District Distinct #88 - Favorite Books of 2024 So Far


Book Recommendations

The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store

by James McBride

A human skeleton is found at the bottom of a well in 1972 in Pottstown, PA. An investigation ensues but Hurricane Agnes abruptly destroys the town and any evidence of the crime. The story travels back in time to the 1930s when blacks and Jews lived together in a tense harmony. The origins of the crime are revealed through the community's interconnected stories. The book is an inspiring reminder of how we once were and still can be of one civic fabric.

The Buddha in the Attic

by Julie Otsuka

In the early 20th century thousands of Japanese picture brides were uprooted and brought to America as wives to husbands they did not know in a language they couldn't understand. Later they endured the ignominy of internment. The story is told in the first person plural, creating a chorus of voices (instead of just one character) that lends both gravity and intimacy to the shared experience of this historical indignity.

Small Things Like These

by Claire Keegan

Shortlisted for a Booker Prize, Small Things Like These is a compact 128 pages but packs an emotional punch. Set in 1985 during Ireland's tragic Magdalene laundries, the story follows the emotional and moral journey of Bill Furlong, a hard-working, dedicated family man, who accidentally uncovers a scandal that everyone understands but is too afraid to challenge. What Furlong decides isn't revealed until the very last lines of the book.

Address Unknown

by Kathrine Kressmann Taylor

An epistolary novella told entirely through the back and forth letters between friends and business partners, one an American Jew and the other a German returning to his homeland in the 1930s. The letters take a dark turn as the German friend falls deeper into the grasp of rising Naziism. It's deeply unsettling how relevant books about early 30s Germany feel today.

Erasure

by Percival Everett

A black novelist struggling to sell books returns home to care for his ailing mother. Stewing in his own professional failure, Thelonious Monk writes an anonymous novel parodying what he thinks white publishers want from black writers. Much to his dismay, but also proving his point, the book becomes a bestseller. Brilliant satire and also a touching story about difficult family dynamics. The book was also made into a fabulous movie, American Fiction.


Next Sunday

Thanks for reading. Stay tuned for next week. If you aren’t already subscribed, please join my newsletter here. We deliver on Sundays. :)

District Distinct

As a business consultant and ICF-certified executive leadership coach, I've helped over a hundred founders, entrepreneurs and business leaders grow their impact professionally and personally. On Sundays, I write a newsletter highlighting some of those coaching insights and ideas with the hope of helping others grow their impact too.

Read more from District Distinct

The High Return Activity of Raising Others' Ambitions This is the title of a Tyler Cowen blog post that I've thought about a lot recently. It applies to coaching, but I also think it has broader relevance to our day-to-day lives and encounters. Here's the salient paragraph from Cowen: At critical moments in time, you can raise the aspirations of other people significantly, especially when they are relatively young, simply by suggesting they do something better or more ambitious than what they...

Ayr Mount, Hillsborough, NC Annual Review & Goal Setting Templates Each year I put together an annual review and goal setting process to help draw perspective from the prior year and frame how I want to focus my time and effort in the new year. For me, this year is about finishing the reader manuscript for my novel, growing my coaching business, building and strengthening community in North Carolina, and continuing to chisel away at my exceptional physique. I'm also putting a premium on...

Favorite Books of 2024 When the clock strikes midnight on 2024 I'll have come damn close to accomplishing a goal of reading 50 books. Of those books, below were the ones that left the biggest impression. Listed in no particular order, except for the first one. James by Percival Everett was far and away my favorite of the year. Not a bold choice since according to LitHub it was on more 'best of 2024' lists than any other book. Everett is brilliant and so is this captivating and funny twist on...