Home WebMail Saturday, November 2, 2024, 06:34 AM | Calgary | -2.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Posted: 2017-06-02T19:49:45Z | Updated: 2017-06-02T20:28:56Z 10 Buzzworthy Books From Memoirists And Essayists | HuffPost

10 Buzzworthy Books From Memoirists And Essayists

10 Buzzworthy Books from Memoirists and Essayists
|
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

Originally published on Kirkus . For more from Kirkus, click here .

Open Image Modal

You Dont Have to Say You Love Me: A Memoir by Sherman Alexie

Despite some repetition, this is a powerful, brutally honest memoir about a mother and the son who loved her. The story of the popular Native American authors difficult upbringing. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

Theft by Finding: Diaries (1977-2002) by David Sedaris

A surprisingly poignant portrait of the artist as a young to middle-aged man. Raw glimpses of the humorists personal life as he clambered from starving artist to household name. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

Memorys Last Breath: Field Notes on My Dementia by Gerda Saunders

A courageous, richly textured, and unsparing memoir. A former gender studies professors memoir about living and remembering her life in the face of dementia. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

Guidebook to Relative Strangers: Journeys into Race, Motherhood, and History by Camille T. Dungy

Forthright, entertaining, often potent essays that successfully intertwine personal history and historical context regarding black and white in America. A poet explores her experiences as a mother, teacher, black woman, and conscientious outsider. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

We Are Never Meeting in Real Life.: Essays by Samantha Irby

Personal embarrassment provides plenty of material for in-print or online entertainment. A blogger (Bitches Gotta Eat) has to laugh to keep from cryingor maybe killing somebodyin this collection of essays from the black, full-figured female perspective. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

To the New Owners: A Memoir of Martha's Vineyard by Madeleine Blais

If not quite as funny as billed, there remains much gentle humor and a certain elegiac sweetness that more than compensatesthat, and a touching coda. A Pulitzer Prizewinning journalist and author gives a familial face to the mystique of Martha's Vineyard in this unfailingly charming reminiscence of summers spent on the island. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

Ruthless River: Love and Survival by Raft on the Amazon's Relentless Madre de Dios by Holly Conklin FitzGerald

FitzGerald overcomes her book's few flaws to produce an absorbing tale of survival, love, and the generosity of people who helped save their lives. The account of a transformational South American odyssey that tested the author and her husband to the limit. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

Watching Porn: And Other Confessions from an Adult Entertainment Journalist by Lynsey G.

An intelligent, provocative, and indulgent insiders view of the contemporary porn industry. An accidental porn journalist reflects on her role mining the sex and politics of the adult film industry. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

Shark Drunk: The Art of Catching a Large Shark from a Tiny Rubber Dinghy in a Big Ocean by Morten Strksnes, translated by Tiina Nunnally

Whether the author is opining on mass extinctions, the importance of plankton, the history of lighthouses, or the epicurean treat of boiled cod tongues, readers will happily devour this smorgasbord of delights. Accomplished Norwegian historian, journalist, and photographer Strksnes invites readers into the fantastical ocean environment of his quest to capture a Greenland shark. Read full book review .

Open Image Modal

All the Agents and Saints: Dispatches From the U.S. Borderlands by Stephanie Elizondo Griest

In this well-conceived book, the author demonstrates unforgettably that national borders constitute much more than lines on a map. An exploration of the borderlands that deftly mixes memoir, groundbreaking sociology, deep reporting, and compelling writing. Read full book review .

Your Support Has Never Been More Critical

Other news outlets have retreated behind paywalls. At HuffPost, we believe journalism should be free for everyone.

Would you help us provide essential information to our readers during this critical time? We can't do it without you.

Support HuffPost