On with Kara Swisher - The Best (and Worst) Books of 2024
Episode Date: December 23, 2024Which subpar books actually warrant writing a bad review? Do best sellers usually live up to the hype? And how does our relationship with technology affect the publishing industry? Kara sits down with... two of her favorite book critics, Dwight Garner of The New York Times and Becca Rothfeld of The Washington Post, to discuss the best and worst books of 2024. The trio debates standout books and notable disappointments, the craft of book reviewing, and the best way to experience a great book. They also explore the importance of best-seller lists, how concerned we should be over the rising tide of book censorship, and which books from 2024 could end up becoming forever classics. Questions? Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on Instagram and TikTok @onwithkaraswisher Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
My staff was like, books?
No, no, they love books.
No, they love books.
I'm teasing.
But I get to do whatever I want, so it's great.
It's on.
Hi, everyone, from New York Magazine and the Vox Media
Podcast Network.
This is On with Kara Swisher, and I'm Kara Swisher.
This is the last episode of the year, and we know that everyone is running out of
time in their holiday shopping list. You might expect me to come out with a tech
wish list, but I'm going analog this year, books. I used to read a ton when I was
younger and then I stopped because I got onto the internet and I've been, you know,
it's the black hole of information and so you're always going to the next thing.
But I have started reading books in book form, although I do read on my screen a lot too.
I'm not one of those people who likes, is against either way.
I also listen to a lot of books.
It depends on the author.
I'm right now listening to Rachel Maddow's prequel, for example.
I'm reading Daniel Mason's books.
I love Northwoods and now I'm going down the
Daniel Mason rabbit hole. And so I think it's really important to think and talk about books.
And of course, they've been in the news a lot because of book bannings and about whether how
the book industry is doing actually surprisingly better than people thought it would. So we'll see
about that. But I thought it was important to bring in two of my favorite critics besides my wife, Amanda, Becca Rothfeld from the Washington
Post, brilliant, brilliant, brilliant reviewer, and Dwight Garner, equally brilliant from
the New York Times. They're great writers in their own right. Dwight is the author of
The Upstairs Delicatessen on eating, reading, reading about eating and eating while reading
What's Not to Like, which came out in 2023.
Becca's debut book All Things Are Two Small Essays in Praise of Excess was published early
this year.
This is my book I'm going to read over the holidays.
So I'm excited to talk about the good and the bad and the ugly with them and a little
bit about how the publishing industry is doing.
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It is on.
Dwight and Becca, thanks for being on On.
Thanks for having us.
Thank you.
We're going to talk about this thing called books.
You heard of them?
I don't know.
Most of the population has not.
I know, exactly.
I think it's the best technology ever.
Not just analog books, but books in general.
Think of two technologies I think work really well.
The egg.
The egg is a perfect vehicle for delivery of egg.
And the book, it's a technology and people don't think of it that way, but I do.
Actually, I want to start, how do you guys read now?
I do read on my phone.
I read everything on my iPhone.
I'm just curious just to get the tech stuff out of the way.
Dwight, why don't you go first?
Yeah, you know, I read a lot on my phone. I read all my magazines there and newspapers
and book review sections and social media where I find a lot of this stuff. But when
it comes to books, I read print. I think the reasons why that I'm a big marker upper and
I love to underline things and write notes to myself and you know, you're in high school,
you write symbolism in the corner. Well, I don't write that anymore, but I make notes of things that I love, you know, and then I go
back through my books and I write some of the stuff that I love down in a commonplace book that I keep.
But that's another topic. I will note right behind both Dwight and Becca are huge amounts of books.
Me, it's just a view of my apartment. Becca, what about you? How do you read? I mean, I try my
hardest to read as little on screens as possible
because I find it just changes the quality of my attention.
I never read a book on a screen.
Like, I tried to bring a Kindle with me when I was hiking the Tour de Mont Blanc
because it's like a 10-day hike and I just couldn't do it.
So I had to haul books around with me.
Magazines, I do subscribe and I try to read things and print when I can,
but I read sometimes on my computer, generally.
My phone screen is a little small for me.
And why do you do that?
What is it take your, you suddenly go over to,
I don't know, threads or blue sky or what?
What does it do to your attention span?
Is it just ruined it?
Well, I'm also a big annotator of books.
And so I find that the kind of physical action
of writing or underlining helps me remember things better.
But also I think that when I'm on a screen, the knowledge that there could
always be some kind of interruption or that I always could go off and
do something else makes it impossible.
It's irresistible.
Yeah, it's irresistible kind of thing to see, especially with news.
News is the addiction machine with that.
But we're taping this on December 12th, and our listeners are here on December
23rd, which means they might be on their way to the bookstore for last minute holidays.
They might be buying it elsewhere, or audible, or listening.
As book reviewers, do you still give books as presents during the holidays?
And I'd love to know what each of you are gifting right now, if you pick one book.
I've given up trying to give books as presents, only because people know I get them for free. Oh, right. It doesn't feel like much of a gift. It feels like I'm I I've given up trying to give books as presents only because people know I get them for free
Gift it feels like I'm regifting it feels like I'm giving them the chocolate-covered peanuts that someone else gave to me
You know, so even though my family loves them and I love them. I can't get away with it anymore
What get what book would you give if you from this year or just in general any time?
Well, I don't know this year clearly the novel is Percival Everett's novel, James.
I mean, that's just, I think, the defining book of the year.
We'll get to that in a second.
My kids have read it already.
I will sometimes, frankly, buy them an old book, a first edition or something.
I'm not the biggest first edition reader and keeper because I mess up my books by underlining
them, but my children do like them.
And a special book and a nice edition is a really nice thing to give.
Nice to give.
What about you, Becca?
I do not really give books as presents because most of my friends are pretty serious readers
and so they'll be in the midst of some reading project.
They don't really need me to give them a book because they're like, I'm sorry, I'm reading
everything that Henry James ever wrote.
I don't have time for this book that you've given me.
I will if I know that some person, if I'm very familiar with someone's taste, then I'll sometimes give them a book.
So my husband, I'll sometimes give him a book because I'm quite familiar with his taste.
I will probably get him a copy of Paradise Lost because we'll probably read that aloud together every day for the New Year.
That's our plan.
That will be my present.
You'll read it aloud together?
Yeah, I think that this is going to be our next reading project.
Every night we're going gonna read a little bit
of Paradise Lost aloud.
Do you do that with other books?
We have in the past, sometimes with like dialogue type things,
Plato's dialogue, bits of Shakespeare,
but we've fallen out of it.
So we're gonna try to get back into it.
Get back a little togetherness.
With Paradise Lost.
Yeah, oddly romantic and lovely actually.
Another perfect analog technology, the voice.
Yeah, you can't do, well AI will be able to do that for you. So perfect analog technology, the voice. Yeah, you can't do it.
Well, AI will be able to do that for you.
So, I want to talk about the books you love, the books you hated, and the books you disagree
on this year.
You might agree, actually.
Dwight, you wrote a review of your year in books, and you noted, the year's best books
matter because they offered refuge from the wheels grinding in our heads.
They made us feel less alone and reminded us that we are still sane.
Let's talk about books that did that.
Dwight, we'll start with you.
Your top three this year and why you love them.
Well, I mentioned James already.
I mean, one of the great books, I think, that came out earlier this year was Salman Rushdie's
memoir of being attacked on stage by an Islamic militant in 2022.
The reason that I sort of led my year-end piece with this book is that Rushdie considers
his quarrel with militant Islam, and it's with him, as being a quarrel over those with
a sense of humor and those without one.
And I loved the wit in Rushdie's book.
I loved that as he's being attacked on stage, he's also thinking, oh my God, my Ralph Lauren suit, you know?
And his book is filled with observations like that.
And I think humor helped keep us sane
in no small part this year.
And Rushdie's book sort of set the tone of the year for me.
Okay, all right.
And that's one, two, James, Rushdie and? Okay, Rushdie's book is called Knife. I think my third favorite was probably Rachel Kushner's
novel Creation Lake. This is about a female spy for hire in rural France. That's probably
my third A. My third B is Sally Rooney's new novel Intermezzo, which just is a-
I'm going to ask you about that in a second. So we'll get to that in one second. So Becca,
what about you?
I will just register a point of disagreement. I did not like Knife.
I know you did.
So we can discuss that later. Another book we disagree about that was probably my favorite
book of the year was Small Rain by Garth Greenwell. I love Garth Greenwell. It's possibly because
I had many medical ordeals myself this year. I recovered from thyroid cancer. But so I
thought that that book was a really great exploration of kind of the
doldrums of undergoing medical procedures. There's a novel by a novelist named Mark Haber
called Lesser Ruins, that I think is an absolutely fabulous book. It's kind of a throwback to
an older mode of writing. Really long sentences, really meditative. It's kind of a comic examination
of a man who's trying for years and years to write an essay and he just can't get it done, kind of as a means of distracting
himself from existential despair or some such. And then I love the book, The Rebels Clinic
by Adam Schatz, which is a biography of the philosopher and activist, Frantz Fanon. I
thought that was a really engrossing book and a really good example of what public intellectualism
can do.
It's not condescending to its readers at all.
It's really intelligent, but it's also really accessible and it's a really gripping read.
So those are probably my three favorite books that came out this year.
All right.
We're going to get to books you don't like too in a second.
But what Dwight, actually let me go through these very quickly before we get to talk about
Sallie Rooney's book.
I'm going to do this lightning round.
You just name a book, most overrated, Becca and then Dwight and then Becca.
Look at you.
Okay, Dwight and then Becca and the next one will be Becca.
I'm going to go with Garth Greenwell that Becca really loves.
So we disagree.
It's fun to disagree.
One of the salient points about modern American culture is that book criticism is a dying
art.
Newspapers used to have, every newspaper had book critics.
Time in Newsweek mattered.
All these alternative weeklies mattered.
Now there's so few of us.
And I love it that I often read Becca and find her completely disagreeing with me and
vice versa and it's good for the culture.
All right, so you think that one.
And overrated because why?
Oh, it's just no humor whatsoever.
It's prosaic, it's dull.
The observations are not smart. It's just not well written. It's prosaic, it's dull. The observations are not smart.
It's just not well written.
All right.
Becca disagrees.
Becca?
I mean, I'm tempted to say knife, which I kind of do think, I mean, it got a lot of
good attention.
It's nominated for a National Book Award, which I really think it didn't deserve.
I guess for the sort of similar reasons, like I kind of think, how can I put this in a way
that is sensitive?
I mean, it's terrible to be stabbed.
That must be really terrible.
But not every terrible experience that you have merits a memoir unless you have something
kind of additional to say about it.
And I did not think that this book had much to say.
Oh, but he couldn't resist.
Fair enough.
I'm with Beck on this one, Dwight.
I will give your opinions this much credence.
I do think that Rushdie's previous memoir, Joseph Anton, is a far better book than this
one, but for what it was, I love this one.
Okay.
All right.
I was also going to say that Splinters by Leslie Jameson, I think similarly, is a memoir
in which someone is trying to work through their own personal experience but may not
have much to say that is of much interest to others.
That book, I think, was also overrated.
All right.
A book that changed your mind? Book that changed my mind.
Book that changed my mind. Maybe when the clock broke by John Gans a
little bit, in the sense that I kind of thought that the Trump phenomenon was unprecedented
in American politics, but that really is just because I didn't have a great memory of the
political turmoil in the early 90s because I was three years old at that time. But so John Gans, I mean, I think
he's close to the same age as I am, but he does a really good job of examining kind of
antecedents. What about you?
Well, there's a biography this year that Verso printed. It was a biography of the radical
journalist Claude Coburn written by one of his sons, Patrick Coburn. And it sort of took us back to the period
in the 40s and 50s and early 60s when Coburn was working.
And it sort of corrected a lot of errors
in the journalism of that period.
And it showed the way he almost launched
a certain kind of investigative
and opinion type of journalism.
And I didn't realize how what an important player Coburn was in terms of influencing
people like Orwell.
I didn't realize how sort of fundamental he was.
So that was one for me.
Great.
All right.
Book you didn't think you'd like, but did.
Becca?
I have to think about this a little and look at my old reviews.
I can think of one that I thought I would like that I didn't like, a book I didn't think that I would like.
All right. Give the one you didn't, you thought you'd like and didn't. I did not
love Sheila Heddy's book, The Alphabetical Diaries. I generally love
Sheila Heddy. I think she's one of the best novelists working today. This book
was a non-fiction, a kind of experimental nonfiction book in which she took all of the
sentences from her diaries and alphabetized them and then organized them in chapters by
way of letter. So chapter A is all the sentences that begin with A. And I just thought that
it was a bit gimmicky and she kind of edited her voice out of it. It was a mechanical means
of organizing the book.
But you would have great hopes. You had great hopes. What about you, Troy?
I did have great hopes you had great hopes what about your great hopes Well, that was my that was my favorite gimmick of the year Sheila Hedy's gimmick
Because I loved the way it made you focus on her sentences and it made me wish in fact that I could have other books
Done for me in a similar way. Like one of my favorite books is Moby Dick
Let's just say it it is but I would love to have a version of Moby Dick that printed the sentences in the way that Sheila
Hedy organizes hers
And then it sort of take you into the guts of what, I don't know, what the concerns were
to Melville.
And I felt it was an interesting way of, it's almost a book that read like poetry.
And I would like to read Deconstructed Moby Dick.
So I love that book.
Oh, AI can do that for you also, FYI.
That's a good point.
In seconds.
Your question was though?
Books you didn't think you'd, FYI. That's a good point. In seconds. In seconds. Your question was though.
Books you didn't think you'd like but did.
I didn't think I would love a Sheila Hennie because I knew it was sort of a big public
facing populous sort of novel and it just completely won me over.
It was just like a big bowl of carbs but in the best possible way, buttery carbs.
All right.
Okay.
All right then.
Dwight, you mentioned Sally Rooney's latest Intermezzo. In your review, you said that publishing a smart young crowd called it overlong and
undercooked. It seemed that there was a generational dispute going on here. Do you think that's the
case? And when you're deciding which books to review, what to leave and what to leave to someone
else, is having a dissenting opinion the reason to take it on? Yeah, you know, sometimes. I mean,
there's no reason, for example, to review a first novel that's not very good.
No one's heard of it.
Why review something no one's gonna hear of anyway
and say something negative about it?
So the only time to leap in, let's say,
for a first novel is if there's a lot of buzz already
and then there's maybe a chance for you to say something.
In this case, Sally Rooney has been around for a while
and she's been not only a critical favorite,
but has sold really well across the world.
And I don't know, I heard from all the cool kids
that I know, a lot of them at the New York Times
book review, a lot of them, my daughter works
in publishing and you know, the early sense was
this book was a step back for her.
And I picked it up thinking I might feel similarly.
Instead, I was utterly, I dropped into it.
It was like a dream I was having from the first pages.
And you know, I can't wait to read it again.
Oh, okay.
All right.
Is there a generational divide here or just you're like, I liked it.
I don't care what you say, young people.
I'm not sure it is a generational divide.
I mean, since I published my review, which was quite yay saying, I've heard probably
70% of people agreeing with me, but I get 30% in my inbox saying, you're a loser.
We all get that. Unavoidable., you're a loser. So. Yeah.
We all get that.
Unavoidable.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah, I bet.
I bet.
We'll be back in a minute.
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So it was an election year, of course, and I've read a lot of political books this year,
memoirs, historical reviews, essays, talked to a lot of journalists, historians, politicians.
A big theme for all of them was the state of democracy and the perils facing freedom, historical president. Does that resonate
in your ears or are there other themes each of you were seeing? I will disclose, I wrote
a memoir and I don't care what you think of it, but I was right about these assholes.
So as it's turned out, but tell me what the themes you were seeing this year.
Politics sort of seems to have dominated everything.
Becca, you start.
I think that there are a bunch of books about divorce, both fiction and nonfiction, lots
of memoirs by people about their divorce.
For example, the Jameson book, Splinters, but also lots of novels about divorce and
the dissolution of marriages, like Liars, the Sarah Manguso novel.
I think there are also a lot of books about children, whether to have children, how to
think about a decision about whether to have children.
There's a book called Water Children Four written by some people who co-edit a literary
magazine with me called The Point, which I highly recommend, both the book and the magazine,
of course, which is kind of about how to think about whether or not to have children.
Interesting.
Dwight?
Well, it's funny, Kara.
I stayed away from politics this year.
You did.
I think it was just instinctual.
I couldn't take any more of it.
My wonderful colleague,
Jennifer Zalai is our non-fiction critic at the Times.
Great.
Yeah, she's amazing.
I stuck to my lane this year and read a lot of fiction,
a lot of biography and memoir and books about music and art.
But I felt, you know, I think just because of the year we had, there was so much angst
and turmoil and loneliness and trepidation.
And you felt these themes coming out of the fiction you read, regardless of whether they
were especially there or not, they really resonated this year with me and I think a
lot of readers.
And you read a book like, for example, there's a wonderful Mexican novelist named
Alvaro Enrique who published a novel this year
called You Dreamed of Empires,
which is this great speckled bird of a novel,
kind of hallucinatory about the Spanish conquistador
Cortez arriving in Mexico City in 1519.
And you feel it's a Trump-like moment.
It's the barbarians at the gate.
And to read this novelist, pull this collision of cultures apart really resonated with what
was happening in the culture to me.
So you were trying to avoid what was actually happening.
I think I did.
I'm sorry to say.
Don't be sorry.
I get it.
I get it.
I get it.
So speaking of memoirs and biographies, there are a couple of pans on your list.
Dwight, you dissed biographies about Carson McCullers and Randy Newman.
The titles were The Sad Happy Life of Carson McCullers and Randy Newman is great.
He deserved a better biography than this.
That's quite a title.
Talk a little bit about, and Becca, you mentioned Leslie Jameson's memoir, Splinters.
Your title is Leslie Jameson's Splinters is a divorce memoir as a therapy session.
What merits giving something a bad critique in your opinion?
Well, you know, I like to feel that I'm talking to the reader like I'm talking to a friend.
You know, one of the things when I was young that I hated, hate is just throwing a word,
that I disliked about journalists that I met is that by talking to them, you would learn
more about their story and what they felt in five minutes than you would learn from
a year of reading them.
And so I decided early on, and I hope I've lived up to it, to sort of try to say what
I think pretty straightforwardly and to do the reader the benefit of treating them as
if they're an intimate of mine, a close friend.
I'm telling you how I feel about this book, and you may disagree with me like crazy, but
that's what I'm after.
So if I'm reading something that's not working
for me, you just start looking for the reasons why it's not working. You have this feeling
that this is not working. Then the hard part is to explain why it's not working because
everyone has an opinion. Your uncle Felix, your uncle Frank, your aunt, whomever has
an opinion about everything doesn't mean they can describe and take apart the aspects of
it and describe why they have this opinion. And that's what being a critic is.
It's not just delivering an opinion.
I know you know that, but readers often just think that criticism means lowering the boom
and it's not that at all.
Right, right.
Well, someone, Becca, who's good at lowering the boom, and I've seen you do it beautifully
so many times, how do you feel?
What merits doing that in your opinion, especially in this area?
I mean, I think one of the most important questions to ask yourself is, is this book
bad in an important way?
If a book is just bad, but it's not representative of any important cultural tendency or it's
not written by somebody who is a big deal, there's no reason to single it out and beat
it up in a national newspaper.
So I try to make sure that if I'm going to write a negative review, it's going to say
something broader about cultural tendencies.
Unless it's by somebody exceptionally famous.
But even then, even when I reviewed, for example, Josh Hawley's book about manhood or Jordan
Peterson's book, there's no point in doing that.
There's no point in reviewing a book that's obviously going to be terrible unless it's
kind of a record of cultural pathologies.
And so that is kind of what I look out for in books that I'm going to have.
So the bigger situation.
Well, let's take on actually Knife.
So speaking of that, someone who's well known, this memoir, you disagree.
What do you think when you read a review that's so different from your own?
Do you ever second guess your opinion?
Just so for people to know, Becca called Knife a meandering and frequently trite and surprisingly
boring.
Dwight, you said it reminds us of the threats the free world faces, it reminds us of the
things worth fighting for.
Quite different.
Becca, you go first.
Do you ever second guess when you review his review or anybody else's who disagrees with
you?
I think it probably depends on how strong my reaction was to the book in general.
Although broadly I would say that yes, I do.
If the person adduces compelling reasons for me to change my mind, I will return to things
and look at them again.
I think I'm more inclined to do that if it's a work of art than if it's a nonfiction book.
Nonfiction books can be works of art.
I don't know that I think Knife rises to that status in my view.
But there's other works of art where when I've read somebody's review of them, I've changed my mind. Like the movie Demon Lover, for example, is a movie that
I found very abrasive initially. There's a great film critic named Nick Pinkerton. I
read his positive evaluation. I went back, I watched it again. It didn't change my kind
of affective reaction, but I could see the arguments for thinking that it was a good
movie.
Right. That happens a lot. I'm like, I can see the point. What about you, Dwight?
Well, my favorite thing is to read an attack on something I love because it pushes back
against you.
It makes you think.
Like when Stanley Crouch, the jazz critic, wrote that famous take out of Miles Davis.
I love Miles Davis.
I'm thinking, okay, I want to test myself against Stanley Crouch about Miles Davis.
So I love a good take down.
I love a take down that's completely opposite of my take.
It's my favorite thing to read.
But I do have second thoughts.
It's funny, I met a writer recently who said he uses AI in this way.
He puts his argument into AI and says, push back against me.
Tell me why I'm wrong.
I've never done that.
But I like the idea that writers could test their theses against something like that.
I prefer to test it against a real person, but I find it interesting use of AI.
So you learned something from it. Have you changed your mind? Like, have you
gotten, oh, I was wrong about that? Oh, maybe. But, you know, in the world of
reviewing books, the one is coming right after the other, and it's rare you have time, except
maybe this time at the end of the year to think, yes, I might have been wrong about that. And,
you know, you guys are like convincing me. Maybe I overdid the rush tea. But at the moment,
I really read it like,
it was what I wanted to read
and I read it in one or two sittings.
And I tried to impart the great movie critic
for the New Yorker who just retired.
What was his name?
Anthony Lane.
Anthony Lane, thank you.
Said that reviews, he's talking about movie reviews,
but he said they should reek of the box office.
They should reek of popcorn.
Like he felt that your review should be written
in the moment when you've just seen the movie
and you're reacting to it.
And I try to go after that a little bit.
Right.
Well, obviously Rushie is one of the writers you can't ignore.
The event was horrific and he's so famous, especially for the writing community environment
we're in.
But how do situational specifics like that factor for you when you're writing a review,
the writing, the narrative, the language, it's hard to separate the writer,
the experience to describe me,
especially in such a memoir or anything else, for example.
What is your top thing that you focus on?
Becca, you first, and then Dwight.
I mean, again, I think it really depends.
I mean, I think that there are some people
who are interesting primarily because of their popularity,
their persona, another good example,
I just wrote this review of Jordan Peterson.
I mean, I don't think that he's particularly interesting
as a thinker or as a pro stylist.
I mean, he's not great in either guys.
I think that what's interesting about him
is that he's cultivated this persona.
He performs intellectualism in a very conspicuous way
that appeals to a lot of people.
So that seems like the most important thing to investigate.
If you're writing about a writer who is much more private, for example, the writer Benjamin Labatute,
who refuses to be profiled, there's a great profile of him called Benjamin Labatute Refuses
to be Profiled or some such thing by Adam Dalva. There's really not, he doesn't cultivate
a persona except on the page. And so it's the personality that comes through the writing
that I focus on in that case. Dwight?
Well, I forget who set up, but someone said that the primary object of literature is to
be delighted. Okay. And I want to be delighted. And delight means many different things. You
know, Tolstoy can delight as well as a comic novel. And so I want to be delighted on some
level. I want to have a reason to turn the page. I, you know, this can be, there are
all kinds of reasons and humor is not the only one by far. But I just find that
I'm interested in a book where I'm not. And if I'm still not interested after 30 or 40
pages, I begin to think that maybe this is not for me.
I have a thing for text, a test for a movie is my texting. If I start texting, it's like
a three text movie. I'm like, hmm, that's my little thing. So Dwight, you kind of address
this dilemma in one of your negative views this year,
Garth Greenwell's novel, Small Rain.
You write, it gives me no pleasure to find
so little pulse in Small Rain.
I'm a Greenwell fan.
Can a misfire be a blessing in disguise?
Talk about why it was hard to hate it,
because I don't think either of you wants to.
I mean, people have this idea of reviewers,
they just want to go at people.
I don't think you do. wants to. I mean, people have this idea of reviewers they just want to go at people. I don't think you do.
You had several, Becca, this year that I could feel your pain in saying the truth, which
I think you were completely correct on several of them.
But talk about that first, Dwight, because Becca, you love Small Brain.
So first Dwight and then Becca.
Well, people always look for when a critic gives a negative review.
Well, two things happen.
One, readers love a negative review because our literary world has gotten quite happy.
The reviews have gotten sort of mushier and more positive.
So when a reader, I think, reads a negative review, they tend to think something like,
well, at least I can cross this one off my list.
It speaks to the sense they have of reading all these positive reviews and buying the
books and not liking them and wondering if they're insane.
Right, it's the same problem.
I get a lot of mail when I write a negative piece, but there's no glee in it, especially
with someone like Garth Greenwell, whom I really admire.
His first two books are both brilliant.
It didn't work for me and it did for Becca.
I think Mencken called criticism prejudice made plausible, meaning you have this know, you don't like it, then you've got to make
it plausible the reasons you didn't like it. And for me, I think I've spoken to some of
them already, but reading, hearing Becca and reading her audit makes me want to read it
again sometime.
Right. You had, let me, one line you had, each page is a tall palisade. One must climb
slowly with the hope, with little hope of a place for eyes or wits to rest. That's what kind of says it all.
Becca, talk about this.
Long sentences were attractive to you.
Yeah, I love long sentences.
One of the books that I recommended, it depends on the quality of the sentences, of course.
There are bad long sentences and good long sentences, but as a general matter, I guess
I have a prejudice in favor of length because there are so many short things in our culture.
It feels like attention is so fragmented that there's something soothing and restorative
in finding a work of art that challenges you to expand your attention span.
I thought that that book was very sort of meditative, hypnotic is how I would describe
it.
I felt like I was in kind of a trance when I was reading it.
And the fact that there was not a lot of event, it's not a book that's written rich in event,
did not bother me because the kind of sensibility itself seemed like an event to me.
Right, interesting.
So Becca, you came out with your first book this year,
All Things Are Two Small Essays in Praise of Excess.
It's listed in a few of the best books of the year list.
Congratulations on that.
Dwight, your book, The Upstairs Delicatessen on Eating, Reading, and Reading about Eating
and Eating While Reading came out in 2023.
I love this book.
It's great.
Bec, I'm about to read your book.
I read everything you write, actually.
Thank you so much.
It was reviewed in the Times.
How has being on the receiving end of reviews changed or sharpened your pen, if at all?
Talk a little bit about being flipped around,
first you Beck and then Dwight.
I mean, it was terrifying, but it went pretty well.
I mean, I might say something different
if the book had been universally panned, but it wasn't.
There's been a couple of negative reviews
that were all thoughtful,
but there were enough positive reviews
that I wasn't devastated by the negative reviews or anything.
I mean, I kind of think that it actually made me feel less bad about writing negative reviews of people's books
because I realized that it's completely possible to keep it in perspective.
It's not life-ruining.
I mean, I think that one is kind of self-aggrandizing as a critic.
You're writing your take down and you think,
well, this is going to take Sally Rooney out of the game.
No one's gonna read her anymore, because I hate her.
And of course that doesn't happen.
I mean, she continues to be the most successful
millennial novelist and it's totally fine for her.
So in some way, while people emerge unscathed,
someone wrote a negative review of me yesterday,
I read it and I was like, all right, I'm fine.
So it helps you put things in perspective,
including your own role.
What about you, Dwight?
You have a book that's hard to hate, but go ahead.
Well, thank you.
I was waiting to be tossed up in the air and caught on a, you know, impaled on the way
down by many critics.
And it turns out that I don't think I got a negative review.
I think my book, I mean, I have not seen one.
So I don't know how I escaped running the gauntlet.
Because it's corned beef, Dwight.
I mean, come on, like, in delicatessen.
I feel very lucky.
I have a pretty thick hide at this point because, you know, I'm a critic for a long time and,
you know, I read Twitter too often.
I mean, I don't go there, but I'll go there maybe once a week and then I'll see, you know,
things people said about me.
And so, you know, I can take it, but I feel like I lucked out.
I don't know what I did right.
Yeah, stop going back to Twitter.
I'm just telling you, I don't go there because the Nazi porn bar
doesn't like Kara Swisher these days.
But I want to talk about the connection
with your reviews in the market.
You just mentioned that, like you're not gonna kill off
Sally Rooney anytime soon.
Dwight, you mentioned personal efforts, James,
a reimagining of Mark Twain's Huck Finn.
I love this book too.
It's been a critics' favorite.
I can see why it won the National Book Awards,
it's shortlisted for the Booker Prize,
and it has been on the best-seller list for 23 weeks, which is really
astonishing. Dwight, in your review, you suggested James should be sold together with Huck Finn,
which was also a classic. Talk about the novel and why you think it was able to straddle
both literary success and commercial success. And do you see a connection between reviews
and bestsellers?
Is it a fluke or not many do that exactly?
Well, to take your second question first, I don't see much connection between reviews
and bestsellers for the most part.
I mean, the things I see on the bestseller list, I don't recognize them most of the time.
And often they're sort of formulaic and they remind you sort of of why, you know, the Times
food critic doesn't review Olive Garden.
I mean, no knock against Olive Garden, but you sort of know what you're going to get
when you go there.
And many of the books like by James Patterson or whomever are familiar products and they
end up there.
The first part of your question was, remind me.
When you think about this book sort of straddling both things, why you was able to straddle both literary success and commercial success, that doesn't happen all the time
anymore.
It doesn't.
It doesn't.
And you know, the literary world loves these books that have feet in both places, like
a Donna Tart novel or a Sally Rudy novel that a committed literary person is not embarrassed
to carry around.
And yet the people who aren't big readers love it as well.
And those books don't come around often enough.
In the case of Percival Everett, he's been doing this for a long time and a lot of critics
have known who he is and have loved the wit of his earlier novels.
And they can see the ways in which this novel follows in the footsteps of some of his earlier
stuff, the way he riffs on objects in the culture and other characters, the way he wrote
the book about Sidney Poitier and kind of made fun of Poitier's image.
And here he comes taking on the adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
And as I wrote in my review, Everett has always been smart and funny as fuck, but in this
book he's putting his heart out there.
You really feel in a way that I haven't felt really before in his work, a certain level
of bedrock humanity, bedrock sympathy, bedrock emotion that sometimes he's
kept somewhat at bay. In this book, he'd let it hang out without losing the stuff that
made him singular in the first place.
So that's why it was popular. Also, Becca, when you think of popular, right? Random House
came out with a reading group guide. James became a book club book for sure. What happens
when that happens from your perspective? Is that a negative or a positive thing?
I mean, I think it's a mixed blessing. I mean, something scandalous that happened was when Jonathan
Franssen's book, The Corrections, was selected for Oprah's Book Club. He famously, notoriously,
said that he didn't want that to be the case. I think kind of implying that Oprah's Book Club
was middle brow. And when I told my parents-in-law that I might do the same, they were absolutely scandalized.
I think now that I'm actually trying to sell a book, I would reconsider.
Raise with a spoon, where are you?
Go ahead.
Yeah, I want people to read my book.
I mean, I think on the one hand, it makes sense to kind of have some defeasible skepticism
about extremely popular products, because
a lot of the things that are really popular products in the culture today are not very
high quality, Marvel movies being the kind of easiest boilerplate example.
But of course, you shouldn't dismiss something just because it's popular either.
So I mean, I think that it can, it adds a level of skepticism, I suppose, when something
is on the bestseller list, but then I'm going to interrogate the object and see if I like it.
Like John Ganz's book, it hasn't been on the bestseller list for many weeks.
I think it was only on there for one week, but I think that that's one of the best books
of the year, probably top five nonfiction books of the year.
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This week on The Assignment with me, Audie Cornish.
The arrest of Luigi Mangione escalated the discourse
to celebratory rage coming from just about every
corner of the internet over the murder of UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson. Now some
are calling the reactions gross, even dangerous. So how does the internet's reaction to this
brazen murder reflect a wider cultural phenomenon? Where else can we see this fury? And what
does the online response mean for our lives offline?
Listen to The Assignment with me, Audie Cornish, streaming now on your favorite podcast app.
So, very quickly, there doesn't seem to be a consensus.
I referenced it earlier.
If we're in a good time for books or not, some opinion writers say that men, especially
young men, are no longer reading or writing books.
Some say that young people in general, even elite college kids aren't reading books anymore.
It's just a story about that, that they can't.
There was a viral post earlier this year on Substack on how books don't sell anymore,
but the stats, they're good, actually.
800 million books were sold last year.
It's up.
It's up the comparatively.
Do you think it's a good time for the book industry or for writers, or are they on the
brink?
And how does that play in your thoughts of literary criticism?
Becca, you start and then Dwight.
I go back and forth on this.
My analysis is completely vibes based.
I think that if I were to look at the numbers, I might have kind of a different view.
I think it's easy to look at our culture and many symptoms of anti-intellectualism.
You have crypto billionaires
bragging about having never read a book.
You have Elon Musk listening to The Odyssey
at 1.25 speed on audiobook,
which is absolutely the wrong way
to engage with The Odyssey.
I mean, you have people peddling misinformation.
I'm sure he made that up, go ahead.
He probably didn't actually even listen to it.
So that kind of thing makes one feel pessimistic.
On the other hand, I kind of just have a fundamental,
unshakable faith in the reading public
and in humanity's need for literary
and philosophical engagement.
And so I think that great books
will always find their readers.
That's kind of my fundamental belief.
And I think that you have to believe that
in order to engage in any kind
of public intellectual activity.
So that is what I believe at my core.
What about you, Dwight?
You know, I'm pretty optimistic.
I know that we're in an attention deficit span world, but I hear them.
I hear them right now, thousands of writers at their desks.
I hear them and I know that they're trying to express things in some of them.
The next Ralph Ellison, the next Sadie Smith, that person is out there and I can't wait
to read what they're going to say about this period.
And yeah, I just tend to know that the novel has lost a lot of its centrality to our culture.
Right, and that it moves things like a Norman man, whoever.
Right.
Yeah, and it used to be where you went to get news about the culture, right?
It brought news before there was the internet, before there was Netflix.
That's where you went to learn about what the people ate and how they slept together and what marriages were like. You went for
cultural information in part, and that's long gone. And yet, you know, writing a good novel,
there are few things in this world that could put you more in the center of the culture
and that's more prestigious to do, and prestigious not in a bullshit way, but in a legitimate,
you know, it's a hard thing to do and it matters more than almost anything that humans
do in terms of describing what our lives are like
And I don't think that's going away
Okay
So meanwhile there are books that come back on the bestseller list for other reasons like now vice president elect jd vance's
2016 memoir hillbilly elegy becca you review the book again in july after vance was tapped by trump
Uh, this is a book that got pretty good reviews back in the day. You're you had kind of a meta review
And then for dwight the new york times gave it a good review back in the day. You had kind of a meta review. And then for Dwight, the New York Times gave it a good review back in the day, but that
wasn't you, Dwight.
In 2019, you called an anthology of Appalachian writing responding to Vance's book, quote,
a volley of intellectual buckshot from high up alongside the hollow.
I guess you get a lot of views to get into political commentary, but talk about this
book.
Does the current political environment change in how you think of your role as critics within the
framework of the mainstream media? And how political do you want or not want to get?
Becca, you start.
I mean, I think that when you are evaluating nonfiction political books,
it's pretty impossible not to get political in some sense because you're
evaluating whether you think the claims made in the books are true.
So, you know, for example, when JD Vance says inhale Billy Elegy that he actually thinks
that predatory loans are good for poor people, I don't think that that's true.
That's, I suppose, both a factual and a political evaluation.
And so it's impossible to fail to engage with a book like that politically.
Go ahead, Dwight. And so it's impossible to fail to engage with a book like that politically
Go ahead Dwight. Well, I actually admired
Vance's book when I first read it because he's a sharp observer of light. I grew up in West Virginia You know, I felt like I knew his people. I don't agree with this politics
And yet there's no way to walk through before or after they change but go ahead true. This is true
But you know before I mean I will dissent about the quality of that book when you they change, but go ahead. True, this is true. Even before, I mean, I will dissent
about the quality of that book when you finish.
Okay, go ahead, go ahead.
Yeah, but no, but if you read a critic over time,
I mean, you know my politics if you've read me.
I mean, I'm a person of the left, I would say,
and yet there's nothing I love more.
This goes back to our loving disagreement.
There's nothing I love more
than a great book from a conservative, you know?
And I wish there were more really hyper-literate,
cultural conservatives to argue with out there, because there aren't a ton of them.
You're not hot on Sean Hannity?
I'm talking about people who can write, who have a hinterland, who even read a book, you know.
Give me a name of a conservative book you liked. I'm just curious.
What's a recent one?
Well, they're older, you're right.
They're older. I mean, the older literary critics, I mean, you're Irving Kristol's and you're-
Bill Sapphire, whatever, yeah.
Yeah, Bill Sapphire.
Anyway, the memoir from Joseph Epstein, is it, is it right?
Joseph Epstein came out this year.
He's a conservative writer for the Wall Street Journal.
And I really wanted to like it.
I wanted to hear a smart conservative voice and he's just, you know, it just didn't work
for me at all on sentence to sentence level.
Yeah, I had the same experience.
I was out looking for smart conservative books.
And so I reviewed a book by,
I believe her name was Christine Rosen
called The Extinction of Experience.
I mean, one strain of conservatism
that I'm highly sympathetic to is the idea
that various technologies are kind of detaching us
from sensory pleasures.
But I tried really hard
to like the book. I kind of agree with its motivating thesis and I just didn't think
it was well done. So I had to give it a bad review too. I mean, I'm open to smart conservatives.
I think that we're not really in an era. The National Review used to be great. There used
to be great criticism in it. They used to publish Guy Davenport. It's just not really
like that anymore. It's become extremely partisan. There's
a lot of, you know, they accuse us of being overly politicized, but it seems like a lot
of the arts criticism is really just kind of anti-wokeness screes.
Well, they're writing a certain formula, those books, and they do really well. I mean, same
thing with podcasts. It's the same thing. It's fascinating to watch. Do you, you were
going to do a quick insult of Hillbillyology?
Oh, I mean, I did not read the book when it came out, but upon rereading it, so perhaps,
perhaps my view of it is intellectually tainted by what's happened since, but I mean,
I think that it is in many ways a pretty bad book. Like, I think it is effectively folksy.
I think that he's kind of performing his folksiness for the benefit of an elite coastal audience.
He's really playing the role of Appalachian spokesperson.
To me, it seems like a nakedly calculating way to get onto the talk show circuit, which
he succeeded in doing.
And I thought that the actual political observations in the book were kind of just boilerplates,
Reaganomics type claims about how people should pull themselves up
by their bootstraps and really the problems
in Appalachia are cultural,
people should be working harder
and they should take responsibility for themselves.
I think that really the book's popularity
was just a function of it coming out
at exactly the right time.
When people were desperate for somebody
to explain Trump to them,
someone who was respectable enough
that they could feel okay listening to that person.
Yeah, I would agree. I went back in Reddit and I thought, how did I like this at the time? And I did.
You know what I mean? Like, I remember being moved by it and then I thought I just got played. That's
what I felt like. So books themselves obviously have become political. According to Pen America,
there were more than 10,000 instances of book bans in public schools during the 23, 20, 24 school
year. One of the most commonly banned books, 44% feature people and characters of color and
39% of LGBTQ characters.
There's a situation right now out in Virginia, very close to Washington, D.C., where most
of the population didn't want these bans and this small group of tyrannical minority
has pushed them out of the things.
We're seeing some political pushback.
The New Jersey governor just signed a law prohibiting book bans in schools and libraries. I'd like each of you,
Dwight, first, how concerned are you with this? And what do you think the book market
and book critics like yourself can do to push back against the pressure on free speech?
Reviewing more books by people of color or LGBTQ writers or what?
Well, I'm blown away that anyone is focusing on books when we have this torrent of other
material bombarding our children every day.
Why?
Good Lord.
I mean, so few kids are reading in the first place and banning books just seems like an
insane reaction to me.
On the other hand, I have a kind of counterintuitive reaction.
I remember when the great critic Clive James said, well, if you want our kids to really
read poetry, we should ban it because Then they're gonna go look for it.
I feel like as a young person, at least myself,
any book that had been banned when I was young,
that's the first book I'm gonna buy.
So I hope that this is the reaction of young people
in these states, but I'm not sure it's going to be.
Do you think it's gonna continue?
I mean, this is something that happens periodically
in US history, right?
Of course it's gonna continue.
It's gonna get much worse the next four years. Becca?
Yeah, I mean I agree. It's gonna get much worse, and I'm very concerned about it.
I'm not sure what the critic can do about it. I mean I think there's kind of a tendency, at least in the first Trump presidency,
there's a strong tendency among people in the literary world to kind of inflate
their own importance to think that they had some kind of seriously important political role to play or that if they wrote more political writing that would really have an effect on
what was happening on the ground.
I think that was basically mistaken.
So I think-
Now they'll change their mind once you hear my effects.
Yeah, like there's some, I don't want to name this person because I don't want this person,
I think this person's well-meaning, but there was someone who tweeted at one point, if these
Republicans had just read one or two books, it's like, I don't think that that actually would change anything.
You know, if they had read movie dick, they would suddenly not hate gay people.
I don't know. I don't think that that's true.
But I do think that one thing that one can do as a critic is try to kind of promote
the kind of books that are being banned so that people who are not able to find them
in public libraries anymore or in read them in school anymore can buy them.
All right. Just a few more questions before we go. Each week we get a question from an
outside expert. This one is a little closer to home. It is my wife, but you'll see why
she has enough credits to be able to do this. So let's hear it.
Hi, this is Amanda Katz. I'm a Washington Post opinions editor as well as a former book
editor and book critic. I would like to
know what book you found particularly meaningful in 2024 that did not come out
this year. Tell us about a book that is not new but that you read either this
year or in the past and that you found yourself thinking about in this moment.
Thanks. Good question. I love this question. I think that we're way too
pegged to the news cycle in terms of our reading and there's
so many great older books that are good to read.
A book that I really love is a book called The Politics of Cultural Despair by the Columbia
historian Fritz Stern.
It's an intellectual history of the kind of, I guess, intellectual ancestors of Nazism.
It's about a bunch of conservative German cultural critics in the
century leading up to the rise of Nazism. And I think it has a lot of light to shed on
the Trump phenomenon now. There's some striking similarities between the kind of pseudo-intellectual
buttress of Nazism and the kind of things that you see conservative intellectuals saying
today.
Interesting. I would recommend Tim Snyder's book too, his story this year. But go ahead,
Dwight. Well, when I'm off duty, I read a lot of cookbooks. I'm kind of a serious foodie. And B,
I love reading old journals. I love journals and books of letters and I review them a lot and I'm
kind of obsessed with them. This year, I'm reading Boswell, Boswell in London, you know,
the great biographer. Wow, you're going there. Well, it's the perfect, it's the perfect bathroom read for me.
It's just every, every, every page is just wonderful and brilliant about not just life,
but ideas and the combination, the high and low of them, the, the, the intellectual jousting
combined with, you know, his walks and what he had for dinner.
And it's just the perfect combination for me of stuff to read on the side.
Nice, those are good ones.
I'm trying to think of what else, oh, I've been reading a lot of Kafka lately and it's just the perfect combination for me of stuff to read on the side. Nice, those are good ones. I'm trying to think of what else,
oh, I've been reading a lot of Kafka lately,
and that's because I think it's about loneliness,
a lot of his books, so I don't know why.
They affected me when I was a kid and I was trying to see,
that's why I went back and reread Hillbillyology
and realized what an idiot I was.
So are there any books from 2024
that will be on your future great books list? Becca?
Hmm.
I mean, it's kind of hard to say, but I would imagine that when the clock broke, this book
by John Gans that I keep mentioning, I bet people will read this book in 50 years as
a way of understanding what led to Trumpism.
And I have to say, I think Small Rain is going to be an enduring classic.
She's going for it.
She's pushing back, Dwight.
What about you?
Oh, no.
I would say perhaps Rachel Kushner's creation, Kushner has a style, a vibe.
She's this generation's Robert Stone of people, what it was like to read him.
A bit of Dennis Johnson in her work.
It feels built to last to me.
Also, I feel like we haven't talked about this book yet, but Lucy Sons' memoir
of transitioning later in life. Lucy, of course, used to publish it on another name. She's
not added a Y to her name. She's transitioned. And it's very moving, her stories about transitioning
in her 60s while teaching at Bard and how her friends reacted, how her students reacted.
It's a wonderful book. And I think that might have a chance of living in the culture for quite a while. Living culture. I noticed neither of you mentioned Ina Garten,
but that's okay, especially you Dwight. I'm just going to ding you for that. She's doing just fine.
It's a bestseller. 2025, are there any books or authors you're looking forward to? Any themes you
think are going to stand out? Give us a little preview. Becca? Good question. I mean, I have reviews that are slated to come out for many months. I
mean, one book that I'm really looking forward to is there's a book of essays by Pulitzer
Prize-winning critic Andrea Long-Chu at New York Magazine. I often really disagree with
her. In fact, I don't think I've ever agreed with her about a book.
Yeah, she's got a lot of opinions.
She's an amazing, she's a wonderful prose agreed with her about a book. Yeah, she's got a lot of opinions.
She's a wonderful prose stylist.
She has a book of essays coming out where she's kind of articulating more clearly what
she thinks the role of the critic is.
I'm really looking forward to reading that book.
That is the primary one that's coming to mind.
Okay.
And Dwight?
Well, the great, great Nell Zink has a new novel coming out this year.
I've admired almost everything she's read.
Some is better than others, but Nell Zink, even at B grade, Nell Zink is better than
A grade most novelist living today.
Also the wonderful writer Hanif Kureishi, if I'm pronouncing his name correctly, the
film director and writer, experienced a terrible stroke a few years ago and has been tweeting
from his bedside.
And he's written a memoir, which is coming out coming out I believe in March called Shattered, I
believe it is.
And I can't wait to read that.
And there's a biography of R. Crumb coming out, the cartoonist.
And you know, what a life, what a weirdo.
And I'm looking forward to that.
Oh, interesting.
I'm going to indulge me if you don't mind.
I was just talking about with my wife last night is I have four kids.
I was trying to think, we were talking about what they, my sons are in college, they're
doing their college stuff, not reading as much as they should.
My older son does read a lot, a lot of history and everything.
If you were to give a recommendation for younger kids, I was thinking, should I have my kids
read Harry Potter? I don't really like Rowling. I didn't love Harry Potter to start with. Is there
any book you'd recommend for a younger child, each of you? I don't know if you have expertise
in there, but I'd love to know one book that would be amazing.
How young is young?
Well, say five and up. Five and up. You can pick any age between five and 15.
Are they ready for Kurt Vonnegut, do you think?
Because some of those books meant a ton to me when I was that age.
Okay, Kurt Vonnegut, all right.
Yeah.
Okay, thanks.
Why are you laughing?
Because I'll get it for my five-year-old tomorrow, but go ahead.
Well, you're talking five-year-old books.
I wrote a piece for The Times a couple years ago years ago, now it's been a long time actually,
I'm not going to say a couple of years, about packing up my kids' books.
It's an emotional moment when you realize you're done reading to them.
It's really sad.
We still have the box of all our favorites and I can't wait to give them to them when
they have kids of their own.
I was lucky enough for many years to sit at the New York Times next to the wonderful children's book editor, Eden Ross Lipson, and she gave me many of her favorites.
And, you know, we still look at those. And now that I'm just babbling here, I can't remember what
some of the best ones are. What are your favorites that you would tell other people based on what
your kids love? Yeah. Good night moon. I could read good night moon. Dr. Seuss, good night moon.
All the classics. All right, Becca, I'm not going to put you on the spot.
No, no, I actually have, I mean, I'm 33, I don't have children, and I was a child relatively
long ago now, but the books that I remember, and that almost make me want to have kids
because I wish I had an excuse to read them a lot, are Dolare's Greek Myths.
Oh yeah, we have that.
This like sort of classic, beautiful, amazing, illustrated book of Greek myths.
It's amazing.
And for a slightly older child, maybe not 15,
I think a really great alternative to J.K. Rowling,
just a better writer as Diana Wayne-Jones.
I was obsessed with the book Howl's Moving Castle
to the point where I still have
the opening lines memorized.
Tell me, go ahead.
In the land of Ingrid,
where such things as cloaks of invisibility
and seven-legged boots actually exist,
it was considered a great misfortune to be born the eldest of three.
I read that book over and over and over.
It's amazing.
Highly, highly recommend.
All right.
So both of you seem, very last question, positive about where books are going.
My son only reads books now.
He doesn't read anything online.
The young people are changing more than you think, I think, personally, in my experience.
Say one really positive thing you think about books in as we move into a very probably difficult
period for a lot of people.
I think they're going to be solace.
I think that's where we're going to go to retreat a bit into ourselves, to also to find
ourselves.
I just think increasingly people are going to be turning to longer forms and I just have
no doubt about it and I know how it works for me.
And sometimes you have to work at it.
I sometimes will turn a timer on for an hour and just say, Dwight, you're going to read
for an hour and don't look at your email.
This is your time.
Sometimes two hours, so I'm feeling really, but I still feel like the novel is the best
delivery device we have in our culture for just news
of the self and what it means to be alive.
Becca, last word.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that the hunger to meditate more deeply on what's happening in society
is perennial.
That's a human need that will never go away.
And so I think that the appetite for literature is inextinguishable.
And I think that particularly in times of political turmoil or political unrest, there's
an even greater need to understand the world by way of texts, by way of people who have
thought deeply about similar situations.
And so I think that literature will never die.
Thank you so much.
I'm so glad I did this.
This is a wonderful, wonderful interviews with both of you. And you're much. I'm so glad I did this. This is a wonderful, wonderful interview
with both of you and you're both really wonderful writers. And I recommend having you go read
their books. And it's really important to keep supporting books. It really is in this
especially difficult times. Thank you so much.
Thanks, Kara. This was fun.
Thank you. Bye, guys.
On with Kara Swisher is produced by Christian Castro-Roselle, Kateri Yocum, Jolie Meyers,
Megan Burney, Megan Cunane, and Kaylin Lynch.
Nishat Kurwa is Vox Media's executive producer of audio.
Special thanks to Claire Hyman.
Our engineers are Rick Kwan and Fernando Arruda, and our theme music is by Trackademics.
If you're already following the show, go grab a book and curl up in the corner.
I mean, an analog book.
Put down your phone.
Read a friggin' book, people.
If not, get your library card renewed.
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I spend a lot of time in libraries because I have small kids.
We should support our local libraries and stop banning books from them.
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