David Brooks interviewed Nicholas Epley at a Family Action Network session on May 21 and that video will be posted shortly on their website. A favorite quote? They referred to the idea that “everyone you ever meet knows something you don’t.” A motivator like that may encourage readers to modify their own routines.
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Saturday, May 23, 2026
A Little More Social by Nicholas Epley
A LITTLE MORE SOCIALis a new book by Nicholas
Epley (Mindwise) where he explains “How Small Choices Create Unexpected
Happiness, Health, and Connection.” Epley is the John
Templeton Keller Professor of Behavioral Science and faculty director of the
Roman Family Center for Decision Research at the University of Chicago Booth
School of Business. He argues that we should not allow fear and myths to keep
us from reaching out more to others, pointing out that if we work on changing
our often overly pessimistic expectations, introverts and extroverts alike can benefit.
Instead, Epley encourages readers to treat beliefs as “bets” or “guesses”
rather than certainty and he discusses the rejection theory videos of Jia Jiang who invited rejection with outlandish
requests in an attempt to overcome his own fear. Several other chapters of A
LITTLE MORE SOCIAL deal with choosing Thankfulness, Kindness,
and Honesty. Overall, Epley cites numerous experiments and research in an
effort to convince people to be a little more open and he tries to offer specifics,
but changing a mindset is difficult and it would help to have more recognition
that not everyone has his capacity to reach out. Notes, related commentary, and an Index comprise
roughly thirty percent of the text. The video below is Epley’s Ted Talk: “The
Simple Habit for a Happier Social Life” and conveys many of the ideas in his
new book:
Friday, May 22, 2026
Dolly All the Time by Annabel Monaghan
Set on the water in Rhode Island, DOLLY ALL THE TIME by Annabel Monaghan is the perfect beach read escape. In an almost too good to be true romance, we meet Dolly Brick (now in her 30s) who used to tease her sister with tales of becoming a princess and riding off on a horse with a gentle man. After helping a local (and wealthy) businessman, Stewart Whitfield, fix a tire on his car, Dolly is offered a platonic contract to act as his girlfriend for the summer. As a single Mom (and underpaid teacher who helps at the family fish store), she agrees. Of course, Dolly and Steward develop feelings for each other, and he even takes her thirteen-year-old son, Gus, under his wing. No relationship is totally “smooth sailing,” though, and the appealing characters struggle a bit with expectations from themselves and well-meaning friends and family. DOLLY ALL THE TIME is a Hall of Fame LibraryReads selection for May 2026 and received a starred review from Kirkus (“a charming love story that absolutely radiates warmth”), plus praise from authors Catherine Newman and Beth O’Leary. Enjoy!
Thursday, May 21, 2026
How to Rule the World by Theo Baker
HOW TO RULE THE WORLD by Theo Baker is a fascinating memoir about his time as a Stanford undergrad and his reporting about hubris and allegations of research misconduct
tied to then Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne. It has certainly
stirred some debate about elitism and Baker’s own privilege: see review and accompanying comments in The New York Times. I wonder how much of the
negativity there is a result of what Anand Giridharadas, the reviewer,
summarizes as how Baker “confronts his dreamland and concludes, painfully, that
it is rotten, indifferent, built on lies, craving power for its own sake.” In any
case, Baker’s account is well-written and well-substantiated and fact-checked.
He describes not only the painful freshman journey to belong, but also the
avarice and competition in the tech/finance and entrepreneurial world which
Stanford feeds. HOW TO RULE THE WORLD received a starred review from Publishers Weekly (“incendiary
account ... [and] ... a confident testament to the power of independent journalism from
an author with a bright future”).
Baker’s reporting for The Stanford Daily won the George Polk Award. For a sense of his writing style, see this recent piece in The New York Times called “What A.I. Did to My College Class.”
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
The Last Mandarin by Louise Penny and Mellissa Fung
THE LAST MANDARIN by Louise Penny and Mellissa Fung is a stand-alone political thriller. The audiobook is narrated by Eunice Wong who does an absolutely excellent job. In this novel, modern day terrorist attacks are occurring simultaneously all over the globe and a Chinese dissident, Vivien Li and her daughter, Alice, are drawn into a mystery which even leading intelligence agencies are struggling to decipher. A favorite scene is the online gathering of the experts from several countries and Wong’s ability to use her voice and convey their biases and country of origin. As readers would expect from Penny (Inspector Gamache series), there are numerous plot twists and surprises. She and Fung also convey the political intrigue and behind the scenes maneuvering, in a manner reminiscent of writers like Allen Drury or Gore Vidal. Barnes & Noble and Abe Books each recommend more authors/titles in this genre. Looking for a political thriller in movie form? Try these suggested by IMDb.
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Change of Plans by Sarah Dessen
CHANGE OF PLANS by Sarah Dessen (Lock & Key; Just Listen; The Truth
about Forever and more) is her first novel in seven years and offers the
chance for new readers to sample Dessen’s expressive writing. Booklist says,
“Dessen’s greatest strength is her creation of vivid atmosphere, which enhances
both her characters' personalities and their conflicts.” Here, the award-winning
young adult author introduces readers to Finley, a graduating high school
senior who lives with her stepmom, dad, and their young family. Finley has a
strong, two-year relationship with Colin, but must decline his family’s invite
to a cruise because her career-oriented and distant mother, Catherine (Cat) has
plans for the two of them to travel together. Quite a bit does change when
Colin meets another girl on the cruise and Finley’s Mom chauffeurs Finley to
The Woods, a family home on a rural lake, instead of heading to New York City. Finley
meets new friends (Clark, Ben, and Lana) and aunts (Liz and Kasey) as she
begins to learn more about her Mom – and herself. CHANGE
OF PLANS received starred reviews from Kirkus
(“she discovers strength, independence, and the transformative power of being
fully present …. A sweet, nuanced, and reflective coming-of-age love story
filled with moments of true beauty between family and friends”) and Publishers
Weekly (“delightfully layered, bighearted novel”). As Clark says, “Everything
changes. You have a choice: make it hard or make it work. And there's enough
hard shit already.”
Monday, May 18, 2026
Mother Tongue by Sara Nović
MOTHER TONGUE by Sara Nović (Girl at War and True Biz) received well-deserved starred reviews from Booklist, Library Journal and Publishers Weekly. Nović uses this memoir to share her experiences, reflections, and research about being deaf and the deaf culture. In an effort to teach and inform others, she is willing to be vulnerable, resulting in a poignant tale. Nović explores related history (e.g., Nazi eugenics and Alexander Graham Bell’s campaign against American Sign Language) as well as the prejudice she encountered when trying to adopt a deaf son from another race. The tone is not academic, but the vocabulary often is, in MOTHER TONGUE, a moving and educational work.
Sunday, May 17, 2026
What We Ask Google by Simon Rogers
WHAT WE ASK
GOOGLE by Simon Rogers is subtitled “A Surprisingly
Hopeful History of Humankind.” Rogers, Google’s data editor, does tend to adopt
a more positive perspective in recounting examples of questions sent to Google.
In particular, he points to patterns – whether daily (like getting a baby to
sleep at 2am) or more seasonally (search for “comfort food” in October and
other recipe requests around Thanksgiving and December holidays). Many of his
comments are extolling the Google Trends dataset; being curious, I tired
looking at Google Trends, but most of the current queries were related to sports
scores or another aspect of popular culture. Publishers Weekly called WHAT WE ASK GOOGLE “a fun if shallow tour of the modern world’s most burning questions.”
That is a fair assessment, but there are some surprising anecdotes and
memorable graphs included in WHAT WE ASK
GOOGLE. For example, Rogers says that half of the
top “how to learn …” searches in the US are about language and the most often
translated word across all languages is “beautiful.” In another chapter, he
notes that “one in every twenty Google searches is for health-related
information.” And he stresses repeatedly how search seems to show our need to
help others, such as in the chapter on grief where people ask what to say to
someone who is grieving. There is an opportunity to dig deeper: a little over
fifteen percent of the text is devoted to notes and sources.
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