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Have a few book recommendations for your next morning at the campfire.
Have a few book recommendations for your next morning at the campfire. (Photo: Anastasiia Tarasova)

Everything Our Editors Loved in October

The books, movies, podcasts, music, and more that our editors couldn't stop talking about

Published: 
Have a few book recommendations for your next morning at the campfire.
(Photo: Anastasiia Tarasova)

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! .

The scariest part of October here at 国产吃瓜黑料 has been anticipating whether we鈥檒l have a good snow forecast this ski season. The second-scariest part was watching Alex Honnold free-solo El Capitan.

What We Read

I just finished , an outstanding novel by Smith Henderson. The story centers on Pete Snow, a social worker for Montana鈥檚 Child and Family Services, chronicling his encounters with drug addiction, abuse, and general dysfunction in and around the fictional town Tenmile, somewhere south of Glacier National Park. It鈥檚 dark stuff (part of the reason it sat on my bookshelf for a couple years), but the main narrative, following Pete鈥檚 looming showdown with a survivalist, Jeremiah Pearl, and his young son living off the grid on timber company lands, is engrossing and portentous. Set against the backdrop of the 1980 Reagan/Carter presidential campaign, the book examines the seeds of the far-right, anti-government sentiments that eventually swept through the rural West (see: Bundy, Ammon) and changed U.S. politics forever.

鈥擟hris Keyes, editor

This month, I read Sheila Heti鈥檚 new book, , in which the narrator takes a strange journey into her anxieties about whether to have a kid. Heti鈥檚 writing stuns me鈥攕he鈥檚 brutally honest about the ugliest, weirdest tendencies of the anxious and creative mind but writes with an approachable, almost childishly straightforward tone. Reading her feels like watching someone peel off a scab: a little gross, weirdly satisfying, and unnerving when you understand their insides look just like yours.

鈥擜bigail Barronian, assistant editor

Sure, came out in the 1980s, but Marc Reisner鈥檚 magnum opus about western water rights is as relevant and powerful as ever鈥攅specially with talk of by 2020. If you rely on water to survive, you need to read this classic book.

鈥擜xie Navas, digital editorial director

I was so happy to receive Lisa Lundwinski鈥檚 just in time for pie season. Lundwinski, the owner of my favorite bakery in Detroit, shares 75 recipes for pies and other yummy goodies, like granola and buckwheat chocolate chip cookies. As a baking novice, I appreciate the detailed instructions for making different types of pie crust, fancy lattices, and blind baking. Will my cardamom-tahini squash pie turn out as good as Lundwinski鈥檚? Probably not, but it鈥檚 always worth a (delicious) try.

鈥擪elsey Lindsey, assistant editor

What We Listened To

This month, I鈥檝e been listening to , a new podcast from New York 尘补驳补锄颈苍别鈥檚 The Cut and Gimlet Media. The show is broadly about 鈥渨omen鈥檚 voices,鈥 but if you enjoy reading The Cut, then you have a general idea of what to expect. The first episode was all about women and power鈥攚ho has it, who doesn't, and what it feels like to be in either position. I鈥檇 been eagerly awaiting the release, and it did not disappoint. There are a lot of mediocre podcasts out there, and it鈥檚 rare for me to find a new show that I like enough to change up my regular rotation. I鈥檒l definitely be adding this one to the mix.

鈥擬olly Mirhashem, associate editor

This month, I binged through the entire first season of CBC Radio鈥檚 podcast in two days. The seven-episode series focuses on a self-help and marketing group connected with a women鈥檚 organization named DOS (read: cult), whose members were branded with the initials of NXIVM founder Keith Raniere. The group got media attention after recruiting actresses Kristin Kreuk and Allison Mack. (Mack and Raniere would later face sex-trafficking charges for their affiliation with DOS.) Host Josh Bloch begins the series by interviewing his childhood friend Sarah Edmondson, who left NXIVM after years of involvement. Through Edmondson, listeners begin to understand what drew members to the self-improvement movement and how it all came crashing down.

鈥擜bigail Wise, online managing editor

I鈥檝e been thoroughly enjoying WBUR鈥檚 , 鈥渁 podcast that investigates the largest unsolved art heist in history.鈥 If you鈥檙e into true crime, take a seat and start bingeing. At least for me, it鈥檚 a refreshing break from murder mysteries.

鈥擩enny Earnest, social media manager

This month in 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 on Facebook, we decided to listen to the podcast , and I鈥檝e been devouring it. The series follows journalist Laura Krantz as she dives into the complex world of Bigfoot. I don鈥檛 typically like podcasts and was only mildly curious about Bigfoot going into the series, so I was surprised by how much I鈥檝e loved it. There鈥檚 so much research and history surrounding the lore of Sasquatch, and it鈥檚 interesting to learn about it in a way that doesn鈥檛 feel like it鈥檚 all a joke. We鈥檙e only three episodes in, and I can鈥檛 wait to see to what the rest of the series looks like.

鈥擜bbey Gingras, social media editorial assistant

Am I allowed to echo Heather Hansman鈥檚 fall culture picks here? I want to second her recommendation of Gregory Alan Isakov鈥檚 new album, . It鈥檚 perfect autumn music鈥攎elancholy and melodious鈥攁nd I鈥檝e been listening to it on repeat for weeks.

鈥擲vati Narula, associate social media editor

What We Watched and Otherwise Experienced

Scary movie season PSA: is an invaluable resource for animal lovers who just cannot with the dog鈥攐r cat, or horse, or other charismatic fauna鈥攇etting whacked. Search the name of the movie, and the site provides a list of user-submitted yes/no answers for animal deaths, plus a slew of other potential dealbreakers. (For example, I sincerely appreciate 鈥淎re any teeth damaged?鈥) User comments frequently contain great beta on whether the death is shown on camera, and if so, how brutal it is. No longer must you waste 80-plus minutes of your life waiting and watching as Buffy or Ralph meets an unjust end; now you can pick something else to watch. Or go read a book鈥擠oes the Dog Die covers those, too.

鈥擜leta Burchyski, associate managing editor

This month, I was really into short trad climbing clips of Austrian Babsi Zangerl. They are both from 2016 (I am very behind the times), but huge runouts and techy climbing on small gear is timeless.

鈥擬att Skenazy, senior editor

I鈥檝e been following on Instagram for a couple years now, and her feed is a constant source of inspiration, incredible writing, and . When one of her pups, Dagwood, was tragically struck by a car a few weeks ago, I was reminded of how we can become emotionally attached to people we鈥檝e never even met. Dagwood is defying all odds and crushing one surgery after another. The most amazing part is that Madia鈥檚 community has raised nearly $100,000 for Dagwood鈥檚 vet bills. The internet can be an OK place sometimes. (P.S. If you鈥檇 like to donate, .)

鈥擡mily Reed, assistant gear editor

I just finished this TV show on Netflix called . It鈥檚 a Spanish drama based in the 1920s Madrid. The main characters are four women who work as operators at the first telephone company in Madrid. The show is super overdramatic but almost scarily timely with its focus on female inequality. While things were way more unequal between genders and sexuality back then, a lot of it is still pretty relatable. There is an English-dubbed version, but I like to listen to the original with subtitles to practice my Spanish a little.

鈥擩ohanna Flashman, digital editorial fellow

I was nervous to watch , because I was afraid it wouldn鈥檛 live up to all the hype. It did. It was absolutely fascinating to see climber Alex Honnold so up close, in terms of his incredible athletic ability and his psychological approach to free soloing. I knew he survived the free solo of El Capitan, yet I was still squirming like crazy in my seat as he climbed it. I鈥檓 in awe of how Honnold manages fear and adrenaline. He was even hamming for the camera on the way up! Great footage from Jimmy Chin and crew, too, and storytelling by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi. It鈥檚 awesome to see a climbing movie crushing it and breaking into the mainstream audiences.

鈥擬ary Turner, deputy editor

Lead Photo: Anastasiia Tarasova

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