Best Books of 2022: Part 1

Best Books of 2022: Part 1

I had missed my regular midyear post, but I just can’t let 2022 pass without posting my favorite books from this year at all! So here is part 1 of 2 of the best reads in 2022.


 

1. Call Us What We Carry by Amanda Gorman

Buy at: Amazon | Bookshop

Like the book The Year We Learned to Fly in my latest favorite children’s books list, I love the idea of having selections in our family library that mark the historic and human experience of COVID-19 over the past few years, sort of as a memorial to this unique experience. Gorman’s poetry feels grounded and present, acknowledging the pain, struggle, loss, loneliness, as well as hope and rest that the pandemic had brought into our world. It is such a gift to have poetry express our felt experience in language.

Considered a classic, this book is a primer on what prophets and prophetic ministry are, per Walter Brueggemann’s formulation. It poses prophetic ministry as a contrast, an antithesis, an “alternative to the consciousness and perception of the dominant culture around us.” Prophecy is pathos, compassion, sensitivity to suffering and death. The insights in this book are so profound, it’s impossible to encapsulate them in a soundbite. But the message is highly relevant and contemporary in our current world.

I read this book together with the previous selection, which made for a cohesive and profound reading experience. They reveal the prophetic power of keeping the Sabbath that stands in defiant contrast to the endless pursuit of economic gain. Of resting, in contrast to the profit-chasing that tends to reduce human beings into commodities. As part of a community of faith that keeps the Sabbath, this book also made me think a lot about how some of our practices may lean more into the anxious kingdom of Pharaoh as oppose to the kingdom of rest… (more on this later, maybe). 

This selection is pretty specific to my community of faith, the Seventh-day Adventist Christian community. It’s an important historical overview of the church, its relationship to the state and its engagement in the public square since the 1800s. It’s a super fascinating book, helping us contextualize where we are today and how certain ideas came to be. History is always helpful to evaluate the present, to see that the present is never inevitable.

Truism: most people like to quote MLK Jr., but have never read a single work by the prolific man. I was that person not too long ago. This selection is not really part of his books, but is part of his writing (and speaking) legacy. In this audiobook, you’ll listen to the recordings of various MLK Jr. speeches over the many topics that he spoke about, the well known ones and the less known ones. There’s nothing quite as engulfing as listening to the voice of MLK Jr. himself and experiencing his soaring rhetoric. I let my then 4-year old son listen to some of the speeches after reading about MLK together and even he was enamored. Much recommended.

I really enjoyed the Vanishing Half, exploring the somewhat arbitrariness of race as it appears phenotypically. The story follows a pair of twin sisters who chooses to live in two different worlds, one as white and one as black, and these impact the lives of their descendants.

Favorite Books Lists

2024: Best Books of 2024 Part 1

2023: Best Books of 2023 Part 1, Best Books of 2023 Part 2.

2022: Best Books of 2022 Part 1, Best Books of 2022 Part 2.

2021: Best Books of 2021 Part 1, Best Books of 2021 Part 2.

2020: Best Books of 2020 Part 1, Best Books of 2020 Part 2.

2019: Best Books of 2019 Part 1, Best Books of 2019 Part 2.

2018: Best Books of 2018 Part 1, Best Books of 2018 Part 2.

2017Best Books of 2017 Part 1, Best Books of 2017 Part 2.

2016Best Books of 2016 Part 1Best Books of 2016 Part 2.

2015Best Books of 2015 Part 1Best Books of 2015 Part 2.

 

*Amazon Product and Bookshop links on this blog are affiliate links, which means that each time you purchase something through those links, I get a small commission without you paying any extra. Of course you don’t have to use them, but if you want to chip-in towards content creation for this blog, I’d really appreciate it!

 

My Favorite Children’s Books: Part 6

My Favorite Children’s Books: Part 6

This post is part of the Favorite Children’s Books series. See all the posts in the series here.

 

I can’t believe it’s been over two years since the last post on my favorite children’s books! Do people still hang out on blogs? 

To make up for the long hiatus, this is a longer list than usual. Hopefully there’s something here for the special little humans in your life!

Giraffe Problems is a hilarious book about a giraffe who’s insecure about his neck. Jory John writes in a way that’s super fun to read, if you like doing voices and intonations when you read to your little ones. I have to say I crack myself up every time I read this one (and if I’m lucky, the kids will laugh too).

Amazon | Bookshop

A fun retelling of the story of Jesus calming the storm, this book is a favorite with my kids. They really enjoy the silly illustrations, and I have to say, I love when illustrators have fun with Bible stories. They don’t always have to be so serious, you know what I mean?

Amazon

This is the newest addition to the wonderful series by Andrea Beaty that has been part of my favorites since my first favorite children’s books post. It’s a sweet story of Aaron who finds his language in artistry.

Amazon | Bookshop

Do boys come pre-programmed to love trucks and trains? The Construction Site series is well-loved in our household and we have all the books in the series. The Merry and Bright one is a cute flap-book that will make a lovely gift for the truck-loving nugget in your life. We also love the recent Road Crew, Coming Through! Another cute Christmas-themed one is Construction Night on Christmas Night (although come to think of it, can be cynically interpreted as the capitalistic drive to work until the last minute before Christmas!).

Amazon | Bookshop

Singer and song-writer Ellie Holcomb writes another lovely book with nature-themed illustrations. The first one was featured in the fourth post of this favorite children’s books series.

Amazon | Bookshop

I found this little gem at an indie bookstore in Colorado, featuring local writer Nicole Magistro. It’s a whimsical story about the adventurous imagination of a girl that’s sure to give warm feelings to all book lovers.

Amazon | Bookshop

Who doesn’t love the Little Blue Truck series? The most recent additions to our library are the cute Christmas edition and the school edition.

Amazon | Bookshop

Now the next two books are for the nature lovers. I love this reflective book, which is a meditation of how enclosed indoors our modern lives are. This book is an invitation to go outside.

Amazon | Bookshop

Reading this book is like going on a nature tour through an ecosystem. Kate Messner brings us to discover the interconnectedness of plants and animals that call a mountain pond their home. I plan to get the other books in the series too.

Amazon | Bookshop

Last but certainly not least, Jacqueline Woodson writes another poetic children’s book that holds space for the pandemic experience that the world just went through (and still going through). For your loved ones who struggled with being at home during lockdown, this book will resonate deeply and provide a soothing balm to that episode of our lives. I love the idea of having literature in our family library that marks the historic and human experience of COVID-19. My kids are still young, so they may not remember what the world went through. But in future years, this book will serve as a vehicle for us to talk about and reflect upon what happened, and how it impacted us.

Amazon | Bookshop

To support independent bookstores, shop these books from my Bookshop.org list.

*Amazon Product links on this blog are Amazon Affiliate links, which means that each time you purchase something through those links, I get a small commission without you paying any extra. Of course you don’t have to use them, but if you want to chip-in towards content creation for this blog, I’d really appreciate it!

*Bookshop.org links on this page are also affiliate links, which means that I get a small commission if you purchase from these links, which also help independent bookstores across the country.

Best Books of 2021: Part 2

Best Books of 2021: Part 2

Hello, weary souls. Anyone else fatigued by the pandemic?

As 2021 closes, I just want to hold space for those of you who are in pain, physically and/or emotionally, in grief, in mourning, or in overall “this sucks” feeling. Life with Covid seems to demand a certain kind of resilience, one that knows not only to buckle down and survive something intense, but one that also knows how to bear a persistent chronic condition and yet… still… live. Each pandemic year calls to me to let go of the world we knew before and to embrace the unknowable and uncertain world that is coming and is already here.

For 2022, I wish for more grace for you and me. Grace to live and leave each day, and then start anew. Grace to be disappointed and grace to be soothed. Grace to leave nostalgia that brings pain and grace to embrace tomorrow. Grace to find bravery along with our anxieties. Grace for each other, whether near or far.

May 2022 bring some healing to your soul. Be gentle to yourself. Be gentle to those around you. And have a Happy Better New Year.


Here are some books from the second half of 2021 that gave me life.

1. Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation by Kristin Kobes Du Mez

Buy at: Amazon | Bookshop

Jesus and John Wayne is a follow-up read to a selection from the first half of 2021 on women and womanhood. I think it does a great job in traversing the history of how the idea of rugged masculinity developed in the Evangelical Christian subculture and pointing out the cultural moments that defined the idea. Honestly, some parts of this book made me want to throw up (literally), because some of the toxicity described in the book was very recognizable.

Special note for book people: I also appreciated some of Du Mez’s commentary on a number of religious books, many of which I’ve consumed in the past. You may find this aspect of the book enlightening too.

This beautiful and short book is a behind-the-curtain look on how Robert Caro, the master biographer whose hefty volumes on Lyndon Johnson are–after thousands of pages–still not done, approaches and does his work. The level of depth that Caro immerses himself in understanding his subject is so astounding. It goes to show that there is no shortcut to producing something great.

Brown’s articulation of the weariness one suffers from being the lone Black person, the lone minority in a White world is so poignant that I, though differing in circumstances, found great resonance. This is one of the books that brought me healing this year.

In this powerful book, James Cone parallels the two dreadful symbols–the cross and the lynching tree–in the experience and history of the African American community. From the publisher’s note: “For African Americans, the image of Jesus, hung on a tree to die, powerfully grounded their faith that God was with them, even in the suffering of the lynching era.” This is a powerful example of how the African American spiritual heritage is a tremendous gift for all faith traditions and deserves to be platformed more in mainstream Christianity. 

I am very late in reading Rachel Held Evans, but when I was searching for something that could express my recent experiences with church, the joys and disappointments included, my thoughts on church–what I crave the church could be for me, my peers, and my generation, Searching for Sunday almost nailed everything on the head. It was almost like reading an epistle to the millennials. 

I’ve had many conversations with friends who lament the performative aspect of going to church without authenticity. Where you really are not sure who to turn to talk about your struggles, questions, and doubts. Where the framing of ideas is more culture war than Jesus. And these are people who are in the church. Yet many churches are wondering why young people are not coming… I suspect I’ll have more to say on this later on. But if you’re someone who has been looking and not finding belonging at church, know that you are not alone. 

Favorite Books Lists

2024: Best Books of 2024 Part 1

2023: Best Books of 2023 Part 1, Best Books of 2023 Part 2.

2022: Best Books of 2022 Part 1, Best Books of 2022 Part 2.

2021: Best Books of 2021 Part 1, Best Books of 2021 Part 2.

2020: Best Books of 2020 Part 1, Best Books of 2020 Part 2.

2019: Best Books of 2019 Part 1, Best Books of 2019 Part 2.

2018: Best Books of 2018 Part 1, Best Books of 2018 Part 2.

2017Best Books of 2017 Part 1, Best Books of 2017 Part 2.

2016Best Books of 2016 Part 1Best Books of 2016 Part 2.

2015Best Books of 2015 Part 1Best Books of 2015 Part 2.

 

*Amazon Product and Bookshop links on this blog are affiliate links, which means that each time you purchase something through those links, I get a small commission without you paying any extra. Of course you don’t have to use them, but if you want to chip-in towards content creation for this blog, I’d really appreciate it!