What I Read June 2026

Runs into blog carrying a stack of books.
Hi! Sorry I’m late. I know I’m not “the cavalry has missed the battle” late. But a little late.
…It’s just that this month has been…
Holds up one finger…
Hang on…
Several deep breaths.
…You know what? It doesn’t matter. Everybody’s month has been amonth. Nobody needs me filing an extension request with my own blog.
Sorry, just a second please…I seem to have overexerted myself…
One more deep breath.
Good grief. Sprinting into your own blog is a young person’s game.
Bends over and puts hands on knees.
Jeez, I’m out of shape.
Whew! Okay. This month: weird brilliant people doing weird, brilliant, consequential things.
Children, teenagers, writers, neighborhoods, eras, nations all trying to become something before they know exactly what that something is.
Grabs water bottle and chugs for a good 15 seconds.
Anyway, enough philosophizing and dramatically bolting into my own post. I’ve got five books to talk about, and if I don’t start now, this’ll become next month’s reading roundup.
Which is all just to say here are the books I enjoyed enough to finish this month.
- The Greatest Sentence Ever Written by Walter Isaacson
- The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros
- Slouching Towards Bethlehem by Joan Didion
- Now Is Not the Time to Panic by Kevin Wilson
- Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
Note: For sanity and scale (mine, yours, and the internet’s), what follows are the openings of each review. Full versions are linked below.
THE GREATEST SENTENCE EVER WRITTEN by WALTER ISAACSON
The Greatest Sentence Ever Written takes the second sentence of the Declaration of Independence (“We hold these truths to be self-evident…”) and treats it as the protagonist in a story still unfolding.
Magnificent.
I mean, most sentences are not generally carrying the moral aspirations of an entire nation for the better part of two and a half centuries, and yet…this one has been drafted, edited, celebrated, weaponized, ignored, embroidered, recited by schoolchildren, shouted by abolitionists, borrowed by suffragists, quoted by civil rights leaders, and repeatedly forced to testify against the country that invented it. That’s a hell of a strong lift for thirty-something words.
THE HOUSE ON MANGO STREET by SANDRA CISNEROS
I read a lot of books that make me want to read more books.
The House on Mango Street made me want to write better.
I came to The House on Mango Street because my daughter sang its praises. She loved the language, the architecture of the storytelling, the way the novel gathered itself from brief, luminous pieces instead of long, sweeping chapters. For weeks she kept returning to it in conversation. So I read it. She makes excellent recommendations.
SLOUCHING TOWARDS BETHLEHEM by JOAN DIDION
The biggest risk I take reading Joan Didion is that by the end of every essay, I am absolutely convinced I should write like Joan Didion. This delusion lasts until I remember I do not think like Joan Didion, nor do I arrange the world into crystalline observations like Joan Didion. Her notebook, unlike mine, is probably not filled with things that say “Bananas???” and “My elbow is weird.” Didion and I are worlds apart, is what I’m saying, and my life is much less for it.
NOW IS NOT THE TIME TO PANIC by KEVIN WILSON
There are two things Americans love more than minding our own business:
- Not minding our own business.
- Convincing ourselves that a thing (that is usually none of our business) means something it does not mean.
Look, civilization is held together by a fragile social contract. Most of us agree not to panic about things. We agree not to form mobs. We agree to use our brains and our words when something unusual happens. Yet, all it takes is a sufficiently mysterious poster and enough people convinced that uncertainty is intolerable for that social contract to dissolve.
PERSEPOLIS by MARJANE SATRAPI
Somehow I had reached adulthood without ever reading Persepolis.
It is subtitled “the story of a childhood.” This is inadequate and also perfect. These types of contradictions make up the friction and the heart of this book.
And there be the June reads. As always, I welcome any recommendations! Read any good books lately?









