海角大神

The 10 best books of June bring hope and insight

Humans are fundamentally good, Longfellow deserves a reappraisal, and butterflies are marvels of aerodynamics 鈥 these topics make for sparkling June reading. 

|
Courtesy of Simon & Schuster
鈥淎n Elegant Woman鈥 by Martha McPhee, Scribner, 416 pp.; and 鈥淭he Language of Butterflies: How Thieves, Hoarders, Scientists, and Other Obsessives Unlocked the Secrets of the World's Favorite Insect鈥 by Wendy Williams, Simon & Schuster, 240 pp.

1. The Voyage of the Morning Light聽by Marina Endicott

An intrepid young woman journeys with her half-sister and captain brother-in-law aboard a Nova Scotia merchant ship to the South Seas in 1912. Awash with vistas of beauty, the novel follows the deep pull of the characters toward harmony, justice, and home. The tale shimmers with intelligence and humor.

2. The Vanishing Half聽by Brit Bennett

Courtesy of Penguin Random House
鈥淭he Vanishing Half鈥 by Brit Bennett, Riverhead Books, 343 pp.

Twin sisters take very different paths in this gripping exploration of race, identity, and the meaning of home. A poignant combination of mystery and history, the novel moves as briskly as a beach read while addressing issues of great weight. While the plot occasionally hinges on unlikely coincidences and surprises, the same could be said for the nation and the times that are chronicled in this book.

3. An Elegant Woman聽by Martha McPhee

Set adrift by their parents in the difficult world of 1910s America, two young sisters anchor themselves by embellishing their family myths; in alternating chapters, their descendants work to understand their legacy. Flashes of gleaming prose illuminate Martha McPhee鈥檚 novel, which is rooted in her own family history and offers much insight, if you have time to linger.

4. The Mountains Wild聽by Sarah Stewart Taylor

This gripping mystery introduces Maggie D鈥橝rcy, a top-notch Long Island homicide detective whose cousin vanished in Ireland 23 years ago. The book鈥檚 intriguing characters spiral through multiple timelines, plot twists, and lush Irish settings, and Maggie鈥檚 quest to finally learn the truth runs parallel to her hopes of reuniting with a lost love.

5. Cross of Snow聽by Nicholas A. Basbanes

The poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow aren鈥檛 in great fashion today, but in the first major biography of the fabled New England poet in many years, Nicholas A. Basbanes argues that Longfellow is starting to make a comeback. His exhaustively researched account of Longfellow鈥檚 life and career should give that reappraisal a boost.

6. Union聽by Colin Woodard

Historian Colin Woodard tells not the story of how America became a nation, but rather of how America crafted its own version of its national history, and how that national mythology has changed over the decades.聽

7. The Language of Butterflies聽by Wendy Williams

In this fascinating book, Wendy Williams not only lovingly relates the variety and natural history of butterflies around the world, but also shares with readers the weird and wonderful stories of the people who have chased, studied, and explained butterflies over the centuries.

8. The Cubans聽by Anthony DePalma

Former New York Times foreign correspondent Anthony DePalma tells the vivid story of communism through the eyes of several generations of Cubans. He includes telling details, such as the pantomime of stroking imaginary beards before criticizing the government, to avoid retribution for mentioning Castro鈥檚 name. DePalma shows what life was like, and is like, for Cubans.

9. Humankind聽by Rutger Bregman

Courtesy of Hachette Book Group
鈥淗umankind: A Hopeful History鈥 by Rutger Bregman, Little, Brown and Company, 461 pp.

Rutger Bregman puts forth a 鈥渞adical idea鈥: that 鈥渕ost people, deep down, are pretty decent.鈥 In a chatty, engaging style, the Dutch historian sifts through academic studies and reassesses historical events to support his feel-good thesis 鈥 one that, he notes, ought to have far-reaching implications for how we run our workplaces, schools, and prisons.

10. The Brothers York聽by Thomas Penn

Thomas Penn puts an irresistible personal face on the legendary Wars of the Roses between the houses of York and Lancaster by focusing on the tempestuous brothers at the heart of the conflict.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to The 10 best books of June bring hope and insight
Read this article in
/Books/2020/0622/The-10-best-books-of-June-bring-hope-and-insight
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe