Los Angeles Times

Pick these up and hold on for a ride

- The National Book Review which genes can be manipulate­d — for good and for ill. talent — and often more important.

“Boy Erased” by Garrard Conley (Riverhead: 352 pp., $27)

Being gay in Arkansas is not easy, and after Conley was outed at 19, his parents sent him to a Christian ministry’s conversion therapy program. More than a decade later, Conley recounts the experience in this memoir. The power of Conley’s story resides not only in the vividly depicted grotesquer­ies of the therapy system, but in his lyrical writing about sexuality and love, and his reflection­s on the Southern family and culture that shaped him.

“The Gene: An Intimate History” by Siddhartha Mukherjee (Scribner: 608 pp., $32)

In his Pulitzer Prize-winning “The Emperor of All Maladies,” Mukherjee explicated the genesis and horrors of cancer, and now he turns his formidable explanator­y talents to the world of the gene. He draws on his own family history of mental illness to illuminate the relationsh­ips between genes and identity and provides fascinatin­g insights into the ways in

“Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseveran­ce” by Angela Duckworth (Scribner: 352 pp., $28)

Psychology professor and MacArthur “genius” fellow Duckworth delivered one of the most popular TED talks of all time. She is recognized for her theory that the combinatio­n of perseveran­ce and passion are the key to success. In “Grit,” Duckworth offers examples from her fieldwork with disparate subjects such as cadets at West Point, National Spelling Bee finalists and Wall Street kings. Through it all, she argues that grit is usually unrelated to

“The Opposite of Woe: My Life in Beer and Politics” by John Hickenloop­er and Maximillia­n Potter (Penguin: 368 pp., $30)

In a season of platitudin­ous political autobiogra­phies, the high-profile governor of purple Colorado gets high marks for his candor and humor as he recounts his unlikely rise from a troubled childhood to success as a brewpub entreprene­ur and eventual statewide election. Embracing the beer metaphor — activists as yeast, the political leader as brewer — in this memoir, written with his former media adviser and speechwrit­er Potter, Hickenloop­er puts such topics as his love life, the legalizati­on of marijuana and same-sex unions on tap.

“Paper: Paging Through History” by Mark Kurlansky (W.W. Norton: 416 pp., $27.95)

With all of the current talk about “going paperless,” this might seem like an inauspicio­us moment to celebrate paper. But Kurlansky, author of earlier monofocuse­d books “Cod” and “Salt,” makes this historical journey well worth the ride. He has a deep instinct for telling detail, which he combines with a disarmingl­y fun narrative style. Kurlansky makes a compelling case that paper has always been a revolution­ary force — a foundation for expression of every sort — and that it is certainly not dead yet.

“Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets” by Sveltlana Alexievich, translated by Bela Shayevich (Random House: 496 pp., $30)

Belarussia­n writer Alexievich won last year’s Nobel Prize in Literature “for her polyphonic writings, a monument to suffering and courage in our time.” She has interviewe­d ordinary Russians, repeatedly and over many years, and her oral histories — including “Voices From Chernobyl,” an artfully constructe­d history of those who suffered through the 1986 Ukraine nuclear disaster — chronicle life in a way that captures the full spectrum of human emotion. Alexievich’s latest book, “Secondhand Time,” deals with the demise of the Soviet Union, revealing a painful mix of oppression and suffering — but also a certain Russian pride.

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