Book Talk ... Continuing a Conversation ...
Friday, May 15, 2026
Good Joy, Bad Joy by Mikki Brammer
GOOD JOY, BAD JOY by Mikki Brammer (The Collected Regrets of Clover) introduces
readers to Joy Bridport, someone who at first
seems truly too good to be true. Joy invariably looks on the bright side, gives
others the benefit of the doubt, and sacrifices her own needs to help others.
Her life, however, gets turned upside down (look at that cover!) when she learns
that her best friend of eighty years, Hazel, has terminal cancer. Brammer shares
Joy’s innermost thoughts about her parents’ values, her troubled relationship
with her own daughter (Elizabeth) and grandson Finn, as well as a new
friendship with Rowan, a neighbor recently released from jail. Joy starts to
take some risks, and the lack of consequences will have readers nodding in
agreement about how older women often are invisible. GOOD JOY, BAD JOY is a rather sad story
and while Joy grows, it can be a difficult read emotionally. Like “good” Joy, Booklist
describes this novel more positively as “a heartwarming, poignant story of
self-discovery and hope.” Book groups will find much to discuss.
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Moonlight Murder by Uzma Jalaluddin
MOONLIGHT MURDER by Uzma Jalaluddin is her second Detective Aunty novel and I found it even more enjoyable than the first, although also a bit slow-paced in parts. Kauser Khan, the main character, is an older widow whose heritage is Muslim and South Asian. She lives in Toronto where her son (Ali, then 15) was killed by a hit and run driver eighteen years ago. The story revolves around her belated investigation of his death and the more recent death of another young teen, Qasim, close friend of her granddaughter, Maleeha. As the beautiful cover illustrates, the culture of the tightly knit community in the Golden Crescent neighborhood of Toronto is integral to the story and Jalaluddin brings to life secondary characters like Kauser’s daughter; old friends May (“Who knew that a shared love for Louise Penny and the Public Library would lead to a friend for life?”), Fatima, and Nasir (also a potential romantic interest); the local police; and several high school students, including the brother, Kamal, and the best friend, Joquiem, of Qasim as well as some of his teachers. The dual mysteries (“Two parallel stories, separated by decades and circumstance, linked by place and community. Both deaths assumed accidents. Both with unanswered questions about motive, story, and intention…”) offer suspense and surprise. Kauser is an appealing character who relies on her faith and also still grapples with grief (“It felt good to make plans for the future. It felt good to feel capable of thinking beyond the next few days. She had lived her life in survival mode for so long, wrestling with the ghosts of death, loss, and grief, … but she could feel something shift inside her now, at last.”). Read this series in order as you anticipate the next title.
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
The Flag Was Still There by McKean and Bennett
THE FLAG WAS STILL THERE by David McKean and M. Todd Bennett is a scholarly work which traces “A
History of the American Experiment in Five Anniversaries:” 1776, 1826, 1876,
1926, and 1976. THE FLAG WAS STILL THERE
received a positive review from Kirkus and praise from well-known
historians like Douglas Brinkley and Walter Isaacson. However, it is fairly dense and would be daunting
for our high school students, even those enrolled in AP US History. The
reoccurring patterns (discrimination, nativism, corruption) and “inflection points” beg to
be documented in a more accessible form – what interesting, informative, and
necessary conversations they could prompt as the nation will soon be
celebrating 250 years. Kudos to McKean, a former U.S. ambassador to Luxembourg,
and Bennett, a professor of history at East Carolina University, for highlighting
these key issues.
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Open To Work by Ryan Roslansky and Aneesh Raman
OPEN TO WORK by Ryan Roslansky (LinkedIn CEO) and Aneesh Raman (Chief Economic Opportunity Officer at LinkedIn) is heartfelt advice about “How to Get Ahead in the Age of AI.” The authors point to how in the industrial age “standardization was the point. When AI handles the standard, though, things start to flip. Suddenly your differences aren't limitations. They're your competitive advantage.” They relate stories of Nilofer Merchant (consultant who coined the term “onlyness”); John Henry (founded a dry-cleaning service at 19 and sold it two years later for a million dollars); and Leena Nair (CEO of Chanel) to illustrate how important it can be to build on one’s unique strengths and experiences. They stress “distinctly human capabilities which AI cannot replicate” and the interaction amongst these 5Cs: curiosity, courage, creativity, compassion, and communication. They say, “As you get going, remember that it's OK to pause, restart, or change direction. The key is just to keep moving.” OPEN TO WORK will encourage readers to experiment with AI due to its conversational tone, thoughtful prompts, and helpful exercises (e.g., listing twelve top tasks sorting them into one of three buckets: (1) routine tasks that AI can do alone; (2) tasks to do together with AI tools and (3) uniquely human tasks, generally involving emotional intelligence). In fact, the final chapter includes a detailed, practical 30-60-90-day plan for getting started with AI, complete with examples and coaching. Over twenty percent of OPEN TO WORK is devoted to Notes and an Index. Additional interviews with Ryan Roslansky are available on the podcast The Path.
Saturday, May 9, 2026
I am Not a Robot by Joanna Stern
I AM NOT A ROBOT
by Joanna Stern (former technology writer
for The Wall Street Journal) is subtitled “My Year Using AI to Do
(Almost) Everything” and looks at a variety of areas (e.g., health, travel,
communications) while using real world examples to showcase some potential
benefits and downsides of AI. For example, Stern spent time with a very
experienced radiologist and AI looking at mammogram and ultrasound images. It
was fascinating to hear the health professional praise AI. In contrast, when
she went to the dentist, AI was used as a crutch to justify recommending unnecessary
and expensive procedures. Bill Gates told her, “The foundation of AI advances
for healthcare are both in the discovery side and in the delivery side,”
referring to being able to speed up innovation and to offer more and better
explanations to patients. In fact, Stern interviewed “nearly two hundred people
– from everyday users to some of the most powerful voices in this industry,”
including Steve Mann (the “father” of
wearable computing), Sal Khan (educational technology leader), and Mustafa
Suleyman (Microsoft’s CEO) amongst others. She shares her thoughts in a variety
formats, often essentially bullet pointing ideas as when she describes her
experiences with a variety of wearables or her problems with relying on AI only
to answer texts and emails (that was a very short experiment). Stern explores
potential impacts on education through a visit to her alma mater, Union College
in Schenectady, New York, finding that teachers and students share concerns
about AI’s impact, especially on critical thinking skills. Stern’s writing
style is distinctive, and Publishers Weekly acknowledges that, saying, “Stern’s
balanced, clear-eyed assessments and crisp, funny prose (‘I was teetering on
the edge of the AI-byss’) make this stand out among the growing crowd of books
on AI.” Highly recommended.
Below is a 20 minute video interview dealing specifically with writing and researching I AM NOT A ROBOT, but if you are curious about Stern’s twelve years of tech reporting at The Wall Street Journal, check out a wider variety of videos.
Friday, May 8, 2026
How to Start by Jodi Kantor
HOW TO START by Jodi Kantor is subtitled “Discovering Your Life's Work” and is a
slender (112 pages) text intended to offer informative reading for the 18- to
25-year-olds in your life. Kantor, a Pulitzer Prize winning investigative
reporter for The New York Times, was asked to give the commencement
speech at Columbia and that, in turn, inspired this text. She writes about developing
craft (an often-slow accumulation of skill), identifying need, and the
interplay between the two: “The craft she is learning will change and refine
her assessment of that need. To meet that evolving vision, she will pursue
higher forms of craft -- more skilled, new tools. Fresh needs will emerge, of
the richness and strength of her craft will help her address the unexpected.” That
may be a bit abstract for many 20-somethings, but they will likely benefit from
Kantor’s acknowledgement of how universal their generation’s struggle is. HOW TO START is recommended by authors like Reid Hoffman (Superagency), Shonda
Rimes (Year of Yes), and Gretchen Rubin (The Happiness Project)
and this title also made me think of Tina Seelig’s What I Wish I Knew When I
was 20 (she has a new book, What I Wish I Knew about Luck, forthcoming
in June).
Jodi Kantor recently paired with Jennifer Breheny Wallace (Mattering) at a FAN session to discuss HOW TO START and the goals of financial stability, satisfaction (being connected to what one does), and contribution (how your career helps others). The recording will be available on the FAN (Family Action Network) website soon.
Thursday, May 7, 2026
AI for Good by Josh Tyrangiel
AI FOR GOOD by Josh Tyrangiel takes a generally positive stance as it describes “How Real People Are Using Artificial Intelligence to Fix Things That Matter.” Tyrangiel is a writer at The Atlantic and he uses examples from healthcare, government, and education to illustrate his points in this relatively short (272 pages) book. Citing practical case studies that center on The Cleveland Clinic, Operation Warp Speed, and Khan Academy; The Wall Street Journal notes that Tyrangiel writes that success “often hinges on a point person at the technology partner (e.g., OpenAI, Palantir) who combines technical fluency with the ability to inhabit a client’s challenges and understand the environment in which the technology must function.” Hence, a potentially transformative technology like AI may need to more gradually evolve for effective implementation; Tyrangiel also further develops the idea of institutional resistance in these complex environments which means battling “professional cultures, government policies, entrenched stakeholders, money, rivalries, emotions” and more. This tension (speed vs human values) makes it all the more important that we each better understand the technology; Tyrangiel asks his readers to “spend an afternoon with ChatGPT, Claude, or whatever equivalent you like” which will be “different from any previous interaction you’ve had with software.” He advocates making the technology your own and offers powerful suggestions like “make an AI summarize its own privacy policy in bullet points an eighth grader can understand” and “stay close to Team Human” by gauging who it is empowering. A thought-provoking critique.
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