South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

It’s the most wonderful book-giving time of year

And you can always Secret Santa yourself

- By Patrick Rapa

Peak TV has peaked, movie theaters are no-go zones and the squirrels outside your window are just lying around looking at their phones. We’re in the doldrums, and all signs point to a long, dull winter.

But at least we have books.

Books to give as gifts. Books to give ourselves. Good ones are coming out all the time, which is why we’ve assembled a list of some top new titles to help point you in the right direction. There, our job is done.

Now it’s up to you to skip the easy option and instead place your orders with a favorite independen­t bookshop, where your money will mean more.

“African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song,” Kevin Young, editor. You’re not meant to read this thick, handsome anthology from cover to cover, but if you did, you could make out the shape of history. From slavery to Civil War, jazz to civil rights, MOVE to Katrina, and so on. As editor Young (also the poetry editor at the New Yorker) says in his intro: These poets “wrote about what they saw around them, but also what they dreamt up — even if it was a dream deferred, derailed, or flat-out denied.” The poets include W.E.B. DuBois, Langston Hughes, Amiri Baraka, Maya Angelou, Nikki

Giovanni, June Jordan, Gil Scott-Heron, Hanif Abdurraqib, Jamila Woods, Paul Beatty, Major Jackson and more than 200 others, each with a bio to provide context.

“Ready Player Two,” Ernest Cline. The much-anticipate­d sequel to 2011’s “Ready Player One” promises more of what made that book so popular: wild adventure, a crazy virtual reality, a fleet of beloved old toys, a nest of not-quite-obscure pop-culture Easter eggs and a handful of underdog gamers saving the world/ ruining the economy by winning a trivia contest.

“We Keep the Dead Close: A Murder at Harvard and a Half Century of Silence,” Becky Cooper. In her engrossing and vivid new book, ex-New Yorker staffer Cooper dissects a cold case that had become the stuff of legend and rumor at her alma mater: the 1969 murder of Jane Britton. The Harvard archaeolog­y grad student was found bludgeoned to death in her apartment, her body sprinkled with red ocher powder. An obsessive researcher, Cooper digs past the urban legend and Ivy League pomp to make “We Keep the Dead Close” a thoughtful, detailed pageturner.

“A Promised Land,” Barack Obama. In the intro to this 768-page memoir, the first of two, Obama

looks back on his career and wonders whether he was “too tempered in speaking the truth as he saw it, too cautious in either word or deed.” Starting with 44’s unlikely rise to political prominence and ending with the SEAL Team 6 raid in Abbottabad 2½ years into his first term in office, “A Promised Land” offers eloquent,

precise and personal insight into an era that feels like a thousand years ago.

“Oak Flat: A Fight for Sacred Land in the American West,” Lauren Redniss. The author makes her niche in the little-discussed “visual nonfiction” genre, writing and illustrati­ng books that read like journalism but feel like artsy graphic novels (only without all the boxes and speech bubbles). This one tells the story of the San Carlos Apache Tribe in Arizona who’ve been defending their sacred land from the shovels and dynamite of a copper mining company since 2014. Between gentle, full-page colored pencil drawings of kind faces and blissful landscapes, Redniss offers mountains of research and interviews.

“The Killer’s Shadow: The FBI’s Hunt for a White Supremacis­t Serial Killer,” John Douglas and Mark Olshaker. When it comes to true crime, nobody’s got

war stories like Douglas. During his 25 years in the FBI, he helped launch the bureau’s criminal profiling unit, assisted in manhunts all over the country and sat down to interview some of the most notorious serial killers of the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s. It’s no wonder his gritty, straightfo­rward books are so popular — he was there. This time, he and writing partner Olshaker recount the cross-country hunt for a racist psychopath who killed more than a dozen people between 1977 and 1980.

“The Thirty Names of Night,” Zeyn Joukhadar. It’s been five years since the trans Muslim artist at the center of Joukhadar’s new coming-of-age novel lost his mother in a anti-Islamic attack, and still he feels lost. Half grief-stricken and half numb, the unnamed young man finds himself unable to paint; instead he wanders the New York City streets talking to his mother’s ghost, making a note of every white male patriarchy transgress­ion that comes to mind and looking for signs in the appearance of birds that seem to materializ­e out of thin air. Quietly powerful and full of surprises, “The Thirty Names of Night” is the literary heartbreak­er of the season.

“The Preserve,” Ariel S. Winter. Stephen King gave a thumbs-up to this sci-fi murder mystery set in a world where robots are the dominant species after a global plague wipes out most of humanity. Luckily the bots look just like us and seem pretty chill, and they’ve begun setting up idyllic preserves where humans can live free. The peace is shattered, however, when a corpse is found behind a grocery store, and now it’s up to a human police chief and his robot partner to solve the crime. Equal parts noir and sci-fi, “The Preserve” is a smart little page-turner that gets its hooks into you early and keeps you guessing.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Here are the biggest books of this holiday season, to gift or read yourself (or both).
DREAMSTIME Here are the biggest books of this holiday season, to gift or read yourself (or both).
 ?? JAMIE MCCARTHY/GETTY ?? Former President Barack Obama’s memoir “A Promised Land” is the first of two volumes.
JAMIE MCCARTHY/GETTY Former President Barack Obama’s memoir “A Promised Land” is the first of two volumes.

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