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The Books Briefing: The Artists Who Melodize Our Lives

📚 Miles: The Autobiography, by Miles Davis With Quincy Troupe


Debbie Harry stares back

“Knowing that there are still those who expect her to be simply ‘a blonde in tight pants,’ she tells her life story how she wants to tell it.”

📚 Face It, by Debbie Harry


The unknowable Joni Mitchell

“[David] Yaffe’s greatest accomplishment in Reckless Daughter, stuffed though it is with insightful reporting, is to shed light not just on the artist but also on the art. Yaffe … brings a sophisticated and exceptionally careful ear to music that demands nothing less.”

📚 Joni: The Anthology, by Barney Hoskyns

📚 Reckless Daughter: A Portrait of Joni Mitchell, by David Yaffe


Diving into pop music’s hidden depths

“In the slim volume’s introduction, [Charlie] Harding and [Nate] Sloan note their own prior snobbery and spend the rest of the text expanding on what their podcast has done since its inception: nerd out. The book’s 16 chapters each break down one song, using it to explain a few different tenets of musical structure.”

📚 Switched on Pop: How Popular Music Works, and Why It Matters, by Nate Sloan and Charlie Harding


(Associated Press)

The secret life of Thelonious Monk

“With unprecedented access to Monk’s family and records, [Robin D. G.] Kelley dispels many of the myths around the eccentric pianist and the psychiatric, legal, and professional challenges he faced before he died in 1982. Through it all, he renders Monk’s world in rich detail, from hardscrabble North Carolina roots to the demanding and uncertain life of the working jazz musician.”

📚 Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original, by Robin D. G. Kelley


The Reference Desk

(New York Public Library)

This week’s question comes from Kelly: “Do you have any book suggestions for how to get over an ex or be friends with an ex?”

Plenty of books follow people rebuilding their life after failed relationships, but I think the most poignant examples are those that portray characters realizing that moving on healthily is not a quick journey. The main character in Lydia Davis’s novel The End of the Story candidly retraces the events of her lost romantic relationship in a novel she’s writing as a way to better understand and make peace with their uncoupling. Dinner With Edward, by Isabel Vincent, is a memoir about the friendship Vincent found with a widowed older man at a time when her marriage was faltering. This sweet true story emphasizes the value of platonic relationships not only as a distraction from issues with romantic partners, but also as a source of genuine love and joy.   

Write to the Books Briefing team at booksbriefing@theatlantic.com or reply directly to this email with any of your reading-related dilemmas. We might feature one of your questions in a future edition of the Books Briefing and offer a few books or related Atlantic pieces that might help you out.


About us: This week’s newsletter is written by Myles Poydras. The book he’s been looking at is Black Lives 1900: W. E. B. Du Bois at the Paris Exposition, published by Redstone Press.


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