Biography and Memoir
December 2022
Recent Releases
Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story
by Bono

What it is: Grammy Award-winning U2 frontman Bono's candid and conversational memoir discussing his life, career, and the inspiration behind his music.

Why you might like it: Forty U2 songs (each presented as a chapter title) serve as the inventive framing device for Bono's reflections. 

Want a taste? "I'm discovering surrender doesn't always have to follow defeat."
Ted Kennedy: A Life
by John A. Farrell

What it is: an engaging biography of Massachusetts senator Ted Kennedy.

What sets it apart: Pulitzer Prize finalist John A. Farrell utilizes never-before-seen sources, including Kennedy's personal diaries, to offer a nuanced and well-researched portrait of a complex political figure.

Awards buzz: This "definitive" (Publishers Weekly) account was longlisted for the 2022 National Book Award for Nonfiction.
A Place Called Home : a Memoir
by David Ambroz

What it is: a raw account of Ambroz's journey to adulthood and a powerful, uncompromising call to action for significant change.
 
What it's about:  A child welfare expert who was raised homeless in New York City discusses how he escaped poverty to become a powerful child welfare advocate for the Obama administration.  
 
Reviewers say: "Galvanizing and compassionate, this personal account of survival should be required reading."  (Publishers Weekly.)
 
The White Mosque
by Sofia Samatar

Starring: fantasy novelist Sofia Samatar (The Winged Histories), born to a Swiss Mennonite mother and a Somali Muslim father. 

What it's about: Samatar's 2016 pilgrimage to Uzbekistan to visit Ak-Metchet ("The White Mosque"), a village built in the late 19th century by Russian Mennonites.

Read it for: an evocative blend of memoir and travelogue that explores faith, identity, and community. 
The Revolutionary: Samuel Adams
by Stacy Schiff

What it is: a dramatic and page-turning biography of founding father Samuel Adams, penned by Pulitzer Prize winner Stacy Schiff (The Witches: Salem, 1692).

Why you might like it: Schiff's richly detailed chronicle reveals the pivotal yet lesser-known role Adams played in the American Revolution.

Reviewers say: "a must-read for colonial history buffs" (Publishers Weekly); "a welcome, fresh study" (Kirkus.) 
2022 Debuts
The Impossible City: A Hong Kong Memoir
by Karen Cheung

What it is: a lyrical memoir of journalist Karen Cheung's fraught coming of age against the backdrop of a Hong Kong newly under Chinese control.

Read it for: a compelling insider's look at the city, from its alternative music scene to its stratified society and protests for democracy. 

Try this next: Louisa Lim's Indelible City: Dispossession and Defiance in Hong Kong or Mark Clifford's Today Hong Kong, Tomorrow the World. 
Deaf Utopia: A Memoir -- and a Love Letter to a Way of Life
by Nyle DiMarco with Robert Siebert

What it's about: Deaf activist, model, and actor Nyle DiMarco's journey toward becoming "the proud Deaf man I am today."

Topics include: DiMarco's upbringing in a multigenerational Deaf family in New York City; navigating ableism in the entertainment industry; coming out as sexually fluid. 

Don't miss: the typed approximations of American Sign Language (ASL) DiMarco employs to convey the language's rhythms and charms.
Fearlessly Different: An Autistic Actor's Journey to Broadway's Biggest Stage
by Mickey Rowe

What it's about: how actor and National Disability Theater founder Mickey Rowe fulfilled his lifelong dream of acting.

Read it for: an impassioned celebration of a life well lived.

Did you know? In 2017, Rowe became the first openly autistic actor to play the lead role of autistic teenager Christopher Boone in a stage production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.
The High Desert
by James Spooner

What it is: Afro-punk artist and filmmaker James Spooner's graphic memoir depicting his coming of age in 1980s Apple Valley, California.

Art alert: Spooner's realistic, attention-grabbing illustrations and muted colors capture his struggles as a biracial kid living in a predominantly white town.

Try this next: For another bittersweet memoir about an outsider teen who finds solace in punk rock, read Phuc Tran's Sigh, Gone.
In the Shadow of the Mountain: A Memoir of Courage
by Silvia Vasquez-Lavado

What it's about: Grappling with alcoholism and memories of childhood sexual abuse, Peruvian-born Silicon Valley executive Silvia Vasquez-Lavado began climbing mountains, eventually starting a nonprofit to help girls heal through adventure and becoming the first openly gay woman to climb the Seven Summits. 

Movie buzz: Selena Gomez is set to star in a film adaptation of this moving memoir.
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