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Summer can't last forever, but our good taste in books will.
Summer can't last forever, but our good taste in books will. (Photo: rawpixel.com)

Our Editors’ Culture Picks of the Month

The books, movies, music, and podcasts we couldn't stop talking about

Published: 
Summer can't last forever, but our good taste in books will.
(Photo: rawpixel.com)

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! .

We鈥檝e been doing a lot of reading and listening in September, because who has time to sit down and watch things when you need to pack all the fun into the final days of summer?

What We Read

I read , by Gabriel Tallent. A note to the reader: This book is dark. A conspiracy nut/survivalist-type father is raising his daughter, Turtle, alone on the Mendocino coast, where he both trains her to become an expert marksman and outdoorswoman and repeatedly rapes her. Grim, yes. But Turtle is one of the all-time great characters in literature. To watch her grapple with her future, her father, her place in the world, makes for the most arresting book I鈥檝e read in years. I can鈥檛 stop telling people about it. Tallent鈥檚 description of the California coast is breathtaking, too.

鈥擩onah Ogles, articles editor

Quartz launched a newsletter this month called , which zeros in on a different topic every afternoon. I鈥檝e been reading it since its launch and can confirm it鈥檚 something to be obsessed with. Topics thus far have included fatbergs, 808 drum machines, and elevator buttons.

鈥擩enny Earnest, assistant social media editor

I just read , a book of short stories by Jenny Zhang. Based on the early reviews, my expectations for the book were pretty high, but that turned out to be a nonissue. Each story is written from the perspective of a different Chinese-American girl, and Zhang brings poignant observations and a blunt sense of humor to all of them. Her characters are endearing and often hilarious, even when tackling heavier elements of their experiences as immigrants. I鈥檝e been impulsively buying books since I finished this one but haven鈥檛 found anything else that I鈥檓 as excited to read.

鈥擬olly Mirhashem, associate editor

I鈥檓 admittedly behind the times on this one, but I cannot stop reading Siddhartha Mukherjee鈥檚 . The Pulitzer Prize鈥搘inning book is a biography of cancer that鈥檚 as gripping as it is terrifying.

鈥擲cott Rosenfield, digital editorial director

I鈥檝e been reading Christine Burke鈥檚 new book, . Christine has been teaching yoga for 17 years and has an awesome studio in Los Angeles called Liberation Yoga. I鈥檝e always wanted to go, but now I can get a taste of it from this book, which is set up with really clear instructions and helpful photos for each pose. (Full disclosure: Christine is the daughter of 国产吃瓜黑料 founder Larry Burke, and I鈥檝e known and admired her for years.)

鈥擬ary Turner, deputy editor

I finally read John McPhee鈥檚 Coming into the Country this year, and it gave me this jealous feeling that I鈥檒l never see anything with as much detail and clarity and sharp sense for the interesting parts as he does. Unfortunately, John McPhee is not as enamored with himself as the rest of us, so he rarely does interviews. Except for this week! Sam Anderson鈥檚 of McPhee in the New York Times Magazine is fun and confirms that McPhee actually is as scarily smart as he sounds. I鈥檓 now excited to read McPhee鈥檚 new book, , which is all about his writing process. Probably won鈥檛 help my jealousy.

鈥擡rin Berger, associate editor

I鈥檓 reading the newly released, 1,146-page, 17th edition of the . Exciting, right? Yet it鈥檚 essential for anyone who works, as I do, in a word factory, extremely useful for writers aspiring to be one of the next generation鈥檚 senior editorial darlings, and a nerdy source of linguistic trivia for the next time you need to entertain a crowd of English majors. Here鈥檚 a little-known nugget, sure to impress: The verb 鈥渄ecimate,鈥 which dates back to Roman times, literally means 鈥渢o kill every tenth person.鈥 You know you can fit that into conversation somehow.

鈥擳asha Zemke, copy editor

What We Listened To

After Harvey, and Irma, and Maria, and Charlottesville, I鈥檓 listening to Krista Tippett鈥檚 podcasts and , hoping I can replace my daily diet of tweets.

鈥擡lizabeth Hightower Allen, features editor

I, along with much of the world, have been digging Odesza鈥檚 new album, . It鈥檚 not as immediately catchy or revolutionary as their first album, In Return, but that鈥檚 often the case with second releases that flow into an already established sound. Nonetheless, there are still some banger songs, several of which have been the soundtrack of my daily bike commutes and a recent trip to California. I鈥檝e yet to see the band live鈥攂ecause I鈥檓 a dad of two and have no time鈥攂ut there鈥檚 no one else I鈥檇 rather pay $100 (maybe even $200) to blow my mind onstage.

鈥擩akob Schiller, online gear director

Mike Powell has been a fixture in the ski industry for more than two decades and has worked for brands like K2, Red Bull, and Powder magazine. In his weekly podcast, , his humorous interviews with professional athletes shed light on the past, present, and future of the action-sports industry.

鈥擝en Fox, assistant editor

I am a shameless First Aid Kit fan. I never even got tired of 鈥淢y Silver Lining鈥 after its run in ski season 2014.聽So I was very excited when the Swedish folk-pop duo came out with their first single in three years. 鈥溾 has the expansive harmonies, twangy guitar, and percussive beat that will scratch the First Aid Kit itch you forgot you had. Fingers crossed that this means a new album is around the corner!

鈥擫uke Whelan, assistant editor

What We Watched, Read, and Listened to at the Same Time

I鈥檝e been liking on PBS. I learn something new every single episode. It鈥檚 incredible.

鈥擬adeline Kelty, deputy photo editor

There鈥檚 something about Vietnam in the zeitgeist right now. Ken Burns鈥 and Lynn Novick鈥檚 The Vietnam War (on PBS) pairs really well with new podcast , which features audio of President Johnson calling friends, advisers, and cabinet members to discuss the war from its beginning to the end of his presidency. Tack on Michael Herr鈥檚 and Denis Johnson鈥檚 , and you have a great primer on one of the most consequential events in American history.

鈥擩.翱.

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