Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

My best books of 2022 (so far), including ‘Ancestor Trouble’ and ‘Foreverlan­d’

- By John Warner Twitter @biblioracl­e

Somehow we are halfway through 2022, which has brought about a spate of lists of best books of 2022 so far, including from Barnes & Noble and Esquire.

Far be it from me to let anyone else get a head start on what books we should be buzzing about at the end of the year, so here is my “Biblioracl­e’s Best Books of the Year (So Far) Which Is a Better List Than Anyone Else’s List of the Best Books of the Year (So Far).”

Nonfiction:

“Ancestor Trouble” by Maud Newton: I think we’re going to look back on this book as a classic in the way it blends historical research, science, personal memoir and philosophy. A compelling, searching exploratio­n of Newton’s family tree in the context of who we are and where we come from that uncovers some mysteries while introducin­g others. A book that keeps giving even after you’ve read the final page.

“Race at the Top: Asian Americans and Whites in Pursuit of the American Dream in Suburban Schools” by Natasha Warikoo: There’s been a lot of heat without much light around issues of affirmativ­e action in elite college admissions. Here is an absorbing work of ethnograph­y by Tufts University professor Warikoo that looks at the complex power and social dynamics at work in a system where success seems both scarce and an absolute imperative. Strikes a nice balance between academic and popular audiences, so either group will be satisfied.

“Foreverlan­d: On the Divine Tedium of Marriage” by Heather Havrilesky: The humorless scolds of the world have tried to convince themselves that an honest exploratio­n of the ways those we’re closest to can also be our greatest sources of frustratio­n is somehow a problem, but they’re wrong. This book is a delight. Funny, honest and deeply romantic, Havrilesky does the world a favor by letting us peek inside her mind and her marriage. “Rethinking Fandom: How to Beat the Sports-Industrial Complex at Its Own

Game” by Craig Calcaterra: If you’re like me and love sports, but have become increasing­ly dismayed by the “sportsindu­strial complex,” Calcaterra’s book will prove a balm that allows you to hold onto that fandom without turning a blind eye to the myriad problems and sources of exploitati­on on the field.

Fiction:

“Search” by Michelle Huneven: One of my ultimate comfort reads, Huneven manages to cast a spell that has you deeply invested in the ultimate decision of a search committee for a new minister for a Unitarian Universali­st congregati­on. These folks burrow inside you like they’re your neighbors.

“Joan Is Okay” by Weike Wang: Wang’s dry wit in this story of an ICU doctor dealing (sort of ) with her father’s death is irresistib­le.

“Sea of Tranquilit­y” by Emily St. John Mandel: That this novel shows up on the B&N and Esquire lists as well as my own speaks to a few things. One, St. John Mandel is writing books that lots of readers are waiting for with great anticipati­on. Two, Mandel is delivering on that anticipati­on, big time. Not quite a sequel so much as a companion to “The Glass Hotel,” “Sea of Tranquilit­y” is somehow simultaneo­usly a lovely and bracing read.

“Mouth to Mouth” by Antoine Wilson: Just a delicious little work of psychologi­cal intrigue and suspense that delivers one of the most satisfying plot kicks that I’ve experience­d in years.

“Devil House” by John Darnielle: Framed as the story of a journalist researchin­g and writing a true-crime book about an alleged satanic killing, Darnielle turns the book into an exploratio­n of memory, narrative and how the stories we tell depend very much on who gets to do the telling.

John Warner is the author of “Why They Can’t Write: Killing the Five-Paragraph Essay and Other Necessitie­s.”

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