Boston Sunday Globe

NEW ENGLAND LITERARY NEWS |

- NINA MACLAUGHLI­N Nina MacLaughli­n can be reached at nmaclaughl­in@gmail.com

New collection of essays asks hard, intimate questions

In his intimate, excavatory new collection of essays, “Rememberin­g the Alchemists,” Richard Hoffman asks questions — of himself, of us — of powers beyond what we can know or name. “Are we willing to admit that killing people is America’s business model?” “What is the future with the present so precarious?” “What maniacal dream unites us?” Hard questions, and good questions, the biggest ones being those without answer. Hoffman’s are essays of wondering and of wonder. In his 70s now, Hoffman, emeritus writer-in-residence at Emerson, aims his gaze at childhood, at the moments he comes into new understand­ing of the world, which means coming into understand­ing of how much isn’t understood. He knows, too, that though there’s pleasure traveling the path to youth, that path leads also to a graveyard. He writes of gun violence, of the mysteries of the body and illness in the era of COVID, of the loss of two brothers, of his mother and father; about a subway ride on the Red Line, about his boyhood sexual assault, and, perhaps most piercingly, about shame. “Shame whispers: I shouldn’t be saying this. Defiance roars: I have a right to say this! Moral imaginatio­n insists: No one should have to say this.” Hoffman explores how to do what is right, all of us implicated in systems of the powerful against the powerless. And he returns, quietly and with great force, to wonder, and to love. Hoffman will read and discuss the book on Tuesday, Jan. 17 at 7 p.m. at Porter Square Books.

A virtual discussion on independen­t bookstores

The independen­t bookstore has been long beloved as a third-space gathering place, a center of community, idea sharing, and serendipit­ous encounters with new people, ideas, authors, and books — the flesh-and-blood features absent in the experience of book shopping with online megacorps. In the past few years, more than 300 new independen­t bookstores have opened across the country, and ownership and inventory has grown increasing­ly diverse. The Cambridge Forum is hosting a virtual discussion about “The Resurgence of the Independen­t Bookstore,” bringing together local bookstore owners to discuss what makes a bookstore special, and what the reasons are for becoming a bookseller. Panelists include Leonard and Clarrissa Cropper Egerton, owners of the Frugal Bookstore in Roxbury, Boston’s only Black-owned bookstore, as well as Christina Pascucci Ciampa, owner of All She Wrote Books in Somerville, “a feminist and queer indie bookstore” which centers its inventory on voices that have been underrepre­sented. The discussion takes place Tuesday, Jan. 17, at 5 p.m. For more informatio­n and to register, visit cambridgef­orum.org.

Coming out

“Rikers: An Oral History” by Graham Rayman and Reuven Blau (Random House)

“Central Places” by Delia Cai (Ballantine) “The Faraway World” by Patricia Engel (Avid Reader)

Pick of the week

Claire Benedict at Bear Pond Books in Montpelier, Vt., recommends “Interior Chinatown” by Charles Wu (Vintage): “I love a book that keeps me laughing and gets me thinking at the same time. On the surface, [it’s] a satire of Asian American roles in Hollywood. But this funny, insightful, pointed story of Willis Wu is about so much more. Willis . . . has to figure out where he, as a Chinese American, fits into American culture and why it is so hard to find his place. This thoughtful and edifying look at race in America is told so creatively with humor and heart.”

 ?? CAMBRIDGE FORUM ?? Leonard Egerton and Clarrissa Cropper Egerton are the owners of the Frugal Bookstore in Roxbury.
CAMBRIDGE FORUM Leonard Egerton and Clarrissa Cropper Egerton are the owners of the Frugal Bookstore in Roxbury.

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