All in Audiobook

Heavy: An American Memoir – Kiese Laymon

These raw and unfiltered memories from Kiese Laymon’s early life in Jackson, Mississippi - roughly pre-teen to mid-20s - left me uncomfortable, frustrated and sad. It’s no wonder this biography is titled “Heavy,” because there is so much weight - metaphorically and physically - that the author has had to carry throughout this life. 

Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland – Patrick Radden Keefe

While he gave it his best effort, “Say Nothing” came up short for me – and that’s more on me than it is on Keefe. He did the work, distilling thousands of interviews, analyzing watershed events and piecing together elements of an intricate puzzle while battling cagey subjects and still fresh wounds on both sides.

Most of my tepidness towards the novel is because I thought it was focused solely on “The Disappeared,” the 18 individuals abducted by loyalists and republicans during the Northern Ireland conflict.

The Help – Kathryn Stockett

Expectation: Cringe-level disappointment that I found the film so entertaining given the hindsight view of its problems.

Reality: Deeper characterization and discussion of the socio-political realities of the time period made this an excellent, if still flawed, novel.