Joseph-Beth Booksellers

Dead and Alive: Essays by Zadie Smith

Zadie Smith’s latest book, Deand and Alive: Essays, is illuminating, engrossing, and thought-provoking. Smith engages in a conversation with the reader — because that is what each essay is, a conversation between author and reader — by sharing her thoughts on art, politics, identity (with an emphasis on racial and gender), the algorithm, socioeconomic status, what it means to be an American versus an immigrant, and the relationship between writer and reader. The unifying theme throughout the entire collection is the author’s viewpoints on the individual and the collective, about who I am versus the Other. Many readers are aware of Ms. Smith’s fiction, but, in my humble opinion, not enough are familiar with her essays. I suspect that I am an atypical fan. The first books I read were Changing My Mind and Feel Free, two previous collections of non-fiction. The majesty of her essays, the radiance of her prose — she conveys so much in a single sentence, handpicking each word — was so intoxicating that I rushed to the nearest library to pick up whatever was available of her fiction. “Fascinated to Presume: In Defense of Fiction,” “Shibboleth,” “The Realm of the Unspoken,” and “Conscience and Consciousness: A Craft Talk for the People and the Person” — each of which is included in Deand and Alive: Essays — should be required reading. In “Conscience and Consciousness,” Smith writes, “Art is one of the ways we reveal the peculiarities of consciousness.” In this latest collection, it is the author’s consciousness that is on display. Because of this aspect, I feel I understand her a little better, and I suspect many readers will appreciate this all too rare quality of the book. I learned a great deal while reading, and I found myself re-considering my own notions about a great many topics simply due to having access to the author’s vantage point. This collection requires careful reading and deliberation. Please, savor each individual work.

Deand and Alive: Essays by Zadie Smith, (List Price: $30, Penguin Press, 9780593834688, October 2025)

Reviewed by Michael Yetter, Joseph-Beth Booksellers Lexington in Lexington, Kentucky

Dead and Alive: Essays by Zadie Smith Read More »

A Clash of Steel: A Treasure Island Remix by C. B. Lee

I am very much a fan of these Remix Classics. I read several of these as a kid, and I never saw anyone who resembled me, and I’m sure other people of various backgrounds, abilities, and sexual orientations did not see themselves either. Just providing a slight twist to these stories breathes new life into these classic tales, and they feel great to read.

A Clash of Steel: A Treasure Island Remix by C. B. Lee, (List Price: $14.99, Square Fish, 9781250853509, September 2022)

Reviewed by Kim Brock, Joseph-Beth Booksellers Lexington in Lexington, Kentucky

A Clash of Steel: A Treasure Island Remix by C. B. Lee Read More »

Chocolate Lover : A Baking Book—Decadent Treats by Michele Song

As a self-professed chocoholic, this book is fantastic! There are familiar favorites, different takes on classics, and new chocolate treats that make me want to get in the kitchen pronto. I want to sample every recipe. YUMMMMMY!”

Chocolate Lover : A Baking Book—Decadent Treats by Michele Song, (List Price: $27.95, Chronicle Books, 9781797215914, September 2024)

Reviewed by Kim Brock, Joseph-Beth Booksellers Lexington in Lexington, Kentucky

Chocolate Lover : A Baking Book—Decadent Treats by Michele Song Read More »

The Demon of Unrest by Erik Larson

Another triumph by Erik Larson who, again, has produced an imposing history that is amazing, informative, and always entertaining. The Demon of Unrest is an engrossing preamble to the Civil War and fully meets Larson’s stated objective to choose a topic that is “inherently suspenseful.” Unfortunately, the book’s title may be too obscure to properly convey any sense of how riveting this book actually is. Of course, this will matter little to confirmed Larson fans, but, hopefully, the casual browser will not “judge this book by its cover!”

The Demon of Unrest by Erik Larson, (List Price: $35, Crown, 9780385348744, April 2024)

Reviewed by Michael Yetter, Joseph-Beth Booksellers Lexington in Lexington, Kentucky

The Demon of Unrest by Erik Larson Read More »

The Editor by Sara B. Franklin

Sara Franklin’s first-rate biography is a celebration of the “audacious life” of editor Judith Jones, whose career spanned the 1960s and into the millennium. With little more than instinct, pluck, and will, Jones began her career at Doubleday at age 17 and rose to senior editor and V.P. At Knopf in Paris. After being involved with noted authors like John Updike, Sylvia Plath, John Hersey, and Langston Hughes, and important manuscripts including The Diary of Anne Frank, she gained her most remarkable success by her association first with cookery guru Julia Child and later with James Beard and Jacques Papin, to become a true “culinary luminary.” This is an exceptional book, where even the end-notes make entertaining reading.

The Editor by Sara B. Franklin, (List Price: $29.99, Atria Books, 9781982134341, May 2024)

Reviewed by Michael Yetter, Joseph-Beth Booksellers Lexington in Lexington, Kentucky

The Editor by Sara B. Franklin Read More »

Scroll to Top