10 best books of April: The courage to look under the surface

Staff

April 20, 2023

It can, and should, be argued that every life is extraordinary. But April’s best books offer another one of those biographies of a life so compelling you cannot believe it was ever forgotten.

1. Saturday Night at the Lakeside Supper Club, by J. Ryan Stradal

This gratifying multi-generational story of two families who own restaurants in northern Minnesota serves up a bounty of humor, heartache, and affection. J. Ryan Stradal’s novel celebrates community, forgiveness, progress, and finding one’s own way.

Why We Wrote This

The reading life is an inspired one. And this month’s books bring empathy, courage, insight, and a new work highlighting an extraordinary life that should never have been forgotten.

2. Enter Ghost, by Isabella Hammad

An actor living in London returns to Israel to visit her sister and join a West Bank production of “Hamlet.” As she warms to the rhythm of rehearsals, the charged political landscape, plus long-ignored tensions with her Palestinian family, tug and test. It’s a patient, emotionally honest novel about creating art – and finding home – amid resistance.

Columbia’s president called the police. Students say they don’t know who to trust.

3. Coronation Year, by Jennifer Robson

The financially precarious Blue Lion Hotel may get the boost it needs when Queen Elizabeth II’s 1953 coronation procession rolls past its doors. As hotelier Edie, a photographer friend, and a boarder prepare for the celebration, a mysterious conspiracy brews. 

4. The Do-Over, by Suzanne Park

Korean American Lily Lee returns to college to complete the degree she thought she’d already earned, only to find that her old boyfriend is the teaching assistant in her class. Suzanne Park has created an empowered, intelligent rom-com with humor and depth.

5. The Secret Diaries of Charles Ignatius Sancho, by Paterson Joseph

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In his debut novel, Paterson Joseph presents the remarkable true life of Ignatius Sancho – born on a slave ship in 1729, raised in London by his enslaver’s sisters, and self-emancipated at age 20. Buoyed by fortuitous encounters, a hunger to learn, and a fierce spirit of survival, he charts his path with determination and brio.

6. Getting Out of Saigon, by Ralph White

On April 14, 1975, Chase Manhattan Bank junior officer Ralph White arrived in Saigon to help evacuate the bank’s 53 Vietnamese employees. His well-documented, true story offers a gripping play-by-play about the choice to do what’s right instead of what’s authorized.

7. The Wounded World, by Chad Williams

This compelling nonfiction book traces civil rights leader and scholar W.E.B. Du Bois’ decades of reckoning with World War I. Du Bois at first encouraged Black men to enlist, believing that their sacrifices overseas would lead to equality at home, but was disillusioned when racist violence escalated after the war.

8. After the Miracle, by Max Wallace

Helen Keller achieved international fame as a deaf and blind child who learned to read and write, but this fascinating biography reveals that her story did not end there. Keller became a radical leftist who used her celebrity to fight injustice, speaking out against Jim Crow, Nazism, McCarthyism, and more.

9. Gradual, by Greg Berman and Aubrey Fox

Activists and politicians frequently call for “radical change” and “bold action.” But what if American democracy was built for incremental change? The authors make a compelling case that a “go-slow” approach can change minds and prevent backlash. (Read our interview with the authors here.)

10. The Ugly History of Beautiful Things, by Katy Kelleher

Katy Kelleher delves into the dark history of luxury goods, along with her conflicting feelings about enjoying them. Beauty, she writes, can be transformative. But lovely objects like silk, diamonds, and marble often come at a cost to the environment and to the workers who produce them.