I regret to share I haven't been reading as much as I normally do this year. I have, however, cried my way through the first five seasons of Grey's Anatomy (the best seasons). But I'd rather not talk about that period of my life.
I think it's time to do a roundup of books I have read this year because there are some great ones in there, and great books deserve a wider audience. Let's get to it.
How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence, Michael PollanOk, I know it's only March but this might be the best book I'll read this year. It has changed the way I think about the brain and the ego and has just made my view of the world a little bigger and more curious.
The book contains a mix of science, history and personal experience to guide the reader through the world of psychedelics. Though it's a fascinating subject in and of itself, Pollan's journalism background really shines here. The history in particular gives some fascinating insights into the reputational risks involved with getting into this scientific area, and the politics of banning the substance. There is definitely a yawning gap between what scientists and practitioners observe, and what lawmakers believe.
As a libertarian, my view on drugs is pretty predictable. But even on non-libertarian grounds I think Pollan puts forward a compelling case for legalising and regulating their therapeutic use. The book also raises the question for me of what society has lost in our current legal stance toward these drugs: material losses in finding creative solutions to technical problems or breakthrough insights, as well as losses in the way humans connect. Which all totally sounds like I've drank the Kool Aid. But just read the book and tell me I'm wrong.
Economics in One Virus: An Introduction to Economic Reasoning Through Covid-19, Ryan A. BourneThis was the first book I read this year. Devoured it on the beach and late into the hot January summer nights. Crucially, I also read it before Omicron was a real threat so I could happily read the book as a retrospective. Otherwise, I'm not sure I'd choose to read a book about Covid for fun. [On that note, if you are the kind of person who enjoys a good horror story, I highly recommend Nightmare Scenario: Inside the Trump Administration's Response to the Pandemic That Changed History]
Back to the book: it's written for people who have no background in economics, as a way of introducing them to basic economic concepts using Covid as an example. The book was published in April 2021 which makes it practically ancient by Covid standards, but the lessons largely hold up.
The author, Ryan Bourne, is a think tanker and it shows. The writing is pitched at just the right level to make the reader feel smart and like they're learning something, and the points are well argued. The book also contains possibly the best explanation of endogeneity I've come across.
For those who are familiar with the book's namesake, Economics in one lesson, this book is that but better. Better because it actually engages with the latest empirical research. And so even if you're a seasoned economist, you'll still get a kick out of the book paying homage to some of the influential econ papers and economic thinkers (I'd call them bloggers or commentators but that doesn't do them justice) at the time, plus some papers that maybe received less attention.
In fact, I think it was in the acknowledgements that the author says the book stands on the shoulders of economic giants. Which I think is a cool encapsulation of what (as an outsider) I was observing in the economics blogosphere and through economic papers and journal articles: economists putting out their views in real time, drawing on their previous knowledge and experience and trying to apply it to an unfamiliar and fast-moving situation. Covid really exposed some rifts in the economics profession, but being exposed to these exchanges became educational in itself.
Read this book to learn a bit more about economics. Read it to learn more about policy responses to Covid. Read it if you're a big ol' econ nerd who appreciates a good writeup of things you'd already been thinking about or reading about.
Burnt Sugar, Avni DoshiThis is the kind of book you can start and finish in a weekend (if you're single and have no social life). In fact, I recommend reading it like that: the book is good, but it has this tension where you wouldn't want to linger on it too long.
It's a fictional book, set in India, based around a mother-daughter relationship. There are mysteries and twists so I don't want to give too much away. Except I'm still thinking about the ending which means it's a good book.
White Bread: A Social History of the Store-Bought Loaf, Aaron Bobrow-StrainGuys... I found a whole book dedicated to white bread and it is kind of amazing. A bit of background: I really, really like bread. It is my favourite food group. So of course I had to pick up this book as soon as I heard of it.
But aside from my obvious bias, this really was a ripper read. It's got social history, economics, ideals of nationhood and imperialism, racism, health fads, food technology and the awe of industrialisation, and casts a sceptical eye on the locovore trend (local food produced within a short distance of where it is consumed). The book's part of a specific genre I really enjoy: a deep history of everyday products and how they shape, and are shaped by, society. You will honestly never look at the rows of supermarket shelves in the bread aisle the same way again.
Exercised: Why Something We Never Evolved to Do Is Healthy and Rewarding, Daniel E. LiebermanThis book was definitely the right book for me at the right time. I'm not proud of it, but for the first time in my life I've started taking my health and fitness seriously. And of course, now that I'm starting to enjoy incremental gains in my strength and fitness I often ask myself: why the hell didn't I do this sooner?
This book answers that simple question: because humans were never evolved to exercise. On that premise alone, I was sold. The book draws insights from anthropology and biology, the book seeks to tackle some of the myths about exercise and explains why exercise is so hard for some of us (me). One of the insights that I found particularly telling is that you actually need a certain level of fitness to receive all of the happy brain chemicals that normally rewards people who exercise. That, of course, really sucks. But again is a useful insight into the uphill struggle faced by those trying to gain fitness.
The myth busting in the book was useful, and I think it's a great source both for people who exercise often and want to know whether they're focusing on the right stuff, and those who exercise never and want to know why it isn't coming naturally to them.