Bunkobons

← All curators

Naomi Klein's Reading List

Notable reader profiled on radicalreads.com. 5 favorite books recommended in their radicalreads feature.

Open in WellRead Daily app →

Favorite books (2023)

Favorite books recommended by Naomi Klein, as compiled by radicalreads.com. Source article: https://radicalreads.com/naomi-klein-favorite-books/.

Source: radicalreads.com

James Baldwin (also rec’d by David Bowie & Ta-Nehisi Coates ) · Buy on Amazon
"Published in 1963 amid the throes of the civil rights movement, Baldwin’s classic is painfully relevant today. Written largely in the form of a letter from Baldwin to his nephew, the book is a call to channel righteous fury into a powerful resistance."
Eduardo Galeano (also rec’d by Howard Zinn ) · Buy on Amazon
"Galeano, who died in 2015, was a Uruguayan journalist and novelist. In his incendiary, poetic, and uncomfortable history of the Americas, published in 1971, he compiled a series of historical vignettes that weave together colonialism’s omnipresent themes: genocide, extraction, and exploitation."
David Mitchell (also rec’d by Natalie Portman ) · Buy on Amazon
"Another form-defying work. Mitchell leaps across space and time to tell six seemingly disconnected stories in different styles. ‘Only as you gasp your dying breath shall you understand, your life amounted to no more than one drop in a limitless ocean,’ one of his characters writes. ‘Yet what is any ocean, but a multitude of drops?'"
Rachel Carson (also rec’d by Jane Goodall & Rebecca Solnit ) · Buy on Amazon
"Carson’s book draws its enduring power from the combination of her deep love for the natural world and her indignation at the attacks waged upon it by the chemical industry. A former marine biologist, Carson was battling an aggressive cancer when she wrote this 1962 masterpiece."
Mary Shelley (also rec’d by Patti Smith & R.L. Stine ) · Buy on Amazon
"Victor Frankenstein created a monster when he took his experiments to a devastating extreme. Today, nearly 200 years after the publication of Shelley’s novel, the pursuit of limitless data and our attempts to exert technological control over nature are producing even more disastrous outcomes — and this time, they’re global."

Suggest an update?