Erin Hatton, Coerced: Work Under Threat of Punishment. This book is thinking quite intensely about the points of commonality among kinds of coerced work in the US, particularly imprisoned labor, "workfare" programs, and the graduate student and student athlete labor associated with the American university. Hatton is being very careful about the ways in which these types of labor are dissimilar as well as similar, and there are lots of interesting thoughts on how this impacts the labor, the laborers, and the larger labor pool in which we exist.
Andrew Hiller, Hornytown Chutzpah. Discussed elsewhere.
Mark Hudson, Bronze Age Maritime and Warrior Dynamics in Island East Asia. Kindle. A brief monograph that, among other things, goes into some detail about considering what meaning the "Bronze Age" has beyond the geographic region where it originated. Revising thoughts about trade and tool use based on new information about this era is pretty cool, the idea that the future is not arriving linearly anywhere is usefully exemplified here.
Tove Jansson, Moominpappa at Sea and Moominvalley in November. Kindle. Rereads. The latter is an ongoing favorite I've read many times and find delightful; the former is my least favorite Moomin book, and there's a reason I haven't reread it since I was about 8. Basically it's Moominpappa Explores Mildly Toxic Masculinity. He pouts whenever he doesn't feel other people are centering and deferring to him enough; he stomps around making other people clear up after his messes; he is just generally an extremely unpleasant version of his previous self, and I hope I remember not to go back to this one again soon. Especially when November is always there. And the others.
Shay Kauwe, The Killing Spell. This is an own-voices post-climate-apocalypse fantasy whose use of languages is, I think, much closer to what many of my friends wanted in Rebecca Kuang's Babel. Its character is part of a complex family and community whose relationships with each other did not ever get oversimplified. I really enjoyed it and hope it gets attention, because frankly I don't think the title and cover are doing it any favors.
Patrick Radden Keefe, London Falling: A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family's Search for Truth. I sure hope that Keefe has a good therapist and personal life, because he so consistently writes about such awful people. And one of the things that makes him very good at what he does is that he doesn't get drawn into the "glamor" of horrible rich people. But oof. Criminals and Russian oligarchs in contemporary London, terrifying but interesting and well done.
Ada Limon, Against Breaking: On the Power of Poetry. This is a single essay in a beautifully published edition. It was published as a book because this is a former poet laureate, not because it in any way counts as an entire book. It's a reasonable enough essay but I'm glad the library had it because it would have disappointed me to spend money on it only to find the number of blank/ornamental pages.
E.C.R. Lorac, Death of an Author, Fell Murder, Post After Post-Mortem, and These Names Make Clues. Kindle. Lorac continues to write quite good Golden Age puzzle mysteries. The one I thought succeeded least here was the last of them. When your pen name is openly known to be an acronym (this is an author who is secretly a lady named Carol!!!), and then you title the book These Names Make Clues...having the names literally as clues is not a good mysterious mystery premise.
Sujata Massey, The Star from Calcutta. The latest in this series, and I think it's flagging a little but still worth having. This time it's gone into early filmmaking in India for its setting, which is fun and interesting.
Jo Miles, The Final Chronicle of Yeneh. Discussed elsewhere.
Andrew Moore, Pawpaw: In Search of America's Forgotten Fruit. A really cool exploration of this fruit throughout its range in the US, which does not include where I am, so it's interesting but from one step over. Definitely worth reading if you have an interest in how produce gets bred and marketed and/or local fruits, definitely of interest.
Viet Thanh Nguyen, To Save and to Destroy: Writing as an Other. Frankly much more useful in terms of interesting and provocative/inspiring essay writing about creative work. Lots of writers should read this and think about it.
D.T. Niane, Sundiata: An Epic of Old Mali. Kindle. I continue my slow-motion comparison of epics from different parts of the world. This one was somewhat defensive about its tradition--but a lot of writing down of oral epics does come out that way.
Emmet A. O'Brien, Both Your Houses and Ever Vexed With Storms. Discussed (both books, separately) elsewhere.
Nnedi Okorafor, The Daughter Who Remains. Kindle. Coming full circle in this series, and for heaven's sake don't start here; you'll know if you've read the rest of the series and want this conclusion, and if you do I think it'll be satisfying.
Linda Proud, Pallas and the Centaur. Kindle. No actual centaurs were harmed in this Renaissance Italy fantasy novel. It's the second in its series and worth reading the first if you think you might be interested; artists and powerful families and religious figures abound. It's non-fantastical except for a divine possession that might be literal or might be a really intense metaphor. I like this kind of big historical novel and would like to find more.
Rebecca Roanhorse, River of Bones and Other Stories. Oh gosh am I glad this exists. Several favorite things and also some new-to-me things, hurrah for having them collected, hurrah.
Rebecca Solnit, No Straight Road Takes You There. This is a reasonable collection but not one of her absolute barnstormers. If you like her essays previously, you'll probably like this; if not, probably try another thing first to find out.
Kory Stamper, True Color: The Strange and Spectacular Quest to Define Color--From Azure to Zinc Pink. I thought this was going to be about colors, pigments, and dyes, and it is not, it is about the Merriam-Webster 3rd edition dictionary and the people who figured out how to define colors in words to their particular standards. Stamper is a vivid prose stylist, and this was interesting and not terribly long.
D.E. Stevenson, The Two Mrs. Abbotts and The Four Graces. Kindle. These two are marked third and fourth in a series, but I would call them third and vaguely-related. They're both light middlebrow midcentury novels, and I enjoyed both, but only one is really stand-alone.
Molly Tanzer, And Side By Side They Wander. Molly's deep knowledge and love of art history really shines through in this novella, and she sets up her characters to ring changes on her theme very skillfully. It's one of the many novella cases where I wanted more room for them to do so, but I don't read the ending as very open to a sequel? I could be wrong. It's marketed as a heist and then the focus is very much elsewhere, which was fine with me, but if what you're looking for today is center-of-genre heist fiction, maybe read something else and come back to this a different day.
Jessie L. Weston, trans., Guingamor, Lanval, Tyolet, Bisclaveret: Four lais rendered into English Prose. Kindle. Weston did a bunch of translations of Arthuriana and similar eras of heroic poetry, and this volume is four Breton examples. If you're interested in more examples of that, here are some. If you're not, I wouldn't recommend them as the place to start or as particularly good exemplars.