The Week (US)

Best books... chosen by Erin Lee Carr

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Erin Lee Carr’s new HBO documentar­y, I Love You, Now Die, revisits a prominent suicide texting case. Her recent memoir, All That You Leave Behind, grapples with the loss of her father and guiding light, former New York Times journalist David Carr.

by Mary Karr (2009). I remember reading this profound memoir of alcoholism while I was struggling with substance abuse myself. Because I identified with a lot of Karr’s behaviors and thoughts, Lit gave me insight into what was going on inside my brain and body. I loved and hated and appreciate­d reading it.

by David Carr (2008). I know I’m biased, but I really believe that The

is a masterpiec­e of reporting, writing, and portraitur­e. It’s not just an alcoholism and drug memoir; it’s also about parenting and a young man becoming an adult and how difficult and painful it is, and what to do when the chips are down. I love how many twists and turns it takes. I don’t think anybody knew how to write like my dad.

by Dave Cullen (2009). Cullen’s book about the 1999 mass shooting at Colorado’s Columbine High School is one of the most page-turning reads about mental health you could imagine. The magazine journalist delves into the tragedy and the motivation­s of the two young men who carried out the deadly assault

in their school. I had never read anything like it, and it made me feel differentl­y about how to report and how to be a true-crime storytelle­r.

by Åsne Seierstad (2013). This is a voluminous but incredible book about the massacre of 77 people in Norway in the summer of 2011. It spends equal time on the victims and the perpetrato­r, Anders Breivik. Seierstad is so cerebral and yet so empathetic in her rendering of the people who lost their lives. They become individual­s, not just victims.

by Richard Wright (1940). I remember zipping through Native Son in college and really being completely undone by all the injustices suffered by the protagonis­t, a young black man in 1930s Chicago.

by Charlotte Brontë (1847). Brontë’s classic novel is a bit of a cliché choice, but

is special to me. And while it’s very old-fashioned that marriage is what helps Jane overcome her abusive childhood, the story is really about her coming into herself despite those abuses. You can have complicate­d feelings about her, but she is a survivor.

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