Our Holiday Gift Guides are here to help you find the perfect page-turner for every bookworm on your list this year!
This year’s nonfiction, journalism, and essays are a roundup of everything that made 2023 such a damned odd year, in a decade that’s already set a precedent for… damned odd years. This year, writers told the stories of pubescent billionaires, the domain of the Florida Man, and the rise and fall of Marvel Studios. Yet this was also a year for taking emotional stock of the roller coaster ride we’ve all been on, with Ross Gay, Carl Safina, and others offering glimpses of beauty, courage, and simple, grounded realness to balance out all the insanity.
Eve : How the Female Body Drove 200 Million Years of Human Evolution
Cat Bohannon
Knopf
How did the female body drive 200 million years of human evolution? Why do women live longer than men? Why are women more likely to get Alzheimer’s? Why do girls score better at every academic subject than boys until puberty, when suddenly their scores plummet? Is sexism useful for evolution? And why, seriously why, do women have to sweat through our sheets every night when we hit menopause? These questions are producing some truly exciting science – and in Eve, with boundless curiosity and sharp wit, Cat Bohannon covers the past 200 million years to explain the specific science behind the development of the female sex: “We need a kind of user’s manual for the female mammal. A no-nonsense, hard-hitting, seriously researched (but readable) account of what we are. How female bodies evolved, how they work, what it really means to biologically be a woman. Something that would rewrite the story of womanhood. This book is that story. We have to put the female body in the picture. If we don’t, it’s not just feminism that’s compromised. Modern medicine, neurobiology, paleoanthropology, even evolutionary biology all take a hit when we ignore the fact that half of us have breasts. So it’s time we talk about breasts. Breasts, and blood, and fat, and vaginas, and wombs—all of it. How they came to be and how we live with them now, no matter how weird or hilarious the truth is.” Eve is not only a sweeping revision of human history, it’s an urgent and necessary corrective for a world that has focused primarily on the male body for far too long. Picking up where Sapiens left off, Eve will completely change what you think you know about evolution and why Homo sapiens has become such a successful and dominant species.
Material World
Ed Conway
Knopf
The fiber-optic cables that weave the World Wide Web, the copper veins of our electric grids, the silicon chips and lithium batteries that power our phones and cars: though it can feel like we now live in a weightless world of information—what Ed Conway calls “the ethereal world”—our twenty-first-century lives are still very much rooted in the material. In fact, we dug more stuff out of the earth in 2017 than in all of human history before 1950. For every ton of fossil fuels, we extract six tons of other materials, from sand to stone to wood to metal. And in Material World, Conway embarks on an epic journey across continents, cultures, and epochs to reveal the underpinnings of modern life on Earth—traveling from the sweltering depths of the deepest mine in Europe to spotless silicon chip factories in Taiwan to the eerie green pools where lithium originates. Material World is a celebration of the humans and the human networks, the miraculous processes and the little-known companies, that combine to turn raw materials into things of wonder. This is the story of human civilization from an entirely new perspective: the ground up.
Art Monsters: Unruly Bodies in Feminist Art
Lauren Elkin
Farrar, Straus, and Giroux
Coming across the term “art monster” in Jenny Offill’s 2014 novel Dept. of Speculation, Lauren Elkin was intrigued. What kinds of connections might there be between art and monstrosity, and how was it different when the artist in question was a woman? Art Monsters is a landmark feminist intervention in the way we think about women’s stories and bodies, calling attention to a radical genealogy of feminist art that not only reacts against patriarchy but redefines its own aesthetic aims. Exploring a rich lineage of visual artists, thinkers, and writers, Elkin examines the ways feminists have confronted the problem of how to tell the truth of their experiences as bodies. Queer bodies, sick bodies, racially minoritized bodies, female bodies: What are the languages of the body, and what are the materials we need to transcribe them? Above all, how can we use the notion of the feminist “art monster” to shape how we live our lives? Writing in the tradition of Susan Sontag and Maggie Nelson, Elkin demonstrates her power as a cultural critic in this erudite and engaging book. From Kara Walker’s silhouettes to Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s trilingual masterpiece Dictee, Art Monsters daringly weaves links between disparate artists and writers, and shows that their work offers a potent defense of beauty and excess, sentiment and touch, ambiguity and opacity.
The Book of (Even) More Delights: Essays
Ross Gay
Algonquin
Opinions: A Decade of Arguments, Criticism, and Minding Other People’s Business
Roxane Gay
Harper
Going Infinite: The Rise and Fall of a New Tycoon
Michael Lewis
W. W. Norton & Company
Critical Hits: Writers Playing Video Games
Carmen Maria Machado, J. Robert Lennon
Graywolf Press
Of Time and Turtles: Mending the World, Shell by Shattered Shell
Sy Montgomery, Matt Patterson
Mariner Books
Tne Birds That Changed The World
Stephen Moss
Basic Books
The Lost Tomb: and Other Real-Life Stories of Bones, Burials, and Murder
Douglas Preston
Grand Central Publishing
Gator Country : Deception, Danger, and Alligators in the Everglades
Rebecca Renner
Flatiron Books
MCU: The Reign of Marvel Studios
Joanna Robinson, Dave Gonzales, Gavin Edwards
Liveright
Eat, Poop, Die: How Animals Make Our World
Joe Roman
Little, Brown Spark
Alfie & Me: What Owls Know, What Humans Believe
Carl Safina
W. W. Norton & Company
A City On Mars: Can We Settle Space, Should We Settle Space, and Have We Thought This Through?
Kelly Weinersmith, Zach Weinersmith
Penguin Press
Most Delicious Poison
Noah Whiteman
Little, Brown Spark