The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2018
The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2018
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Mariner Books
Just the Series: The Best American Series   

Series and Publisher: The Best American Series   

Annotation: This anthology presents a selection of short works from mainstream and alternative American periodicals published in 2017, including nonfiction, screenplays, television writing, fiction, and alternative comics.
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #6571569
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Mariner Books
Copyright Date: 2018
Edition Date: 2018 Release Date: 10/02/18
Pages: xviii, 297 pages
ISBN: 1-328-46581-0
ISBN 13: 978-1-328-46581-8
Dewey: 810.8
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist (Mon Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)

This annual compilation of the best nonrequired reading (i.e., literature for young adults) boasts 30 selections presented in a variety of formats and genres, including comics, poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and the head-scratchingly unclassifiable, all originally published in 2017. As in the past, the contents have been selected by 15 Bay Area high-school students, who vetted their own nominations as well as those from the guest editor, Canadian writer Sheila Heti, and series editor Clara Sankey. The results are, to put it mildly, eclectic if not downright eccentric, often intriguingly so. Some are from established mainstream venues like the Atlantic, the New York Review of Books, New York magazine, the New Yorker, and more; others are from less well-known sources: NOON, Guernica, The Believer, etc. It's obvious that these students' tastes are not necessarily universal; one wonders, for example, of what interest a long piece about a woman's bariatric surgery might be to most teens. Nevertheless, there is something for everyone in this year's assemblage. And, best of all, it's nonrequired!

Kirkus Reviews

A decade and a half after its inception, the annual "nonrequired reading" continues along its quirky path—so quirky at times, in fact, that the editors want us to know that "no one was on drugs when we put it together."Founded by novelist Dave Eggers in 2002, the Nonrequired Reading has a delightful twist baked right into it: It's judged by high school students, and the proceeds go to 826 National, a cluster of writing and tutoring centers around the country. By guest editor Heti's account, the process of working with those young people was as important as the product; says one student judge, "we're not worried about analyzing the pieces—we're not worried about picking apart every motif because we'll have to write an essay on it." It should be said, on that note, that the product doesn't suffer by comparison to older kin such as the Pushcart annual; in addition, the BANR volumes, drawing from a wide pool of reading, have tended to emphasize a welcome diversity along all lines as something more than a polite nod. The themes are often quite grown-up, too. A story early on, for instance, by the Chinese writer Qiu Miaojin, features alcohol, albeit alcohol ejected from the body in ways teenagers will understand, and same-sex lovemaking, accompanied by lashings of angst. From the late journalist Alex Tizon comes an essay that ignited a storm of controversy when it appeared in the Atlantic, recounting a dark family secret: "I had a family, a career, a house in the suburbs—the American dream. And then I had a slave." Other stories and poems tend to less fraught but still engaging topics. A standout among many high points is Annie Baker's decidedly centrifugal play, "The Antipodes," which goes from family drama to horror as a character realizes that the fence of a neighbor's house "is actually made out of bones and on the top of every post is a human skull."Literary culture is in good hands in this top-shelf collection.

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ALA Booklist (Mon Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Kirkus Reviews
Reading Level: 9.0
Interest Level: 9+

Sheila Heti, author of the acclaimed How a Person Should Be? and coeditor of the best-selling anthology Women in Clothes, along with the students of 826 Valencia writing lab will edit this year’s anthology. Their compilation includes new fiction, nonfiction, poetry, comics, and the category-defying gems that have become one of the hallmarks of this lively collection.


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