It's slim volume summer
let'sđ read đ shortđ books!
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In a season of overwhelm, when time to read has been scarce, Iâve found great comfort in three wonderful, profound, powerful books that just happen to be quite short.
The Writing Life by Annie Dillard
I ordered The Writing Life after reading about her in a Mason Currey book, I think. Iâve never read anything else by Annie Dillard, but she seemed interesting and Iâm working on a novel (can you say youâre âworking on itâ if you havenât touched it in half a year?) and wanted to read a great book on writing that might unlock something for me. BOY did this book hit hard. Annie Dillard is so intense, so penetratingly honest in a way that kind of blows your hair back, and I fucking loved every page of it and read from it to anyone whoâd listen.
My favorite section was one where she essentially says, youâre not blocked. Thereâs something wrong with your book, something you see as so vital you canât imagine losing it, and your body knows even if your head doesnât, and thatâs why itâs not sitting down at the desk to write. Interrogate your book, test every piece of its structure, and find the weakness and fix it. Her tone somehow feels very hostile but very loving at the same time, like your one friend you can actually count on to be completely honest with you even if it might be tough to hear.
I canât wait to read some of her fiction. Jacqueline Suskin (who is, btw, the aforementioned type of friend) says I have to read Pilgrim at Tinker Creek.
In The Round by Rebecca Handler
I was fortunate to snag an early copy of In The Round, which comes out this November from McSweeneyâs. I had no idea what to expect, knew nothing about the book, had no idea I was about to read something unlike any book Iâd ever read.
I actually donât want to tell you too much about it because going in blind was a great experience for me, but I will say that if most books take place on the flat side of a square, this one takes place on a corner. Does that make sense? Like, youâre on the tip of the story, you can see all these different sides of it, and you have no idea if, when or where youâre going to land, and itâs thrillingly mysterious and prismatic while also being a sweet and deeply moving narrative.
It reminded me a bit of Italo Calvino, if Iâm remembering that guy correctly. But also totally magical, inventive and new. Every time I picked it up, it lit me right up and I couldnât put it down. Pre-order!
Make Believe by Mac Barnett
Make Believe is by Mac Barnett, the National Ambassador for Young Peopleâs Literature, which is apparently a thing. When it was published in May, the book sort of registered in the background for me, I figured Iâd get to it one day. Then I heard there was DRAMA. People were apparently enraged that Barnett says, essentially, that most kids books are bad.
I heard about that and ordered the book immediately, because heâs totally right. Some of the picture books thatâve wormed their way into our household have emitted audible gasps of disgust from me. Awful, awful art (the highly digital stuff especially yucks me out), soulless, lazy writing, atrocious, sub-par gobbledygook that I whisk out to our little free library when my kids arenât looking. In short, Iâm a snob who loves drama, and I wanted to know what else Mac Barnett had to say.
Also, Iâm working on two picture books right now, and dreaming of more â dreaming, in fact, of a whole career making picture books. But Iâm just at the start of it, just learning the ins and outs of this specific art form, and I found such an incredible education in Make Believe. Itâs a powerful clarion call asking us as parents, readers and artists to take kids more seriously as readers, to give them truly great, entertaining, beautiful, meaningful art that celebrates their world â not smoothed out sludge thatâs meant to indoctrinate them into the world of adults. It gave me so much more context for the work I do, and a real sense of responsibility.
Especially in the age of AI, I think this book is wise and vital. I hope this silly backlash doesnât keep Mac from continuing to lead the way and speak the truth. Itâs hard to believe anyone who was upset by it actually read the book, which Iâm certain Iâll be re-reading this book many times in my life, maybe even again this year.
Have a slim volume to recommend? Drop it in the comments!
Thanks for being here,
â¤ď¸ Hal
HALMAIL is a free newsletter. But if you want to show support and help me buy art supplies and childcare, you are welcome to.
The Writing Life by Annie Dillard
In the Round by Rebecca Handler
Make Believe by Mac Barnett
Looking at Picture Books, Mac Barnettâs newsletter with the wonderful Jon Klassen







- tove jansson, THE SUMMER BOOK
- Denis Johnson, TRAIN DREAMS
- Eve babitz, SLOW DAYS FAST COMPANY
- Charles Portis, TRUE GRIT
- Eleanor Davis, YOU & A BIKE & A ROAD
- John Berger, WAYS OF SEEING
And a few more (need to update this list)
https://austinkleon.com/2020/04/03/short-was-good-in-a-book/
The Employees by Olga Ravn
Minor Detail by Adania Shibli
I Remember by Joe Brainard
People Who Led to My Plays by Adrienne Kennedy
Great Granny Webster by Caroline Blackwood