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Some of our favorite nonfiction authors are dropping new books that explore everything from climate disaster to unusual acts of endurance.
Some of our favorite nonfiction authors are dropping new books that explore everything from climate disaster to unusual acts of endurance. (Photo: Hannah McCaughey)

The 5 Smart Books You Need to Read This Fall

Some of our favorite nonfiction authors dropped new books that explore everything from climate disaster to unusual acts of endurance

Published: 
Some of our favorite nonfiction authors are dropping new books that explore everything from climate disaster to unusual acts of endurance.
(Photo: Hannah McCaughey)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

This fall we were spoiled by听five of our all-time favorite authors releasing new books.听They range from essay compilations听to memoir听to science writing, but all boast lyrical prose that explores听what it means to be a human during these strange times.听

If You鈥檙e Body Positive

books
(Courtesy Doubleday)

The Body: A Guide for Occupants,听by Bill Bryson听

A huge amount of research went into , covering everything from the skin and the skeleton to aging, reproduction, and death. But Bryson has a unique ability to camouflage his hard work and depth of knowledge with a light and self-effacing voice, which fans of his Appalachian Trail classic, , will instantly recognize. He uses it to deliver an avalanche of surprising and eminently sharable facts about how our bodies鈥斺渁 product of three billion years of evolutionary tweaks鈥濃攁re built. (Ever wondered how many species of bacteria live in your belly button? Read on.) Like your favorite teacher, Bryson is someone who loves his subject. Before he鈥檚 finished, he鈥檒l make you love it, too.听($30, Doubleday)


If You Are F鈥搆ing Freaked Out by Climate Change

books
(Courtesy Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

We Are the Weather,听听by Jonathan Safran Foer听

Foer begins his newest book as a climate-based argument for eliminating meat, eggs, and dairy from the American diet. But the novelist and is really too thoughtful and self-doubting to stop the conversation there. Probing the contradictions that seem built into how we talk, think, and write about global warming, he concludes that the only way we鈥檒l actually do anything about the crisis is through a collective embrace of personal responsibility. 鈥淭he ways we live our lives, the actions we take and don鈥檛 take, can feed the systemic problems,鈥 he writes, 鈥渁nd they can also change them.鈥 is not just a polemic, it鈥檚 also a vigorous and unflinching meditation on Foer鈥檚 own status as a father鈥攁nd a descendant of Holocaust survivors鈥攖rying to answer for his role in a man-made disaster.听($25; Farrar, Straus and Giroux)


If You Want Training Advice from Animals

books
(Courtesy Knopf)

Running with Sherman,听by Christopher McDougall听

Not everyone would understand the impulse to rescue a donkey from a hoarder, load it with mining tools, and lead it on a trail run in the Rocky Mountains. But burro racing is a real thing, involving real competitors who travel side by side with stubborn quadrupeds over distances that range from a few miles to an ultramarathon. To the author of , now living with his family in Amish country, there was no better way for him to learn about humanity鈥檚 relationship with working animals than to train an equine named Sherman for the sport鈥檚 world championship in Fairplay, Colorado. If you can forgive the reliance on dad jokes, you鈥檒l find a smart critique of the culture of conventional American sports. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got one hope of getting to the finish line,鈥 McDougall writes, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 to forget about dominance and ego and discover the power of sharing and caring.鈥澨($28, Knopf)


If You Feel Like a Wanderer听

books
(Courtesy Penguin Press)

Travel Light, Move Fast,听by Alexandra Fuller听

Fuller was born in England, raised in southern Africa, and resides in Wyoming. She has a gift for depicting the forces that compel people to move, and in her new memoir鈥攚ritten shortly after her father died in a hospital in Budapest鈥攕he reflects on how an itinerant farmer who chased zebras and drank to excess could also be a nurturing and perspicacious parent. Ultimately he helped her appreciate the value of restlessness and impermanence: although grief strikes her as 鈥渁 place between countries, a holding pattern, a purgatory,鈥 the author nevertheless emerges from it with a clearer understanding of what it means to have a home.听($27, Penguin Press)


If You鈥檙e Trying to Make Sense of It All

books
(Courtesy Sarah Crichton)

Erosion,听by Terry Tempest Williams听

Few writers can match Williams鈥檚 talent for capturing big, abstract notions of environmental justice and connecting them to the lived experiences of individuals, families, and communities. In this collection of essays, written between 2012 and 2019, the lifelong activist and educator celebrates the power of friendship and dialogue to bring about authentic change. 鈥淲e tell stories that remind us we will resist,鈥 she writes, 鈥渁nd insist that our communities be built upon the faith we have in each other.鈥 Crashing oil and gas lease auctions and visiting tea ceremonies in the desert, Williams lyrically depicts global disputes over climate change and public lands through her own community of art making, collective organizing, and prayer.听($27, Sarah Crichton)听

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