The most positive part of my retirement has been the freedom to read what I will beyond the demands of the classroom. Since mid-May, the effective beginning of my semi-retirement, I’ve read the following books (plus a few more that I can’t recall right now), roughly in the order I read them (which is random):
Terry Eachout, Pops
Hampton Sides, Hellhound on His Trail: The Stalking of Martin Luther King Jr. . . .
John Heilemann and Mark Helperin, Game Change
Tony Horwitz, A Voyage Long and Strange
Patti Smith, Just Kids
Eula Bliss, Notes From No Man’s Land: American Essays
Dave Barry, I’ll Mature When I’m Dead
Joan Didion, The Year Of Magical Thinking
Simon Winchester, ed., The Best American Travel Writing 2009
Stefan Klein, Leonardo’s Legacy: How Da Vinci Reimagined the World
Christopher Hitchens, Hitch 22
Malcolm Gladwell, What the Dog Saw
Ron Chernow, Washington: A Life
Christopher Hitchens, ed., The Best American Essays 2010
Sarah Vowell, The Wordy Shipmates
Tom Grimes, Mentor: A Memoir
Anthony Bourdain, Medium Raw
Steven Johnson, Everything Bad Is Good For You
Nora Ephron, I Remember Nothing
Keith Richards, Life
Sarah Bakewell, How To Live: Or A Life of Montaigne
Holly Hughes, The Best Food Writing 2010
It’s no surprise that all of these books are nonfiction. That’s been my primary professional interest for 30 years. Plus I have a hard time getting into the imagined characters and worlds of fiction when there are just as engaging and enlightening characters and worlds in nonfiction. I suppose I’d be a more rounded reader if I were to spend at least a little time with fiction (not to mention poetry or drama), and perhaps I should make a New Year’s resolution to do so. But I don’t make New Year’s resolutions, so I guess I’ll just have to wait and see what happens. And that’s another positive of retirement, the freedom to go where whim demands.