糖心Vlog

Summer reading 2019

Scholars and sector figures offer recommendations for reading over the summer break

Published on
July 11, 2019
Last updated
July 11, 2019
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With summer coming, to the northern hemisphere at least, many of those in universities can set aside must-read texts for something more diverting. We聽asked some of them to choose two books they will read or recommend, stipulating that one be a serious work and the other somewhat lighter. Here are their selections:


Geoffrey Alderman, professor of politics, University of Buckingham

I聽have long been fascinated by the magnificent Agapemonite church (significantly named 鈥淭he Abode of聽Love鈥) that stands defiantly in the middle of ultra-orthodox Jewish London, hard by Stamford Hill. Founded by one Henry Prince 鈥 a Victorian religious lunatic who proclaimed himself the Messiah and earned eternal notoriety after having indulged in public intercourse with one of his many female acquaintances 鈥 the movement fell into the hands of a genuine con artist, John Smyth-Piggott, who maintained a commune at the movement鈥檚 country retreat in Somerset. Smyth-Piggott鈥檚 granddaughter Kate Barlow published an account of life with the Agapemonites, Abode of聽Love: The Remarkable Tale of Growing Up in a Messianic Cult (Mainstream, 2006), and it is this memoir of one of the strangest Victorian and Edwardian religious cults that I聽shall be page-turning.

For fun, I聽shall be reading the brilliant Keith Thomas鈥 In聽Pursuit of Civility: Manners and Civilization in Early Modern England (Yale University Press, 2018), and learning from this master of the historian鈥檚 craft how it was that urinating in public came to be thought of 鈥 at long last 鈥 as unfashionable!

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Jim Al-Khalili, professor of theoretical physics and public engagement in science, University of Surrey

You may have heard the saying 鈥淚f聽you think you鈥檙e not baffled by quantum mechanics, then you haven鈥檛 understood聽it.鈥 Well, in the past few years there has been a plethora of popular science books in the area called the foundations of quantum mechanics that explore just what is so puzzling about the most powerful and successful theory in all of science. Philip Ball鈥檚 Beyond Weird: Why Everything You Thought You Knew about Quantum Physics Is Different (Bodley Head, 2018) is one of the most lucid and enlightening books on the nature of the reality of the quantum world that I聽have ever read.

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I know that Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman鈥檚 骋辞辞诲听翱尘别苍蝉 came out a few years ago in hardback, but it is now in paperback (Corgi, 2019), so you have no excuse not to buy it. I聽guarantee you鈥檒l find it very, very funny. The apocalypse is coming 鈥 in fact, the world is about to end next Saturday just before dinner. So an angel and a demon, who rather enjoy their comfortable lives among mortals, decide to join forces to sabotage the End Times. Chaos ensues, of course.

Clementine Beauvais, senior lecturer in English in education, University of York

This summer, I聽intend to read 鈥 at last 鈥 a book that鈥檚 been on my to-read-for-research pile for months: Merve Emre鈥檚 Paraliterary: The Making of Bad Readers in Postwar America (University of Chicago Press, 2017). As a children鈥檚 literature scholar and writer, making bad readers is (according to society and most of my friends and family) my daily routine, and I聽look forward to seeing it theorised. Emre, a young prodigy of anglophone literary and cultural studies, is one of those academics whose style is as inspirational as her ideas.

On the pleasure side 鈥 not that research isn鈥檛 pleasure, but we perhaps shouldn鈥檛 be saying it too loudly 鈥 I聽will be reading enough to keep my Instagram followers happy (a聽key aim of my existence): children鈥檚 literature, comics and contemporary world literature principally. Excitingly, my new subscription to the wonderful publisher Fitzcarraldo has started. I聽love the concept of subscribing to a publisher. I聽also have a tights subscription and a contact lenses subscription, but books are even better because they don鈥檛 ladder and they rarely give you eye infections. The first book I鈥檝e received is Vivian, a novel about the mysterious photographer Vivian Maier, by the Danish writer Christina Hesselholdt (translated by Paul Russell Garrett).

Photographer Vivian Maier
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Sir David Bell, vice-chancellor and chief executive, University of Sunderland
Like others interested in modern American history, I聽am eagerly awaiting the fifth and final volume of Robert A. Caro鈥檚 monumental biography of Lyndon B. Johnson. The extent to which Caro and his wife, Ina, have immersed themselves in Johnson鈥檚 life is the stuff of legend. For three years, Caro went to live in the Texas hill country where Johnson grew up, partly to research the detail for his books, but also to encourage people to speak to him about his subject. He took a similarly in-depth approach to his book on Robert Moses, the public official who shaped modern New York. Now, Caro has written about his extraordinary approach to the biographer鈥檚 craft in Working: Researching, Interviewing, Writing (Bodley Head, 2019). As much as anything, I聽am looking forward to understanding more about what continues to motivate a man, now aged 83, to devote so much of his own life to the lives of others.

In a different vein, but certainly not a lighter one, I聽will read Ian Rankin鈥檚 latest novel, In a House of聽Lies (Orion, 2018). I聽cannot quite make up my mind if Rankin鈥檚 wonderfully dissolute detective, John Rebus, is past his sell-by date. Maybe this story will help me decide鈥

Carrie Tirado Bramen, professor of English and director of the Gender Institute, University at Buffalo, New York
Having just started a book project on the cultural history of the occult in the US, I聽am curious to read LaShawn Harris鈥 Sex聽Workers, Psychics, and Numbers Runners: Black Women in New York City鈥檚 Underground Economy (University of Illinois Press, 2016). Harris introduces an intriguing concept called 鈥渟upernatural labor鈥, and she features one of New York鈥檚 most famous fortune tellers of the early 20th century, Madame Fu Fattam. Her advice accentuated hope to a clientele that struggled with poverty, illness and violence. This underground economy managed to survive in the midst of city-wide campaigns against supernaturalism.

The second book on my list has arrived in time to commemorate the centennial of the 19th聽Amendment in 2020: Susan Ware鈥檚 Why They Marched: Untold Stories of the Women Who Fought for the Right to Vote (Harvard University Press, 2019). Ware tells the story of 19 suffrage activists who have been overlooked in most accounts. This narrative includes Rose Schneiderman, a聽Jewish immigrant active in union organising who became a women鈥檚 suffrage speaker among factory workers in NYC. Ware also includes the African American writer Frances Harper, who addressed a聽suffrage gathering in 1866 with the words: 鈥淲e are all bound up together in one great bundle of humanity.鈥

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Clare Brant, professor of 18th-century literature and culture, King鈥檚 College London
Depressed about the Anthropocene but don鈥檛 know what to do about it? Or where to start? Isabella Tree鈥檚 Wilding: The Return of Nature to a British Farm (Picador, 2019) tells the story of how she, her husband and others set about wilding a Sussex estate, featuring what they did and why they did it. What changed is fascinating, inspiring and memorable. The book is also full of eco-thinking: explaining why wilding is different from (and better than) rewilding. The author takes in palaeodendrology questions that cross Europe and make you see trees differently, including what we could and should be planting now.

What a Fish Knows by Jonathan Balcombe (Oneworld, 2016) has a title that sounds like a line by Dr聽Seuss. Its subtitle, 鈥渢he inner lives of our underwater cousins鈥, pushes kinship a bit far 鈥 how many removes are we? 鈥 but this is a loving and riveting account of fish on their own terms. Compelling on how fish think, feel, perceive, live and die, Balcombe鈥檚 deep tour of piscine abilities has more gripping romance in it than most novels. You might even not eat fish again.

Bryan Cheyette, professor of modern literature and culture, University of Reading
I聽suffer badly from the 鈥渟cholar鈥檚 curse鈥, as my friends and family often remind me.聽This means that I聽do not read for pleasure but, instead, read to write. But I聽am not sure that this is an either/or situation. My scholarly reading is often pleasurable, if narcissistic, because it feeds my own research. So I聽am looking forward to Daniel Schwartz鈥檚 Ghetto: The History of a Word (Harvard University Press, 2019). It is a聽comparative book (between Jewish and black history), which is surely the only approach worth taking. Dialogue between communities can be painful, but it is much better than speaking just to a single group.

There are books, however, that can break the scholar鈥檚 curse. Kate Clanchy鈥檚 Some Kids I聽Taught and What They Taught Me (Picador, 2019) is a case in point. It combines poignancy, stunningly evocative prose and the travails and wonders of state school teaching over a lifetime. The resonant voices of her students are immortalised. Clanchy combines learned experience with prose so pleasurable that reading slows so that the book can be savoured properly. It is also an antidote to the research-obsessed scholars who, to their great loss, teach only in the margins.

Sarah Elizabeth Cox, media relations officer and postgraduate history student, Goldsmiths, University of London
In 2011, anxious gender studies graduate and exercise-avoider Heather Bandenburg moved to London for a call centre job. There she stumbled across Lucha Britannia, a group of wrestlers who train and perform in a sweaty club in a Bethnal Green railway arch. She has now crowdfunded and published Unladylike: A Grrrl鈥檚 Guide to Wrestling (Unbound, 2019), an inspiring feminist romp chronicling her journey towards becoming global grappler La Rana Venenosa. Wrestlers and wrestling fans have long been stereotyped as jacked-up mullet-wearers with fewer brain cells than fingers, but the modern British independent scene couldn鈥檛 be more different, with empowered and empowering women taking the lead.

John Woolf鈥檚 2016 Goldsmiths PhD thesis has been lovingly converted into the enjoyable The Wonders: Lifting the Curtain on the Freak Show, Circus and Victorian Age (Michael O鈥橫ara, 2019), which focuses on P.鈥塗. Barnum and 鈥淭om Thumb鈥 while exploring the lives and deaths of lesser-known performers. The author concludes that the voyeuristic Victorian obsession with exploiting those outside the norm, while justifying it under a respectable veneer of 鈥渟cience鈥 or 鈥減ublic interest鈥, has changed little today.

Kate Devlin, senior lecturer in social and cultural artificial intelligence, King鈥檚 College London

Summer is a time when absolutely everyone swears that they鈥檒l catch up on all the things they didn鈥檛 get the chance to do during the academic year. Thankfully, the book I聽have waiting for me is one I鈥檝e wanted to read since it first came out. It鈥檚 Revolting Prostitutes: The Fight for Sex Workers鈥 Rights by Juno Mac and Molly Smith (Verso, 2018). The authors have written a clear, factual and evidence-based account of sex work in the context of labour, feminism and justice 鈥 and one that聽is from the perspective of sex workers themselves.

When work gets pushed to one side (sometimes), then I聽need escapism. I鈥檓 a sucker for a neo-gothic story, so Sarah Perry鈥檚 Melmoth (Serpent鈥檚 Tail, 2018) is on the list. I聽love Perry鈥檚 wonderful, careful use of language to set gripping and evocative scenes. This reworked tale of a ghostly figure, haunted and haunting, will be just the chill that鈥檚 needed when the London temperature hits stifling highs.

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John Gilbey teaches in the department of computer science at Aberystwyth University

The haunting documentary images captured by Dorothea Lange had a lasting global influence. Her iconic photograph Migrant Mother, taken in March 1936 in Nipoma, California, will for聽ever be associated with Dust Bowl America 鈥 but her work on the plight of Japanese-American internees during the Second World War is equally troubling 鈥 and painfully topical. Milton Meltzer鈥檚 detailed biography, Dorothea Lange: A聽Photographer鈥檚 Life (Farrar Strauss Giroux, 1978), draws together the many threads of her professional life, including her notable struggles with various federal agencies.

In these times of global upheaval, it takes a special kind of writer to make me laugh about politics 鈥 but John Steinbeck manages it with his 1957 satire The Short Reign of Pippin聽IV: A聽Fabrication (Penguin Classics, 2001). With French party politics in complete gridlock (sound familiar?), a plot is hatched to re-establish the monarchy. Pippin Heristal, a mild-mannered intellectual descended from Charlemagne, is convinced to become king. While intended as a passive figurehead, he uses the platform to insist on huge social and economic change 鈥 resulting in a very short tenure but some intensely amusing set聽pieces.

Migrant Mother by Dorothea Lange
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Sir John Holman, emeritus professor of chemistry, University of York

If you鈥檙e heading for the hills, read Nan Shepherd鈥檚 1977 The Living Mountain (reissued by Canongate in 2011), an outdoor book like no other. The mountain of the title is the Cairngorm plateau, which Shepherd spent a lifetime exploring and which she describes with the intensity of a lover. Her intimacy extends to every feature of the mountain, animate and inanimate, interior and exterior 鈥 rocks lead to plants and plants to birds; colour is everywhere. Full of intimate detail, it takes longer to read than you would expect from 100 pages, and the introduction by Robert Macfarlane and the afterword by Jeanette Winterson seem superfluous wrappers for this concentration of lyrical writing, to be savoured slowly.

For a quicker holiday read, it鈥檚 time I聽moved on to Lustrum (Hutchinson, 2009), the second part of Robert Harris鈥 trilogy on the life of Cicero. Harris鈥 combination of thorough research with compulsive readability never disappoints me.

Aniko Horvath, research associate on the global higher education engagement research programme, UCL Institute of Education

In academia, when we read for work, we often focus on the sections relevant to the immediate task. With many texts, we never regret having to do so. Occasionally, however, we come across books we want to read from cover to cover. Anthropologist Jo茫o Biehl鈥檚 Vita: Life in a Zone of Social Abandonment (University of California Press, 2013) has been one such book for me. Set in Brazil, in an area of a big city where the 鈥渦nwanted鈥 鈥 the homeless, the mentally ill, the sick 鈥 are left to die, Biehl walks us through the painful stages of people鈥檚 lives disintegrating under economic pressures and dependence on pharmaceuticals. He is unforgiving 鈥 and addresses us all 鈥 when he exposes the role of the public and the state in allowing a consensus to emerge that leaves the 鈥渦nsound and unproductive鈥 to die abandoned. It is hardly a light summer read, but the dystopia it explored is rapidly catching up with us.

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Between the more serious books, and running after a super-fast toddler, I聽will snatch spare moments for Istv谩n 脰rk茅ny鈥檚 witty, absurd and ironic One Minute Stories (translated by Judith Sollosy; Corvina, 2013), a true classic of central European humour.

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Rivka Isaacson, senior lecturer in chemical biology, King鈥檚 College London

This month, I am presenting at the Iris Murdoch Centenary Conference in Oxford. Since the recommended retail price is 拢75.00 (eek!), I聽am hoping to pick up a heavily discounted copy of Lucy Bolton鈥檚 Contemporary Cinema and the Philosophy of Iris Murdoch (Edinburgh University Press, 2019). I鈥檓 a lot better versed in Murdoch鈥檚 novels than in her academic philosophy, although I鈥檓 anticipating that the conference and this accessible, insightful book will give me my seasonal boost in the latter this summer.

Thanks to a book review I wrote for 糖心Vlog, I聽was recently invited to chair a fascinating session at the York Festival of Ideas on the art of visual imagination. I聽bought a beautiful pocket-sized book called To聽See Clearly: Why Ruskin Matters (Quercus, 2019), by one of the panellists, Suzanne Fagence Cooper, research curator for a recent exhibition called Ruskin, Turner & the Storm Cloud (York Art Gallery). I聽am particularly excited to read this because I聽work in Borough and attended an inspiring lunchtime event run by Bankside Open Spaces about Red Cross Garden, a social housing/welfare project spearheaded by Octavia Hill with support, financial and otherwise, from Ruskin.

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Farah Karim-Cooper, head of higher education and research, Shakespeare鈥檚 Globe

This summer, while most people may be seeking some escape from reality, I聽will be immersed in death and feminism. As my current research is on death in Shakespearean performance, I聽will be rereading Michael Neill鈥檚 Issues of Death: Mortality and Identity in English Renaissance Tragedy (Clarendon Press, 1997). This classic and seminal study explores the iconography of death, in particular the tradition of the danse macabre, the spectre of death as it was encountered in the human anatomy theatres of the age and some of the great tragedies of the period. Neill shows us that at their heart is a聽harrowing fear of annihilation in Elizabethan and Jacobean culture.

On a (somewhat) lighter note, I聽plan finally to read Roxane Gay鈥檚 Bad Feminist (Harper Perennial, 2014). I聽like it that her collection of personal essays promises to offer an honest perspective on the contradictions inherent in and the conflicts of desire that permeate an individual鈥檚 feminism. I聽am hoping it can perhaps provide some guidelines about navigating the territory of feminism in a world where women鈥檚 rights seem to be under threat. Apparently, it鈥檚 funny too, so I聽imagine Gay will provide laughs as well as something to think about.

Joanna Kidman, associate professor of education, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand

Every so often, we sociologists peek over our disciplinary parapet and catch sight of the field of history with its moated castles and rolled lawns. We鈥檙e like neighbours who don鈥檛 have much in common, but if we meet in the driveway we鈥檒l kick the tyres on our cars and talk about motoring. It鈥檚 not a close relationship 鈥 except when it is. In He Reo W膩hine: M膩ori Women鈥檚 Voices from the Nineteenth Century (Auckland University Press, 2017), Maori historians Lachy Paterson and Angela Wanhalla scoured 19th-century archives for accounts by Maori women about life in settler-colonial New Zealand. This was a turbulent time in the nation鈥檚 history, and the texts of speeches, letters and other documents show how Indigenous women, in their own words, experienced wave after wave of British invasion. This is history at its most incisive, but it is also a gift to sociologists, like me, whose research centres on the aftermath of colonial violence.

For fun, I聽have a full set of Agatha Christie novels, each of which I聽treat like a dose of analgesic after long summer afternoons spent in faculty meetings. On those days, I聽pick titles that reflect my mood: Ordeal by Innocence (Harper Collins, 2018) is a particular favourite.

Reina Lewis, centenary professor of cultural studies, London College of Fashion, University of the Arts London

Shalina Shankar鈥檚 Advertising Diversity: Ad聽Agencies and the Creation of Asian American Consumers (Duke University Press, 2015) will shed light on what happens when usually ignored consumers are wooed by advertisers; specifically, if and how this creates career opportunities for people 鈥渇rom鈥 those communities. Where I聽examine how religious (and religio-ethnic) dispositions become commodified in the competitive industry infrastructure now developing within the (once small and niche) cross-faith modest fashion market, she focuses on the commodification of racial and ethnic difference.

For relaxation, I shall re-re-reread Georgette Heyer鈥檚 Regency romances (a passion I聽share with a number of my peers). Novels populated by feisty, intelligent heroines never conventionally beautiful, and chased by/chasing handsome heroes, are not a genre I鈥檇 seek out 鈥 but somehow, with Georgette at the pen, it鈥檚 OK. And oh, m鈥檇ear, those frocks!

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Philip Moriarty, professor of physics, University of Nottingham

Back in December, in THE鈥檚 suggested winter reads, I聽was eagerly awaiting the publication of Angela Saini鈥檚 Superior: The Return of Race Science (Fourth Estate, 2019), the follow-up to her compelling and forensically researched Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong 鈥 and the New Research That鈥檚 Rewriting the Story. I was delighted to receive a pre-publication copy and read it almost in one sitting. My single-sentence review? Stop what you鈥檙e doing now and go and order Superior instead 鈥 I聽promise you鈥檒l not regret聽it. It is an exceptionally important examination of the origins and influence of scientific racism, which, given the recent resurgence of 鈥渞ace realism鈥 driven by racist pseudointellectuals and their online enablers, is also about as timely as any book could be. A gripping read.

For a rather more light-hearted tome, I鈥檓 tempted to suggest Jordan Peterson鈥檚 12聽Rules for Life: An聽Antidote to Chaos, a laugh-out-loud, pitch-perfect parody of the worst excesses of vacuous, preening self-help guff. It鈥檚 still topping best-seller lists (although I鈥檝e got to admit that I聽sometimes wonder if quite everyone is in on the joke). I鈥檓 instead going to enthusiastically recommend the wonderful Soonish, by Kelly and Zach Weinersmith (Particular Books, 2017), whose subtitle tells you all you need to know: 鈥淭en Emerging Technologies That鈥檒l Improve and/or Ruin Everything鈥.

Tamson Pietsch, senior lecturer in social and political sciences and director of the Australian Centre for Public History, University of Technology Sydney

Everyone should read Bruno Latour鈥檚 Down to Earth: Politics in the New Climatic Regime (Polity, 2018). I鈥檝e sent it to people in the mail, forced copies on friends for their birthdays and talked endlessly about it at social events. It鈥檚 jargon-free and it鈥檚 short, and it is the book that, more than anything else I鈥檝e come across, helps to make sense of the entangled politics of ecological destruction, inequality, deregulation and globalisation. Not only does it offer a startling new analysis, it also points to an alternative: learning new ways to inhabit the earth is our biggest challenge. We need to live together in our common home.

I am looking forward to reading Sumner Locke Elliott鈥檚 recently reissued 1963 classic, Careful, He聽Might Hear聽You (Text, 2013), which was given to me by a friend, insisting that it was high time I聽read more mid-century Australian fiction. The back cover tells me it鈥檚 an aunt book, in which snobby Aunt Vanessa returns from London to Depression-era Sydney to whisk away her six-year-old orphaned nephew who has been living with his other Aunt Lila. Drama, together with the complexities of family life between the wars, ensues.

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A.鈥塛. Purdue, visiting reader, the Open University
The echoes of the war years and the traumatic ending of France鈥檚 long hold on Algeria resound in Sebastian Faulks鈥 magnificent novel聽Paris Echo (Hutchinson, 2018). The two leading characters are very different. Tariq, a young Algerian whose deceased mother was half-French, has set off for Paris in search of his dream world of available girls, but also, unconsciously, to trace his mother鈥檚 early life. Hannah, an American in her thirties, is a postdoctoral researcher whose subject is Paris during the German occupation. Almost surreal at times, this is a haunting novel in which the echoes sometimes appear more like ghosts. Even the metro system, which joins yet divides the fragmented city, reveals memories of an uneasy mid-20th century past.

In contrast, Anne de Courcy鈥檚 Chanel鈥檚 Riviera: Life, Love and the Struggle for Survival on the C么te d鈥橝zur, 1930-1944 (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2019) gives us delicious gossip. France鈥檚 leading designer was the epitome of chic. When she acquired a magnificent villa on the C么te d鈥橝zur, the rich and famous 鈥 among them Jean Cocteau, H.鈥塆. Wells, Salvador Dal铆 (and, after the abdication, the Windsors) 鈥 followed. They created a gilded and hedonistic world, which continued until the fall of France in聽1940.

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Jennifer Schnellmann, associate professor of pharmacology, University of Arizona
Biologist Nathan H. Lents鈥 Human Errors: A聽Panorama of Our Glitches, From Pointless Bones to Broken Genes (Weidenfeld聽& Nicolson, 2018) explores every physiological inconsistency we humans have, from junk DNA to the atrocious architecture of our sinuses. I聽expect to borrow from Lents鈥 highly lucid explanations of how we create horrendous environments for our imperfect selves, allowing overindulgence (obesity, diabetes) and even death (faulty logic, unsafe practices). This rich material will augment the physiology I聽feature in my pharmacology lectures and balance the perpetual message of medicine, that we are perfect and miraculous creatures. Most likely, our biological shortcomings are far more interesting.

Humourist David Sedaris鈥 Calypso (Little, Brown, 2018) will be an indulgent treat of 21 autobiographical essays. A long-time fan of this author, I聽anticipate reading deeply thoughtful prose describing his eccentric and colourful family and his perfectly poised partner, Hugh. I聽also expect to bray like a wheezy donkey at his scatological, X-rated humour and the wildly inappropriate questions he lobs at unsuspecting guests during his multi-hour book signings.

Jeremy Till, pro vice-chancellor, research, and head of Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London

I am climbing into a deep, dark, hole of reading about the climate emergency, with various books competing with each other to聽present the most apocalyptic vision. I think Clive Hamilton鈥檚 Defiant Earth: The Fate of Humans in the Anthropocene (Polity, 2017) is going to win 鈥 a necessary and urgent wake-up call. I know some say that getting too absorbed by the bad news is paralysing in terms of taking action, but as a designer I聽need to know the context to work out聽of.

After this, I am going to need something to cheer me. I am late to the party, but Chris Kraus鈥 I聽Love Dick (Serpent鈥檚 Tail, 2016) sounds like it will fit the bill: a confessional rampage through the cultural scene, apparently with a black-humoured excoriation of the art world and its accompanying rituals. And in a month in which a Lincolnshire primary school sees fit to send its girls to domestic studies and boys to technology studies, it is clear that we need more than ever Kraus鈥 subversive spiking of the patriarchy.

Refugees
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David Wheeler, editor at Al-Fanar Media

I can recommend Ben Rawlence鈥檚 City of Thorns: Nine Lives in the World鈥檚 Largest Refugee Camp (Macmillan, 2017) as one of the few non-fiction books 鈥 maybe the only one 鈥 that provides serious insights into the layers of corruption, suffering and chaos that can reign when refugees are herded into one artificial city. Rawlence visited Dadaab, with about 300,000 residents, over a period of four years. Here, Kenyans were the usually unwilling hosts of Somalians pushed out of their country by al-Shabab militants. The Kenyans鈥 desire to send the Somalians home is mirrored in attitudes towards Syrians in Jordan and Lebanon today.

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For a book that is probably not most people鈥檚 idea of beach reading but聽does have a compelling narrative, I聽can suggest Dave Eggers鈥 What Is the What (Penguin, 2008), which tracks the tale of a 鈥渓ost boy鈥 of South Sudan who fled to Ethiopia, then Kenya, and wound up in America. In a fictionalised true story, the urge of the protagonist, Valentino Achak Deng, to seek out education is as strong as hunger or thirst. There are lessons for those seeking to help 2019鈥檚 generation of young refugees.

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