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Jenna Bush Hager’s final book club pick of 2019 is this indie darling from Margaret Renkl. “It’s beautiful and it is a slower pace but I kind of loved that at the end of the year. We end with something slow and reflective and gorgeous,” Hager said in the announcement. Renkl wrote this book about her mother’s life soon after her death.
A thrilling account of the mysterious — and unsolved — deaths of a group of elite Russian hikers in 1959. The nine suddenly disappeared in the wintry wilds of the Ural Mountains. When their bodies were finally found, none was properly dressed for the brutal cold. Did they flee something terrible in the dead of night? Travel along with the investigation into what really happened without leaving your cozy couch.
Sarah M. Broom won the 2019 National Book Award for Nonfiction for her touching memoir, “The Yellow House,” which chronicles how her family rode out Hurricane Katrina and generations of social injustices. Judges praise how Broom “uses reportage, oral history, and astute political analysis to seep into the generational crevices, while reveling and revealing the choppy inheritances rooted in one family in the neighborhood of New Orleans East.”
Former NFL quarterback Andrew Luck selected “Red Notice” as his final book club pick of 2019. Written like a gripping thriller novel, Bill Browder’s account of exposing deep corruption in Russia and his unfailing will to fight against Vladimir Putin’s regime proves that sometimes fact is far stranger than fiction.
Hallie Rubenhold won the 2019 Baillie Gifford Prize — the prestigious British award for the best nonfiction writing in English — for “The Five: The Untold Lives of Women Killed by Jack the Ripper.” Judges describe her book as “brilliantly written and brilliantly researched … And it is so relevant now in terms of how crimes, particularly sex crimes and crimes against women, can be reported and considered and talked about.”
While your uncle is getting on your nerves at holiday gatherings, just think, there’s no way your family has even half the dysfunction of Augusten Burrough’s. Seriously, there’s a pedophile who lives in the shed behind his house. Defines “insanely funny.” (If your family is half as dysfunctional, you should start writing a book about it over winter vacation.)
Impeachment proceedings continue to dominate headlines, but what would impeachment actually mean for Trump’s presidency? Find out by learning about what happened the three times impeachment has been invoked in the past.
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