What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Beauty of Falling’ by Claudia De Rham

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Beauty of Falling’ by Claudia De Rham
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Beauty of Falling’ by Claudia De Rham

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Beauty of Falling’ by Claudia De Rham

Claudia de Rham has been playing with gravity her entire life. As a diver, experimenting with her body’s buoyancy in the Indian Ocean. As a pilot, soaring over Canadian waterfalls on dark mornings before beginning her daily scientific research.

As an astronaut candidate, dreaming of the experience of flying free from Earth’s pull. And as a physicist, discovering new sides to gravity’s irresistible personality by exploring the limits of Einstein’s general theory of relativity. 

In “The Beauty of Falling,” de Rham shares captivating stories about her quest to gain intimacy with gravity, to understand both its feeling and fundamental nature.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Silent Patient’

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Updated 3 min 55 sec ago

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Silent Patient’

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  • This book’s grip on the reader is almost criminal: You turn the pages hunting for answers and analyses, testing your own loyalties, and questioning what is real

Author: Alex Michaelides

A psychological thriller about a woman accused of murdering her husband and remaining completely silent for more than six years, and of her eager new psychotherapist, “The Silent Patient” by Alex Michaelides invites readers to explore another’s psyche while reflecting on our own.

The 2019 novel unfolds through two perspectives. Alicia Berenson, the thoughtful artist at the center of the case, speaks through her diary, written in the weeks leading up to her husband’s death. It details her upbringing, marriage, and career during a period of unstable inspiration.

Theo Faber, a new psychotherapist at The Grove, leaves a prestigious London psychiatric hospital to join what many consider a sinking ship. He is driven purely by his obsession with Berenson’s case. He is fascinated by her past.

A true Freudian, Faber believes that adult traits and behaviors are shaped largely by childhood experiences. This theme runs throughout the book, both in Faber’s attempt to unlock Berenson’s mind and explain her silence and in the unraveling of his own life and marriage.

This book’s grip on the reader is almost criminal: You turn the pages hunting for answers and analyses, testing your own loyalties, and questioning what is real. Maybe you’ll place your trust in Faber. May you’ll suspect everyone else in Berenson’s life, painting her as lonely as she painted herself.

And maybe you’ll think again, and again.

Berenson’s only communication after the “incident” is a self-portrait titled “Alcestis,” inspired by Euripides’ play. The painting shows her standing before a blank canvas, holding a paintbrush dripping with red paint, her expression blank, mouth open yet silent, staring directly at the viewer.

With its layered psychology and mythic undertones, “The Silent Patient” leaves the reader haunted long after the final page. Michaelides is also the author of “The Maidens” and “The Fury.”

 


What We Are Reading Today: Lessons for Survival by Emily Raboteau

What We Are Reading Today: Lessons for Survival by Emily Raboteau
Updated 15 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: Lessons for Survival by Emily Raboteau

What We Are Reading Today: Lessons for Survival by Emily Raboteau

In her elegant essay collection, “Lessons for Survival,” Emily Raboteau confronts climate collapse, societal breakdown and the COVID-19 pandemic while trying to raise children in a responsible way.

Award-winning author and critic Raboteau uses the lens of motherhood to craft a powerfully moving meditation on race, climate, environmental justice — and what it takes to find shelter.

Lessons for Survival is a probing series of pilgrimages from the perspective of a mother struggling to raise her children to thrive without coming undone in an era of turbulent intersecting crises.

The book was written very well and about topics “we all should be aware of, especially in the times we are living in,” said a review on goodreads.com.

The strength of her book is her willingness to express concerns that many feel but are reluctant to voice.

Lessons for Survival stitches together multiple stories of protection, offering a profound sense of hope.

“The book is deep, and clearly well researched, as Raboteau puts emphasis on a lot of topics many people would rather brush under the rug.”


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Earth and Life’ by Andrew H. Knoll

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Earth and Life’ by Andrew H. Knoll
Updated 14 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Earth and Life’ by Andrew H. Knoll

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Earth and Life’ by Andrew H. Knoll

How did the world as we know it — from the soil beneath our feet to the air we breathe and the life that surrounds us — come to be? Geologists have proposed one set of answers while biologists have proposed another. 

“Earth and Life” is the first book to reveal why we need to listen to both voices — the physical and the biological — to understand how we and our planet became possible.

In this captivating book, Andrew Knoll traces how all life is sustained by Earth’s geological and atmospheric dynamics, and how life itself shapes the physical environment.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘How To Not Always Be Working’

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Updated 14 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘How To Not Always Be Working’

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  • Bosses should read this book; employees should read it

Author: Marlee Grace

In “How To Not Always Be Working: A Toolkit for Creativity and Radical Self-Care,” author Marlee Grace gives us a book every working adult should read.

It is tiny. You can slip it into your tote, read it during your lunch break, or flip through it after work. It is a small reminder to not always be working, and that will work in your favor.

“Here is a book, a workbook, a guide, an ode to not knowing. I wrote it first as a tiny zine that I typed up on my typewriter. I glued all the words down and scanned in the pages, printed them out, and stapled them together,” Grace writes.

“I wrote it for myself. The more I shared the little workbook with other people, the more I found that my friends were also in deep need of this process of identifying our work.”

She started it for herself first, which shows how important it was to her, and she found that we all could use it. Bosses should read this book; employees should read it. Everyone should remember that work will always be there — but not working is work too.

Part advice manual, part love letter, this book is full of practical tips — like keeping your phone in a box in another room — and poses bigger questions that make you stop and ask why you are burning out.

Grace, an artist and writer living on the coast of California, also runs a community space and public studio called Center. It is an aptly named venue that brings creatives together.

Her 2018 book feels as relevant today as ever, its chapters reminding us that we have to take charge of our own lives and create a rhythm that actually makes sense to us.

Learning how to not always be working is not about doing less, never working, or avoiding a job: It is a gentle but firm reminder to pause, breathe, and reclaim your time.

 


What We Are Reading Today: Exemplary Things by Christine M. E. Guth

What We Are Reading Today: Exemplary Things by Christine M. E. Guth
Updated 13 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: Exemplary Things by Christine M. E. Guth

What We Are Reading Today: Exemplary Things by Christine M. E. Guth

The Japanese term meibutsu refers to things of the highest cultural value, evolving over time to encompass both craft and fine art, high and low culture, and manufactured and natural items.

Material goods designated as meibutsu range from precious art objects to regional products like bamboo baskets and ceramics.

“Exemplary Things” traces the history of this epistemic classificatory system in Japanese culture from its elite origins in the fifteenth century to its commercial appropriation today.