I take part in this meme every few months. This time we begin with Born to Run, Bruce Springsteen’s memoir. (See Kate’s opening post.)

#1 Springsteen is one of my musical blind spots – I maybe know two songs by him? – but my husband has been working up a cover of his “Streets of Philadelphia” to perform at the next open mic night at our local arts venue. A great Philadelphia-set novel I’ve read twice is The Sixteenth of June by Maya Lang.
#2 The 16th of June is, as James Joyce fans out there will know, “Bloomsday,” so I’ll move on to the only novel I’ve read so far by Amy Bloom (and one I felt ambivalent about, though I love her short stories and memoir), White Houses.
#3 A recent and much-missed occupant of the White House: Barack Obama, whose Dreams from My Father didn’t quite stand up to a reread but is still a strong family memoir when it doesn’t go too deep into community organizing.
#4 Similar to the Oprah effect, Obama publicly mentioning that he’s read and enjoyed a book is enough to make it a bestseller. On his list of favourite books of 2022 was The Furrows by Namwali Serpell, which I currently have on the go as a buddy read with Laura T.
#5 The Furrows is longlisted for the inaugural Carol Shields Prize for Fiction. In 2020 I did buddy reads of six Carol Shields novels with Marcie of Buried in Print. One of those was Happenstance, the story of a marriage told from two perspectives, the husband’s and the wife’s.
#6 My Happenstance volume gives the wife’s story first and then once you’ve read to halfway you flip it over to read the husband’s story. The only other novel I know of that does that (How to Be Both does have two different versions, each of which starts with a different story line, but you don’t physically turn the book over) is Scary Monsters by Michelle de Kretser, which recently won the Rathbones Folio Prize in the fiction category. Perhaps it’s no coincidence that Ali Smith was a judge! (How astonished am I that I predicted all three category winners and the overall winner in this post from three days before the announcement?!) I know nothing else about the novel, but I have a copy out from the library and plan to read it soon.
Where will your chain take you? Join us for #6Degrees of Separation! (Hosted on the first Saturday of each month by Kate W. of Books Are My Favourite and Best.) Next month’s starting book is Hydra by Adriane Howell, from the Stella Prize 2023 shortlist.
Have you read any of my selections? Tempted by any you didn’t know before?
Good chain! I’ll be interested to hear what you make of The Furrows. I found it interesting and engaging while reading, but ultimately felt it fizzled out a bit.
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It has the potential to get old quite quickly! I’m at around page 40 and still enjoying it.
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Yours is the second reference to Obama I’ve come across in a Six Degrees this month. Lovely to see Happenstance get a mention. I’ll be interested to see how you get on with Scary Monsters.
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Ooh, I’ll have to find the other one!
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Quite a fascinating chain here. That book you flip over to read the other half sounds very unusual!
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I think the idea is to give a different perspective on the same events, to make you rethink what happened before.
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The flipping idea is an interesting one; the only ones of that sort I’ve seen are children’s books from the companion library series, but those are two different books rather than perspectives.
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Still rare enough to seem novel.
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Great job! I love how you linked the first one! I prefered Susan Wittig Albert’s Loving Eleanor to White Houses but that’s not a biggie. I highly recommend it!
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Thanks! Maybe I’ll try Loving Eleanor to see if I like it better.
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Happenstance sounds really interesting! Thanks for mentioning it!
Enjoyed your chain this month!
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Thank you! It’s not one of my favorites by Carol Shields but it’s interesting to see how the husband and wife’s stories interlock or contradict each other.
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