THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW 3 New & Noteworthy READTHEBOOK I HAD a MISCARRIAGE: a MEMOIR, a MOVEMENT, by Jessica Zucker

THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW 3 New & Noteworthy READTHEBOOK I HAD a MISCARRIAGE: a MEMOIR, a MOVEMENT, by Jessica Zucker

ON THE FORCE Two books about the culture of policing in America WHY THE LONG FACE? Lucinda Rosenfeld looks at self-loathing literary heroines PLUS Charles Blow, Elizabeth Kolbert, Patricia Lockwood and audiobooks MARCH 14, 2021 CANNADAY CHAPMAN *3EB1* You Reap What You Sow drilling sites have left the fields fallow and the they get what they want, the villagers should HOW BEAUTIFUL WE WERE By Omar El-Akkad water poisoned. The residents of Kosawa want hold Pexton’s men as prisoners. the company gone and the land restored to what By Imbolo Mbue It’s a propulsive beginning, though one that 364 pp. Random House. $28. A KIND OF MORAL claustrophobia hangs over the it was before Pexton showed up, decades ago. feels at first as though it’s about to roam familiar opening pages of Imbolo Mbue’s sweeping and The company’s representatives say they’re do- ground — a tale of a casually sociopathic corpo- quietly devastating second novel, “How Beauti- ing everything they can, though their audience ration and the people whose lives it steamrolls. ful We Were.” In October of 1980, in the fictional knows it’s a lie — Pexton has the support of the By the end of the first chapter, I couldn’t help African village of Kosawa, representatives of an village head as well as the country’s dictator bracing for a long march toward one of two con- American oil company called Pexton have come and, with it, impunity. Nothing will be done. But clusions: the corporation’s inevitable victory, or to meet with the locals, whose children are dy- just as the meeting concludes, Konga, the village ing. Nearby, the company’s oil pipelines and madman, bursts in. He’s got another idea: Until CONTINUED ON PAGE 20 2 SUNDAY, MARCH 14, 2021 Book Review MARCH 14, 2021 A secret network of women. A Forgotten Fiction 26 The Shortlist Nonfiction True Crime Reviewed by Kate Tuttle 1 HOW BEAUTIFUL WE 11 TERROR TO THE WICKED History of WERE America’s First Trial by By Imbolo Mbue Jury That Ended a War and Reviewed by Omar Helped to Form a Nation Children’s Books Revenge. El-Akkad By Tobey Pearl Reviewed by Francis J. 22 AMBER & CLAY 8 BROTHER, SISTER, Bremer By Laura Amy Schlitz MOTHER, EXPLORER Illustrated by Julia Iredale By Jamie Figueroa 12 UNDER A WHITE SKY Reviewed by Natalie Reviewed by Esmeralda The Nature of the Future Haynes Santiago By Elizabeth Kolbert Reviewed by Helen 22 OH MY GODS! 9 Listen Up Macdonald By Stephanie Cooke and Audiobooks Insha Fitzpatrick Reviewed by Sebastian 13 TANGLED UP IN BLUE Illustrated by Modak Policing the American City Juliana Moon By Rosa Brooks Reviewed by George 10 NO ONE IS TALKING O’Connor ABOUT THIS WE OWN THIS CITY By Patricia Lockwood A True Story of Crime, Reviewed by Merve Emre Cops, and Corruption By Justin Fenton Features Reviewed by Maurice 15 THE BONE FIRE 7 By the Book Chammah By Gyorgy Dragoman Jo Ann Beard Reviewed by Rebecca 14 FOUR LOST CITIES Makkai 19 Essay A Secret History of the Heroines of Self-Hate Urban Age 16 KHALIL By Lucinda Rosenfeld By Annalee Newitz By Yasmina Khadra Reviewed by Russell Reviewed by Helon Habila Shorto 27 Graphic Review “Normal People,” by 21 WHAT’S MINE AND YOURS Sally Rooney 16 THE DEVIL YOU KNOW By Naima Coster By Walter Scott A Black Power Manifesto Reviewed by Lauren By Charles M. Blow Francis-Sharma Reviewed by Tanisha C. Ford 21 SEX WITH STRANGERS Etc. Stories 17 THE GOOD GIRLS 4 New & Noteworthy By Michael Lowenthal “Abold, edgy, An Ordinary Killing Reviewed by Brandon 6 Letters By Sonia Faleiro Taylor Reviewed by Nina 23 Best-Seller Lists accomplished debut!” Burleigh 23 Editors’ Choice 24 Inside the List —Kate Quinn, 18 ANIMAL, VEGETABLE, JUNK 24 Paperback Row author of The Alice Network A History of Food, From Sustainable to Suicidal By Mark Bittman Reviewed by Ted Genoways Available now TO SUBSCRIBE to the Book Review by mail, visit nytimes.com/getbookreview or call 1-800-631-2580 THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW 3 New & Noteworthy READTHEBOOK I HAD A MISCARRIAGE: A MEMOIR, A MOVEMENT, by Jessica Zucker. (Feminist Press, paper, THAT ' SSPARKINGAMOVEMENT $18.95.) The author, a psychologist specializ- ing in maternal mental health, struggled after her own pregnancy ended in miscarriage; this memoir seeks to destigmatize the issue. Now in Paperback SHAKING THE GATES OF HELL: A SEARCH FOR FAM- ILY AND TRUTH IN THE WAKE OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS REVOLUTION, by John Archibald. (Knopf, $28.) In this self-critical exposé of white privilege, a Birmingham News columnist born at the height of the civil rights movement examines his roots in a line of Methodist preachers. TAKING A LONG LOOK: ESSAYS ON CULTURE, LIT- ERATURE, AND FEMINISM IN OUR TIME, by Vivian Gornick. (Verso, $26.95.) Spanning five dec- ades from the 1970s on, this collection of previ- ously published work includes incisive as- sessments of Lore Segal, Mary McCarthy and James Salter, among others. THE PORNIFICATION OF AMERICA: HOW RAUNCH CULTURE IS RUINING OUR SOCIETY, by Bernadette Barton. (NYU, $24.95.) Zippy and well illustrated, this book persuasively argues that “equating hypersexualization with sex positivity is a form of Orwellian doublespeak.” THE NEW YORK TIMES COOKING NO-RECIPE RECI- PES, by Sam Sifton. (Ten Speed, paper, $28.) The first cookbook from The Times’s popular Cooking app is less a recipe collection than a spur to improvisation, with lavish photos. “[A] Melvillian showdown.” — THENEWYORKTIMESBOOKREVIEW “Breathtakingly exciting.” WHAT WE’RE READING —IANFRAZIER , AUTHOROF TRAVELS IN SIBERIA Growing up watching Bollywood movies might have primed me for romantic stories about people who look and sound like me. But that’s “Environmental writing as clear as the not entirely true, especially when fairness, caste, class and even body type dictate so much world’s most pristine waters .” of what is depicted. In the literary world, I find —THE WALL STREET JOURNAL myself instead turning to the Y.A. magic spun by Sandhya Menon. In THERE’S SOMETHING ABOUT SWEETIE, we have at the center Sweetie: a fat Indian girl who isn’t apologetic about who she is or how she looks, despite her mother’s efforts to convince her of the contrary. She goes against her family’s wishes without inhibitions, eventually finding love with Ashish. Together, EDITORS' PICK: The New York Times Book Review, they must figure out how to weigh family expectations against the Outside, The National Book Review, Forbes, and Amazon bliss of young love. Menon’s female characters always feel at once relatable and realistic, making it super easy to root for them. With lighthearted banter and a fierce brown girl at the helm, this book remains one of my top favorites to revisit in these difficult times. —PRIYA ARORA, SOCIAL EDITOR 4 SUNDAY, MARCH 14, 2021 THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW 5 50 Years in the OR Letters By Ron Whitchurch labels “one of the supreme Ron Whitchurch wrote ironies of American history.” this wildly entertaining Not at all. Defending a state’s November 2020 popular vote for book to offer a firsthand president is a far cry from what look at what happens Calhoun understood as “states’ rights.” South Carolina — in after patients are which Calhoun was a leading political figure for four decades anesthetized and what — did not even allow its citizens challenges the staff face to vote for president until after the Civil War, long after he died. in keeping them healthy So my Republican legislators and safe. who sought to nullify Pennsylva- nia’s popular vote — some even proposed that the Legislature 50 Years in the OR will give itself choose electors — are Cal- readers an intimate sense of houn’s heirs, not those of us demanding that “every vote what it’s like to be the only counts.” And just as the idea of person in the OR who knows Black people voting would have horrified the racist Calhoun, his the heartbeat-to-heartbeat From the cover of “Harpo Speaks!” heirs today objected above all to status of a surgical patient Philadelphia’s large African- American vote. at any given moment. The Toast of Moscow He was a fascinating, multital- ented man who led an extraordi- ROBERT SHAFFER Available on Amazon.com TO THE EDITOR: nary life. MECHANICSBURG, PA. I was pleased to see Jason Zino- 50yearsintheor.com RICHARD GALLAGHER Who Says man acknowledge “Harpo FISHKILL, N.Y. Speaks!,” by Harpo Marx, as the TO THE EDITOR: gold standard of the comedian Making History In Ibram X. Kendi’s By the Book memoir (Feb. 21). As a teenager interview (Feb. 28), one of the in the early ’60s, I got my hands TO THE EDITOR: questions asks: “How do you on the book and found it to be Discussing Robert Elder’s biog- advise readers to approach thoroughly entertaining. raphy of John C. Calhoun (Feb. books like ‘The Adventures of Particularly enjoyable is the 28), Andrew Delbanco writes Huckleberry Finn,’ books with chapter about Harpo’s trip to that in the wake of the Jan. 6 conflicted or hard-to-parse racial Russia in the fall of 1933. He insurrection, a study of the “ideo- attitudes?” logical father of the Confederacy ended up spending eight weeks There is nothing conflicted or may feel as welcome as an ex- there and put on shows that hard to parse about it. The novel humed corpse.” earned him standing ovations. is an unquestionable indictment But when it comes to official Posters that announced his ap- of racism as well as one of the approbation, Calhoun isn’t even pearances, written in Cyrillic, greatest studies of human nature interred.

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