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Late Last
Night Books
because so much reading, writing, and living happens after-hours
Since 2013
Gary Garth McCann, founder and managing editor
an ad-free magazine about fiction by authors Terra Ziporyn * Sally Whitney * Eileen Haavik McIntire * Gary Garth McCann * Peter G. Pollak * Garry Craig Powell * Jenny Yacovissi * Lily Iona MacKenzie * Todd S. Garth * Daniel Oliver
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2020: Reviewing a Year of Reading

Late Last Night Books
JENNIFER YACOVISSI

Author of Up the Hill to Home

21 JANUARY 2021 2020: Reviewing a Year of Reading

In a year like no other in living memory, many of us turned to the comfort that books can offer when the world is too much. Unlike many of my friends and social network connections, I continued to go into an office every workday throughout the year, so I never found myself with the kind of enforced leisure time that so many encountered during 2020, but I still found myself burrowed in books—either reading them or listening to them—whenever possible, and I will own up to using them as an escape mechanism. Most I read to review, either here in my bimonthly column or for my regular reviewing gig for the Washington Independent Review of Books.

In the hotly contested election year that was, my reviewing skewed heavily political, starting with Unmaking the Presidency, which was released on the first day of the January 2020 impeachment trial—and before virtually any of us had heard of the other issue that would consume our year, covid—and ending with What Were We Thinking, my review of which came out on election day. For the Independent’s “Best Book I Read in 2020,” I made a hard choice and said mine was OMG WTF Does the Constitution Actually Say?, “because America needs to re-learn its civics, and this is a great place to start.”

In a bit of serendipity, I read three books in row that fit neatly together in a feminist trio of echoed themes: Recollections of My Non-Existence, Too Much, and Why Fish Don’t Exist. In other parallels, The Doctor of Aleppo reminded me of earlier Elliot Ackerman novels, while Ackerman’s latest novel, Red Dress in Black and White, had stunningly eerie parallels to the moment into which it was released, at the start of this summer’s protests for racial justice.

So not even the fiction I read this year was exactly escapist. Let us hope that 2021 doesn’t need as much of an escape, that we can emerge from our protective crouch and rejoin the world around us as vaccines take hold and help us to beat back the darkness. And, as this column is posted on Inauguration Day, I also send out thanks for a speedy return to empathy, understanding, and competence. And may your 2021 reading bring you joy just for itself, just as it should be.

Books I read to review, with links to the reviews:

What Were We Thinking: A Brief Intellectual History of the Trump Era, Carlos Lozada

Transcendent Kingdom, Yaa Gyasi

The Boy in the Field, Margot Livesey

OMG WTF Does the Constitution Actually Say? A Non-Boring Guide to How Our Democracy is Supposed to Work, Ben Sheehan

It Was All A Lie: How the Republican Party Became Donald Trump, Stuart Stevens

Nothing is Wrong and Here is Why: Essays, Alexandra Petri

Humankind: A Hopeful History, Rutger Bregman

Red Dress in Black and White: A Novel, Elliot Ackerman

Tree Story: The History of the World Written in Rings, Valerie Trouet

Galileo and the Science Deniers, Mario Livio

Why Fish Don’t Exist, Lulu Miller

Too Much: How Victorian Constraints Still Bind Women Today, Rachel Vorona Cote

Recollections of My Non-Existence, Rebecca Solnit

Little Constructions: A Novel, Anna Burns

Unmaking the Presidency: Donald Trump’s War on the World’s Most Powerful Office, Susan Hennessey and Benjamin Wittes

Coventry: Essays, Rachel Cusk

Ordinary Girls: A Memoir, Jaquira Diaz

The Doctor of Aleppo, Dan Mayland

The Ghost in the House, Sara O’Leary

Known By Heart, Ellen Prentiss Campbell

Books reviewed together in my column Brief but Indelible

  • Midnight at the Organporium, Tara Campbell
  • How to Sit, Tyrese Coleman

Books Reviewed together in my column 2020 Summer & Fall Reading Round-up

  • Mad and Bad: Real Heroines of the Regency, Bea Koch
  • The Brief and True Report of Temperance Flowerdew, Denise Heinze
  • When We Were Young and Brave, Hazel Gaynor
  • Blacktop Wasteland, S. A. Cosby
  • The Vultures, Mark Hannon
  • They’re Gone, E. A. Barres

Books I read to prepare for my interview with Louis Bayard at the virtual 2020 Gaithersburg Book Festival:

  • Courting Mr. Lincoln
  • Roosevelt’s Beast
  • Lucky Strikes
  • Mr. Timothy

Books I read or listened to for sheer pleasure:

  • Salt the Snow, Carrie Callaghan
  • The Weird Sisters, Eleanor Brown
  • Milkman, Anna Burns
  • Salvage the Bones, Jesmyn Ward
  • On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, Ocean Vuong
  • The Glass Hotel, Emily St. John Mandel

Books I read and chose not to review:

  • Butch Cassidy, Charles Leerhsen
  • A Woman Alone, Nina Laurin

Books still in progress at the end of the year:

  • Alexander Hamilton, Ron Chernow
  • Blood Dark Track: A Family History, Joseph O’Neill
  • The Bluest Eye, Toni Morrison
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Jennifer Bort Yacovissi

Jenny Yacovissi grew up in Bethesda, Maryland, just a bit farther up the hill from Washington, D.C. Her debut novel Up the Hill to Home is a fictionalized account of her mother’s family in Washington from the Civil War to the Great Depression. In addition to writing historical and contemporary literary fiction, Jenny reviews regularly for the Washington Independent Review of Books and the Historical Novel Society. She belongs to the National Book Critic’s Circle and PEN/America. She also owns a small project management and engineering consulting firm, and enjoys gardening and being on the water. Jenny lives with her husband Jim in Crownsville, Maryland. To learn more about the families in Up the Hill to Home and see photos and artifacts from their lives, visit http://www.jbyacovissi.com/about-the-book.

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