#FridayReads, Oct. 5–“I’m Your Man,” New Leonard Cohen bio & “The Night Strangers”

#FridayReads, Oct. 5–I’m Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen by Sylvie Simmons, a well-written, richly textured bio of the 78-year old world class troubadour, just published this week. Still reading and savoring Chris Bohjalian’s quietly beautiful haunted house novel, The Night Strangers, set in New Hampshire’s North Country, near where I went to school at Franconia College.

Reading Great Books with Will Schwalbe

Great to see that friend and author Will Schwalbe‘s new book The End of Your Life Book Club is having a great roll-out. Last May, Will published a Mother’s Day Op-Ed in the NY Times, after which I wrote a post called Savoring Great Books with a Dying Parent. In part it reads,

“It opens with Will and his ailing mother in a medical office awaiting a chemotherapy appointment. He asks her what she’s reading–it’s Wallace Stegner’s aptly titled Crossing To Safety. “It was a book that I’d always pretended to have read, but never actually had. That day, I promised her I’d read it.” Soon, over the months of treatment and convalescence until her passing, they find mutual comfort in discussing the books they are reading in a kind personal book club all their own.

It’s touching story, and as I read the column I found myself in Will’s place, glad for the solace provided by these books and the opportunity for closeness shared reading offered them.

Having operated a family-owned bookstore–Undercover Books in Cleveland, Ohio–and later losing both my parents, Earl and Sylvia, and my brother Joel, I look back on all the books we shared and enjoyed over the years. I just have to look at my home library and dozens of memories and conversations come cascading forth, from the novels alone: Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale; Peter Rushforth’s, Kindergarten; Jack Finney’s Time and Again; Mary Tirone-Smith’s The Book of Phoebe; James Crumley’s The Last Good Kiss; Howard Frank Mosher’s Disappearances; Philip Kerr’s March Violets; Ernest Hebert’s Dogs of March. This list could go on indefinitely.
Will’s new book will be out in the fall. I’m eager to read it.”

At the BN Review today, Will’s offering his top three reads of the moment, including J.R. Moehringer’s new novel Sutton, which I am really eager to read. I am also really eager to read The End of Your Life Book Club. Congratulations to Will!

Today’s Encouraging Job Figures

At a doctor’s office right now, but finding I have good wifi so can blog a bit while waiting. It’s great to get word of the upward revision to jobs #s for July & August, the #s for Sept. and the resulting drop in UE rate to 7.8%. Under PBO USA has created more jobs in 4 years than GWB did in 8! The upward revisions show that even though there’s still a long way to go, the national trajectory is definitely moving in the right direction. Meantime, Jack Welch is disgracing himself by pushing out a tweet that ‘Chicago’ has cooked the numbers to give the president and DEMs a boost, as if the Bureau of Labor Statistics were in on a fix. This guy was CEO of a major corporation-what an idiot.