Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Epic summer reading list

- HUGH HEWITT Hugh Hewitt hosts a nationally syndicated radio show on the Salem Network.

STHE WASHINGTON POST ummer beckons, and so does the easy season’s need for a nourishing read. Everything after J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Lord of the Rings” is in some way derivative, but fantasy epics remain a staple on many bookshelve­s, including mine.

CNN’s Chris Cillizza sent me into the endless but eventually satisfacto­ry Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan. The New York Times’ Ross Douthat nudged me toward British writer Joe Abercrombi­e, with a warning that his books are as grown-up and dark as “Game of Thrones” but have the decided advantage of an author committed to finishing his epics.

During the pandemic’s endless opportunit­ies to walk, I blew through Brandon Sanderson’s “Mistborn” series on audio but hesitated on brink of his “The Way of Kings.” Patrick Rothfuss is delivering the goods in his Kingkiller Chronicle trilogy, but he’s only two-thirds finished. So Abercrombi­e it will be when next I get the epic itch.

The attraction of epics is much the same as those of Patrick O’Brian’s 20 works built around British naval officers Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin: The writers create entire worlds around a few central characters and a long list of recurring friends, lovers, competitor­s and enemies.

“For the past 30 years the greatest novelists writing in English,” asserted playwright David Mamet, “have been genre writers: John le Carre, George Higgins and Patrick O’Brian.” From Mamet, that’s quite a tribute.

Thriller authors like Daniel Silva and Brad Thor have legions addicted to their knowledge and storytelli­ng prowess. C.J. Box’s books deliver an understand­ing of the mountain west not easily available to city folk on the coasts, and an unlikely hero in Joe Pickett. And I inhaled “Ridgeline,” the new historical fiction by Michael Punke (author of “The Revenant”), about an 1866 battle in Wyoming’s Powder River Valley between the Lakota and the U.S. Army.

These writers are terrifying­ly prolific—add up their titles and ask yourself, “How do they do it?” They serve the need for the human imaginatio­n to travel far from whatever reality it inhabits day to day.

Nonfiction writers broaden our horizons too, yet their work is both harder and easier to absorb. Three nonfiction books have made it on to my necessary bookshelf this year—works that need to be read to understand our age: Niall Ferguson’s “Doom,” Josh Rogin’s “Chaos Under Heaven” and Joby Warrick’s “Red Line” can grip as tightly as any thriller, but the reader has to take mental notes if not actual ones.

These books form the basis of important and official conversati­ons in our national politics, and the details matter.

Where does this leave fantasy epics? Their purpose beyond pure entertainm­ent is constructi­on of a moral universe different from ours, with different gods and dilemmas; rituals and standards, tests, triumphs and failures.

Many of the epic fantasies construct vast archipelag­os of competing regimes that, while hardly as helpful as Aristotle’s “Politics,” still dance around the ancient and central question of what form of government is best. Machiavell­i is embedded in these tales, as is Rousseau. There are very few Thomas Jeffersons, quite a few Stalins and Maos, and occasional­ly the attempt at the genuinely heroic.

Mostly they give space to roam far from 2021—or 1968, when I read Tolkien for the first time. For some, escape means science fiction; others have their own guilty pleasures. But as summer approaches, and if you’ve read everything by Dickens or you are done with Evelyn Waugh, take Douthat’s advice (with his disclaimer about Abercrombi­e’s grown-up content) and try something completely different.

What can it cost you, save the price of a book and a few hours away from Twitter and Instagram?

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