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Reading: Berkeley bookstore staffers shut 2024 with quirky fiction, non-fiction suggestions   – Native Information Issues
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San Francisco News > Blog > Arts > Berkeley bookstore staffers shut 2024 with quirky fiction, non-fiction suggestions   – Native Information Issues
Arts

Berkeley bookstore staffers shut 2024 with quirky fiction, non-fiction suggestions   – Native Information Issues

By Miles Cooper
Arts
December 20, 2024
Berkeley bookstore staffers shut 2024 with quirky fiction, non-fiction suggestions   – Native Information Issues
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Since there could also be extra books per sq. foot of land in Berkeley than wherever else in the USA, getting a finger on the heartbeat of what folks learn this 12 months isn’t the worst method to discover nice reads from 2024. 

On the celebrated Moe’s Books on Telegraph Avenue—which has a list of principally used books and new titles by Bay Space authors —proprietor Doris Moskowitz (the youngest daughter of Moe himself) had a tough time narrowing her selections down.  

“I’ve worked here at the bookstore for 35 years this year and I read a lot of books, not always the things that just came out this year, but I did read a few really good ones,” she says.  

Moskowitz’s suggestions embrace 2022’s “The Myth of Normal: Trauma, Illness, and Healing in a Toxic Culture” (launched in paperback in 2024) co-authored by Gabor Maté, who wrote “In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts.” 

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She calls “The Myth of Normal” an “important work on addiction and how to really heal the world of issues that we really struggle with.” 

She calls “Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI” by Noah Harare one other vital nonfiction title. However she provides, “‘Nexus’ is about AI and how that’s kind of always been with us and how has that looked over time. I didn’t read this one, my husband did, but I’ve heard all about it. So I suggest you look it up.” 

Moskowitz, who reads a number of novels, says, “James McBride is a wonderful author, and I really enjoyed ‘The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store.’ I like to read in the backyard. There’s a tree I like to sit under. … a novel satisfies that need to comfort and relax.”  

Berkeley bookstore staffers shut 2024 with quirky fiction, non-fiction suggestions   – Native Information IssuesMoe’s in Berkeley has an enormous stock of used books and titles by Bay Space authors. (Sobhan Hassanvand/Bay Metropolis Information)

She additionally needs to plug Steve Wasserman’s “Tell Me Something, Tell Me Anything, Even If it’s a Lie: A Memoir in Essays.” She says, “He’s the editor at Heyday Press, which is local. He’s also somebody who grew up in Berkeley. This is a wonderful collection of essays related to all kinds of things literary, and it’s really well worth reading.”  

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Moskowitz additionally recommends Tommy Orange’s 2024 “Wandering Stars,” the sequel to “There There,” calling it “a wonderful novel that ties the story together.”  

Moe’s bookseller Jazkin Phillips’ better of 2024 is “Reading the Room: A Bookseller’s Tale” by Paul Yamazaki, which, unsurprisingly, is hooked up to her career: “I chose it as my favorite book because it kind of just gives an insight to the longer history of bookselling in the Bay Area—specifically in San Francisco. I learned a lot from it the interviews that he did here were really insightful for me as a bookseller.” 

Stanley Sobolewski, who has labored at Moe’s for 25 years, found what’s maybe his favourite guide of the 12 months just lately: “I came on my shift this week and was very happy to see this book ‘Selected Amazon Reviews’ on the shelf, by Kevin Killian, who was local poet and passed away a few years ago. In fact, I spoke with him once here in the in the basement of Moe’s.” 

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“It’s an incredibly subversive book,” Sobolewski says. “….Basically, in later part of his life, he used the Amazon comment section to just review all manner of products: movies, CDs, records. books, car seats, you name it. And he used the platform to publish his completely unrelated crazy stories. … It’s a wonderful collection.” 

Sobolewski provides, “He used a huge platform but then took advantage of it and just created this incredibly whimsical and interesting title.”


Pegasus Books staffers name “Rakesfall” an “eerie, multi-layered exploration of Sri Lankan history and mythology that defies description that made two of our top 10 lists this year.” (Cowl courtesy Tordotcom)

The employees on the downtown Berkeley department of Pegasus Books additionally chimed in with alternatives.  

In keeping with supervisor Hannah Sharafian, multiple worker cherished “The Seventh Veil of Salome” by Silvia Moreno-Garcia and “Rakesfall” by Vajra Chandrasekera.  

“Silvia Moreno-Garcia is a store favorite, and her new novel is a sweeping Hollywood epic full of her usual incredible characterizations,” Sharafian mentioned.  

“Rakesfall,” Chandrasekera’s second fantasy novel after his Hugo-nominated “The Saint of Bright Doors,” is an “eerie, multi-layered exploration of Sri Lankan history and mythology that defies description but made two of our top 10 lists this year.” 

Pegasus supervisor Hannah Sharafian extremely recommends the horror-tinged and humorous novel “The Empusium” by Nobel Prize winner Olga Tokarczuk. (Cowl courtesy Riverhead Books)

One other Pegasus choose is Kelly Hyperlink’s first novel “The Book of Love,” which Sharafian says is “exactly what the title says: a gorgeous exploration of love in all its shifting forms, written with the beauty and clarity that makes her short stories such gems.” 

Additionally on the record is Elif Shafak’s “There Are Rivers in the Sky,” which Sharafian calls “a sweeping novel of the past, the present and how water holds us all together.” 

Sharafian additionally recommends “Hail Murray! The Bay Area Punk Photography of Murray Bowles 1982-1995,” which she calls a “fabulous collection by the late Murray Bowles, a true local legend. If it happened, he was there taking pictures.” 

However she concludes, “Finally, the book I personally have been trying to shove into everyone’s hands is ‘The Empusium,’ Olga Tokarczuk’s horror-tinged historical novel that is deeply philosophical without losing its bitter edge of humor.”  

TAGGED:BerkeleybookstoreclosefictionLocalMattersNewsnonfictionquirkyrecommendationsstaffers
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