5 books that inspired Elamin Abdelmahmoud, host of CBC Radio's new daily arts & culture show Commotion | CBC Books - Action News
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5 books that inspired Elamin Abdelmahmoud, host of CBC Radio's new daily arts & culture show Commotion

The host of CBC Radio's new arts and culture show spoke with CBC Books about the nonfiction works that left a lasting impression on him.
A man with short hair standing in front of a yellow wall wearing a maroon hoodie.
Elamin Abdelmahmoud is the host of CBC Radios daily arts, pop culture and entertainment show Commotion, and a writer-at-large for BuzzFeed News. (CBC)

Elamin Abdelmahmoudis a culture writer and author who is adding another line to his resume: CBC Radio host.Abdelmahmoudis the host of the new CBC Radio show Commotion, a daily 30-minute show that looks at the arts, pop culture and entertainment stories making headlines.

"I find that conversations about art and pop culture bring people closer to each other," Abdelmahmoudsaid in a press release announcingCommotion. "Talking about a new show that you're excited about, or a big culture idea you're seeing everywhere lately, that's the connective tissue between all of us. On Commotion, what you get every single day is a crowded table of insightful and hilarious people talking about something that moves them and lights them up."

Abdelmahmoudwas raised inKingston, Ont., and now lives in Toronto. He was thehost of CBC's pop culture podcastPop Chatand the founding co-host of the CBC Politics podcastParty Lines. He is a writer-at-large for Buzzfeed and is also the author of the memoirSon of Elsewhere.

Son of Elsewhere, which came out in 2022, is a collection of essays that touches on everything from his family's journey from Sudan to Canada, his Black and Muslim identity, being raised on pop culture and how all those things intersect.

In 2022,Abdelmahmoudshared five nonfiction books that have inspired him with CBC Books.

A Field Guide to Getting Lostby Rebecca Solnit

A Field Guide to Getting Lost is an essay collection by American writer Rebecca Solnit. (Penguin Random House, Trent Davis Bailey)

"I think she's one of the most important writers working today. Without this book, I'm not sure I'd be writing. It's so compelling in themebut also in structure. She deals so much with different ideas of loss whether it's personal loss;whether it's a good way of getting lost in something;or a bad way, like losing oneself. But she shows such deep versatility because it's part art criticism, part memoir, part history, part sociology it bends and blends so many genres into one.

There's nothing like the freedom that a book like that offers, because it sort of opens different doors for you.

"And it is an incredibly free book. It's the kind of book that you read and go, 'I didn't know you could do that I guess you can.' There's nothing like the freedom that a book like that offers, because it sort of opens different doors for you."

They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Usby Hanif Abdurraqib

They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us is a 2017 collection of essays from American poet and cultural critic Hanif Abdurraqib. (Andrew Cenci, Two Dollar Radio)

"The way that this is deeply considered is truly extraordinary. It's the kind of thing that really inspires me to go, 'I really need to spend some time to develop my craft,' because I think he'd be someone who has spent a long time doing that.

"The way the music criticism gives way to bigger social commentary is just masterful."

Known and Strange Thingsby Teju Cole

Known and Strange Things is a 2016 essay collection by Nigerian American writer Teju Cole. (Random House, Stephanie Mitchell)

"I spend a lot of time reading nonfiction. Known and Strange Things is a book that is so beautiful in its prose in a way that is so vivid that you want to spend more and more time with it.

"For me, his work has been a template of what you could do with the essay format, because he's done so many different things with it whether in The New Yorker, the New York Times, or in book form. I came to Teju first as a novelist, but then discovered his essay stuff that I have been completely drawn to."

Changing My Mindby Zadie Smith

A white book cover with scripted blue text.
Changing My Mind is a 2010 collection of essays by British writer Zadie Smith. (Penguin Random House, Dominique Nabokov)

"I remember being hooked on this essay collection. I just love that the whole book is a collection of moments where she's changed her mind about something, and I love that idea for a frame. That's a really brave thing to do to lay out all the ways you were wrong.

The whole book is a collection of moments where she's changed her mind about something, and I love that idea for a frame.

"Seeing her struggle and wrestle with it is really rewarding. There's something about the inelegance of working through all of those ideas."

The Sweet Scienceby A.J. Liebling

The Sweet Science is a collection of American writer A.J. Liebling's New Yorker pieces about boxing. (Farrar, Straus And Giroux, Library of America)

"Former New Yorker writer A.J. Liebling covered a lot of culture in general, but he also covered boxing a lot. Maybe four or five years ago, one of my former colleagues recommended this book. I don't care about boxing at all. But this dude writes about boxing like Renaissance poets write about daffodils.

A.J. Lieblingwrites about boxing like Renaissance poets write about daffodils.

"I'm working my way through the deeply lyrical, intense ways that he writes about boxing.

"Every once in a while I'll read a page and think, 'If I could write just one phrase like this, today's been a good day.'"

Elamin Abdelmahmoud's comments have been edited for length and clarity.

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