn’t just write about Franklin, he engages with his ideas and tries to apply them to his own life...

Book Recommendation: How to be idle by Tom Hodgkinson

Book Recommendation: How to be idle by Tom Hodgkinson

Sapna Sudhakar

This is a remarkable and very necessary book that is not so much about idleness as it is a call to examine our lives and our choices, and to do a better job of living than we currently do. Hodgkinson’s definition of idleness is not that we sit around and do nothing, but that we build enough down-time into our lives that we can make the time to think, to read, to reflect, to appreciate art, and to engage in rewarding and hands-on activities like cooking, gardening, engaging with the natural world, and having good times with friends and family, doing things that truly bring us joy...

Book Recommendation: Good Days by Michael Rosen

Book Recommendation: Good Days by Michael Rosen

Sapna Sudhakar

This book is many things, it is philosophy, memoir, general life advice and musings on a life well lived. It’s unusual in its structure in that it is not a straight-line narrative in which ideas build on each other. Rosen does not have a theory of happiness or a five-step plan to a happier life. While the word is in the title, he doesn't really talk about happiness in the narrative. He's thinking less in terms of how to be happy and more in terms of what we can do to have a good day.