11 Books to Read This Month
Maybe itâs the longer hours of daylight, maybe the surreal momentary darkness of last weekâs eclipse reset our sense of seeing the world. Whatever the reason, several members of the VF staff gravitated to books that foreground close visual observation this month: two rich works of photography, a close-read of the Sistine Chapel. But donât worry, weâve got rangeâan audiobook narrated by one of Hollywoodâs most comforting voices requires no eye work at all. âKeziah Weir
âHong Kongâ by Mikko Takkunen
Hong Kong is a tiny triumph. The first monograph from Finnish photographer Mikko Takkunen, a New York Times picture editor, Hong Kong is the print equivalent of a spring cherry blossom: the glorious first blush of a budding visual artist.
Takkunenâs eye is delightfully quirky yet bracingly cogentâin the grand tradition of quirky-cogent street photography. As viewers, we feel as if weâve been made privy to a newly discovered cache of vivid color photographs by Saul Leiter or William Eggleston or Alex Webb, all converted into contemporary movie stills. We see a woman and her shadow, both smoking on a rooftop at night. A man in a green stairwell with the word CITY emblazoned nearby. A taxi driver parked in front of an impossibly orange wall, suspended in time, in space, in his own inescapably quotidianâand Instagrammableâexistence.
It is no wonder that in his marvelous introduction, Geoff Dyer cites Leiter and Eggleston and Webb. Takkunen, like these photographic forebears, makes a city and its people pulse with secret, febrile, irrefutable life. We can almost smell the photographs, as if made in the tingly minutes after a passing sunshower. We can imagine these moments having been first envisioned in all their mescaline clarity by Aldous Huxley, then set to music by Laurie Anderson, then flash-fried by RenĂ© Redzepi, and finally curated by Yayoi Kusama. (Kehrer Verlag, April 2024) âDavid Friend
âThe Dutch Houseâ by Ann Patchett, narrated by Tom Hanks
Continuing on the Ann Patchett actor-narrated audiobook trainâI recently listened to Meryl Streep read Tom Lake, which made me feel very warm and fuzzy insideâI just finished listening to Tom Hanks narrate The Dutch House. The book, a sort of dark modern fairy tale about a brother and sister, is told from the brother’s perspective. I really liked the story, but I loved hearing Tom Hanks tell it. It just brought it to life in a way that I don’t know I would have felt were I just reading the text. Truly like seeing (listening to?) a one-man play. (Harper, 2019) âCharlotte Klein
âThis Trainâ by Justine Kurland
Justine Kurlandâs This Train brings two bodies of work together in a thematically rich (and beautifully made) concertina-style book. On one side of the accordion fold of pages, her large-format film photographs, taken from 2005 to 2010, show Kurland and her young child, Casper, living out of a camper van as they travel through the American West; several of the images capture Casper playing with model trains along real railroads. The photos are âdomesticâ in genre (the family unit of two cooks, plays, and naps together), but subversive by nature. Kurland and her child exist in transitory spaces rather than Suburbia: wayside rests, the banks of a river, and campground picnic tables. A new essay by Constance DebreĂ© builds around the idea that Kurlandâs images defy the conventions of family photos and road trip photos until she drops stunning truths about parental love, childhood, and being together, alone, in the world. On the other side of the concertina pages are large-scale photographs of the railways, without people. Long stretches of trains and tracks intrude on the land, and yet Kurland shows that the land ultimately prevails. Mountains and fields dwarf the trains, making the mythology of Manifest Destinyâat least its man-made hubrisâfeel trivial in comparison. Another original essay, this one by Lily Cho, recontextualizes the body of work in relation to the history and humanity of 19th-century Chinese railroad workers, reminding us of the âquiet violenceâ of this overlooked era and the historical undercurrents of Kurlandâs images. Happily, this rich book object invites multiple viewings, so that all of its meanings might unfold. (Mack, 2024) âMadison Reid
âAll Things Move: Learning to Look in the Sistine Chapelâ by Jeannie Marshall
Last fall I did something completely out of character. Iâa person who does not like to wait for anything, who will always choose the food truck with the shortest lineâstood for more than three hours in a queue of people shuffling toward the Vatican Museums entrance. I donât know what compelled me to do it, although at a certain point it was probably the influence of sunk costs. Once inside, I was able to choose from two routes: the long way, or the beeline to the Sistine Chapel, the much-viewed, much-memed, secretly photographed, blue-skied, fingers-touching apotheosis of Christian art. (All western art, some might say.) Itâs this known quality that Jeannie Marshall seeks to peel back in her rich, meditative All Things Move, which charts the evolution of her relationship with the chapel, from hostility toward the Christian content (âtoo much, too enormous, and too religiousâ); through her early, mystified visits; to a somber and eerily empty viewing in 2020. She compares her shifting experience of the Chapel over time to Michelangeloâs own return to it, having painted the ceiling frescoes between 1508 and 1513, and âafter a gap of more than twenty years in which he witnessed war and plague,â The Last Judgment in 1536. âMichelangeloâs return to the Sistine Chapel after such destruction was a show of faith in art as much as anything. For me, returning to see it is a show of faith in this work of artâs capacity to point backward and then forward in timeâŠâ The book is part art history, part memoir; a case for slowing down, curiosity, a closer look. âThe Sistine Chapel comes from a world before us with our twenty-first-century preoccupations, where we donât really believe that art can do anything to us, but we come to see it anyway, just in case.â (Biblioasis, 2023) âKW
âThe Living Daysâ by Ananda Devi translated from the French by Jeffrey Zuckerman
This novel is strange, fetid, disturbing, exquisitely writtenâa beguiling story of power and exploitation in which Mary, 75 years old, white, and languishing in an inherited house on Portobello Road, recalls the only man sheâs ever slept with, and imagines the wartime death that kept him from coming back to her. In her youth she shaped sex scenes out of clay, which she mashed up and remade into more salable goods; in old age, when arthritis strips her of her income, she resorts to eating dog food. Cub, a Jamaican 13-year-old, shows up and shakes her out of a decades-long squalor. But all is not right in their world. Worms fall from a corpse in a hole in the ceiling. First Cub has his own room, and then he is in Maryâs bed. âIâm an ever-growing belly that has to be fed, and fed, and fed, she said.â (Feminist Press, 2020) âKW
LIGHTNING ROUNDFrom the magazine, a taster-plate of noteworthy new titles.
âThe Sleepwalkersâ by Scarlett Thomas
Scarlett Thomasâs sharp, stylish thriller finds a pair of feuding honeymooners at a Greek hotel, where another coupleâs earlier disappearance looms increasingly large. (Simon & Schuster)
âThe Gardenâ by Clare Beams
In Clare Beamsâs teeming gothic, would-be mothers with a history of miscarriage flock to a Berkshires manor for experimental treatmentâand a mysterious walled garden works its own strange magic. (Doubleday)
âThe Audacityâ by Ryan Chapman
A scammy start-up, superyachts, âGuggenheimedâ as a verb: Ryan Chapmanâs delicious satire charts a career implosion that sends a husband to a private island and his wife into hiding. (Soho Press)
âTable for Twoâ by Amor Towles
From Amor Towles, a collection of six NYC-based short stories plus a novella that revisits the thread of his 2011 debut, Rules of Civility: A young woman seeks her fortune in 1930s Los Angeles. (Viking)
âReal Americansâ by Rachel Khong
Spanning three continents and as many generationsâChinaâs Cultural Revolution to San Francisco, 2030âRachel Khongâs precise, tender family history considers inheritance of all kinds. (Knopf)
âThe Cemetary of Untold Storiesâ by Julia Alvarez
A Dominican author buries her unfinished manuscriptsâbut her characters are unwilling to go gently into that good night, in Julia Alvarezâs inventive latest. (Algonquin) âKW