The beginning of April feels a little like taking the training wheels off after winter鈥攎aybe we should wait one more weekend to store the skis?听But听the end of April feels like barreling full speed ahead into backpacking and climbing trips, summer race training, and hammock lounging. But we already had plenty of momentum going when it came to reading stacks of books and binge-listening great new podcasts. (No joke:听online managing editor Abigail Wise听got halfway through the podcast听within a day of its release.) These picks made a lasting impression.
What We Read听
I've been reading , T.C. Boyle鈥檚 2015 novel about guns, sovereign citizens, and violence. Set in the forests of Northern California, it follows a few converging story lines鈥攁 retired school principal who kills a mugger while on vacation, his mentally ill survivalist son, and听his听conspiracy theorist older girlfriend. It鈥檚听Boyle at his best.听Shockingly inventive language, perfect pace, plots that keep you moving from the next page to the next. I鈥檓 50 pages from the end and听already regretting it鈥檚 not longer.
鈥擩onah Ogles, articles editor
This month, one of my favorite newsletters,听 , launched a weekend edition where they report an original story, rather than sharing curated links and the latest business and tech news.听I especially loved the 听on the unlimited, first-class ticket for life American Airlines sold in the early 1980s. They needed a lot of money, and fast, so they came up with this inventive offering and sold 28 passes for $250,000 each. But what AA failed to account for were 鈥渟uper-travelers鈥澨齱ho would take over 10,000 flights in 25 years, and cost the airline millions. If you don鈥檛 already subscribe, I highly recommend it.听
鈥擩enny Earnest, social media manager
Is it sad that I read all day and go home and read more at night?听My excuse: I鈥檝e been following the of famous folks posted regularly by bookstore听One Grand听and decided to tackle the favorites of , whom I admire. Her choices include听a lot of inherent feminism and storylines involving coming-of-age revelations, and the authors hail from various parts of the globe. I loved Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie鈥檚听听and Joan Didion鈥檚听, Alice Munro鈥檚听听(a fantastic finale!), and听听(what a great title) by the late Irish novelist Elizabeth Bowen. I hated Virginia Woolf鈥檚听, though. Still have another five to get through, and then maybe I鈥檒l hit the lists of Tom Hanks or Alice Waters.听听
鈥擳asha Zemke, copy editor
I read Ken Kesey鈥檚 novel听One Flew Over the Cuckoo鈥檚 Nest听years ago,听but I hadn鈥檛 heard of the Oregonian鈥檚 second book, , till recently. I鈥檓 about three-quarters of the way through it now (and it鈥檚 a big one, at over 600 pages), and I have to say, I like it even better than the first. Kesey dedicates long, lyrical paragraphs to descriptions of the Pacific Northwest鈥檚 dense forests, which become as much a character in the book as the human protagonists鈥攁 tough logging clan staking out a claim on the banks of an Oregon river outside the fictional town of Wakonda. It's a world to get lost in during long hours reading on the beach this summer.听
鈥擜xie Navas, executive editor
What We Listened To
I binge-listened to all the episodes of 鈥,鈥澨齛 series from WNYC and听The Cut听about women and the internet. The cast of interviewees is totally stacked on its own (think Christiane Amanpour, Barbara Kruger, etc.), plus听host听Manoush Zomorodi also has big-name writers from听The Cut, like Ann Friedman and Allison P. Davis, come on to discuss the interviews afterward. The conversations cover a wide variety of subjects鈥攑olitics, art, media, tech, and more鈥攕o there's something for everyone, even if you're not the kind of person who鈥檚 constantly scrolling through Twitter (as I am). I鈥檓 surprised the series hasn't gotten more buzz鈥攄on鈥檛 sleep on it!
鈥擬olly Mirhashem, associate editor听
Kacey Musgraves鈥檚 new album, , makes me feel like I鈥檓 13 and listening to Taylor Swift鈥檚 namesake album for the first time. Musgraves has a way of dealing in well-worn themes like crushes, love, and heartbreak that casts everything in a fresh light. Perfect for driving through the desert with the windows down, crying your way through a breakup, or dancing around the kitchen. I never thought I鈥檇 care for country-pop after middle school, but I was hooked when I heard听鈥淪pace Cowboy,鈥澨齛 genius, genre-blending breakup song. Then I listened to the whole darn thing three times in a row. The first track, 鈥淪low Burn,鈥 is another standout.
鈥擜bbie听Barronian, assistant editor
Remember MTV鈥檚 The Real World, in which听a bunch of strangers lived in a house and we watched to see how they got along? Gimlet鈥檚 new podcast听听is like that, except on fake Mars. That is, a remote Hawaiian volcano听that apparently , where NASA sent six volunteers for a year-long experiment in 2015.听I鈥檝e listened to three episodes so far, and I鈥檓 hooked. Host Lynn Levy introduces the听participants and helps us听understand why they鈥檙e there:听Crew commander Carmel from Whitefish, Montana, loves the outdoors and wants to see what kind of plants will grow in HI-SEAS, the name of the habitat. Growing up, engineer Andrzej听watched the cheesy 鈥80s film听Space Camp听and decided he wanted to become an astronaut. The crew sends听recordings to Levy, and she mixes it all with听recordings from real space missions throughout history, giving listeners a听feel for what it鈥檚 like to eat, exercise, and unclog a toilet in space. For someone who grew up going to space camp鈥攏ot the cool kind with flashy gadgets like zero-gravity machines, but the ultra nerdy kind where we were听quizzed on facts about the papier-m芒ch茅 planets we crafted鈥攖his podcast is the dream.听
鈥擜bigail Wise, online managing editor
I've spent the last few days listening to , a jazz pianist and singer who passed away at 94听earlier this month. If you鈥檙e familiar with听Schoolhouse Rock!, then you鈥檙e familiar with Dorough鈥檚 music. He composed many of its songs, including the classic 鈥淭hree Is a Magic Number.鈥澨鼳lthough that鈥檚 his most recognizable credit, he also played with Miles Davis and is responsible in part for bringing together a community of jazz musicians in the Poconos. You could walk into the Deer Head Inn, a jazz club/inn in Delaware Water Gap, Pennsylvania, and see a hiker or two from the Appalachian Trail, a top-notch jazz performance, and Dorough hanging out at the bar.听
鈥擶ill Gordon, assistant editor
What We Watched and Otherwise Experienced
The Giro d鈥橧talia starts on May 4, and I鈥檒l actually be able to watch the race live from my desk. That鈥檚 because听 is expanding and adding events like the Giro, Tour de Suisse, Amstel Gold, and Il听Lombardia to its streaming schedule. In the past, bike race coverage was a mess: a weird mix of illegal streams, paid apps, and way-too-short TV highlights. Some races like the Tour de France aren鈥檛 available on FloBikes, but the company鈥檚 expanded schedule is a move in the right direction for fans. It鈥檚 not cheap, but for $150 a year or $30 a month it鈥檚 finally possible to watch some of the most exciting races of the year in one place.
鈥擲cott Rosenfield, digital general manager
I鈥檓 just over two decades late in watching , but I finally did after a visit to the Very Large Array听in southern New Mexico, which features fairly prominently in the movie. Contact is about an hour and a half too long (much of it spent on an unconvincing romance between Jodie Foster and Matthew McConaughey) but it does make a great case for getting a Ph.D. in astronomy. Foster鈥檚 character, inspired by real life SETI director Jill Tarter, gets to travel to the lush surroundings听of Puerto Rico鈥檚 Arecibo Observatory, the dramatic desert of听the VLA,听and鈥攕poiler alert鈥攁 wormhole. I struggled (with enthusiasm!) through astrobiology lectures, but Contact has me wishing I were smarter so I could live in such beautiful locales and spend my days listening to outer space.
鈥擡rin Berger, senior editor
After watching the season two premier of , I am very excited about the robot buffalo. Longhorn cattle appeared as glorious valkyries alongside badass heroine host Maeve in a season-two ; the buffalo made a brief but impactful debut in the premier. And given that a is also showcased in the season鈥檚 , and that this is going to be an official , I鈥檓 keeping my fingers crossed for a stampede reckoning that cries vengeance for a thousand sport hunts.
鈥擜leta Burchyski, senior copy editor