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A fall preview for outside music, books, and films.
A fall preview for outside music, books, and films. (Photo: Rawpixel/iStock)

The Best New Music, Books, and Films of Fall

Vegans, caribou, songwriting, and other treats to check out as you refresh your media diet

Published: 
A fall preview for outside music, books, and films.
(Photo: Rawpixel/iStock)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Fall is the time to dust off your winter layers, skis, bookshelf, and various media apps. We have some ideas for those last two things. Here鈥檚 what聽we think you鈥檙e going see, hear, and read a lot of in the coming months.

For Your Playlist

鈥橳is the Season for Beautiful, Complicated Songwriting

One autumn long ago, I sat on a hay bale in Fort Collins, Colorado, watching Gregory Alan Isakov play to a crowd composed mainly of bawling toddlers and stilt walkers. I鈥檇 like to think we鈥檝e both progressed a lot since then (dude鈥檚 got his own farm now, so at least he has), but Isakov鈥檚 swooping melodies still feel like fall to me. His new album, , hits all kinds of melancholy sonic spots.

As solo artists, Julien Baker, Phoebe Bridgers, and Lucy Dacus all write understated rock songs that are both pretty and painfully true. Together, they鈥檙e putting out a six-song EP and traveling this fall as a newly formed band, , which seems exceptionally smart.

Ruston Kelly鈥檚 Nashville-y debut album, , touches on addiction, recovery, redemption, and the road. His songs are old-school singer-songwriter stories couched as twangy earworms that have so far proved impossible to stop listening to.

For Your Bookshelf

Dudes Are Walking Around Trying to Figure Things Out

Not women鈥women have therapy and friendship, so we鈥檙e good on the 鈥渧oyage to discovery鈥 tip鈥攂ut men are, apparently, still working through that. This fall鈥檚 best journey is Leath Tonino鈥檚 ramble through the topography and history of his home state of Vermont in . The collection of essays includes 鈥淪even Lengths of Vermont,鈥 in which he crosses the Green Mountains seven different times, seven different ways. If crisp days drum up New England nostalgia for you, this book probably won鈥檛 help.

Halfway across the world, John Kaag, now a middle-age dad, goes back to the mountains, the Swiss Alps, and the philosopher, Nietzsche, that fascinated him when he was young. In , Kaag explores how the idea of striving mentally and physically are tied together. To be honest, at this point in my life I鈥檓 probably never going to read Nietzsche, but Kaag鈥檚 clear writing and insight into why we get obsessed with peaks鈥斺淚 was 19. Parent mountains had a certain power over me,鈥 he writes鈥攔ang true and made me feel slightly more enlightened.

For Your Laptop

Eating Veggies Won鈥檛 Make You a Noodle-Armed Wimp

, produced by blockbuster filmmaker James Cameron and directed by Louie Psihoyos (the man behind ), digs into why a plant-based diet is good for athletes鈥攁nd everyone鈥攁nd why a meat-focused diet is rough on bodies and the environment. A movie like this could easily trend toward proselytizing, but it doesn鈥檛, thanks to a narrative that follows former UFC champion James Wilks and other athletes who have gone vegan and is underlined by easy-to-digest science and medicine. It鈥檚 worth watching if you care about where your food comes from and what it does to your body.

If you want ideas about what to eat once you鈥檝e sworn off flesh, Timothy Pakron鈥檚 soul food cookbook drops in October. Now your only challenge is remembering that the first rule of veganism is that we don鈥檛 talk about our veganism. Please.

For Your Coffee Table

We Aren鈥檛 the Only Animals Living on This Planet

How do animals adapt to humans and cities, and how do we, hopefully, adapt to give them space? Two new books search for some answers to those questions and come at them from opposite standpoints. Gavin Van Horn鈥檚 looks at the hidden ways wild animals weave themselves into urban areas, specifically Chicago. In , wildlife tracker David Moskowitz tails the last 20 mountain caribou in the United States and examines why the loss of the Pacific Northwest鈥檚 inland rainforest means more than the loss of these ungulates.

Lead Photo: Rawpixel/iStock

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