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The books, movies, podcasts, music, and more that our editors couldn't stop talking about. (Photo: kristen leigh/Unsplash)

Everything Our Editors Loved in November

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

Published: 
Winter outdoor
(Photo: kristen leigh/Unsplash)

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! .

This month听some听翱耻迟蝉颈诲别听staffers leaned into their darker sides by听devouring stories about Harvey Weinstein, the O.J. Simpson trial, and a scary criminal doctor. But! Others of us听sampled great cabernet sauvignon in Napa, California, danced in the kitchen, uncovered an appreciation for country music, and found new ways to love Harry Potter. Here are our favorite culture recommendations from last month鈥攚ith best wishes for a balanced December.听

What We Read

I read , the new book by Ronan Farrow that听details his investigation into Harvey Weinstein and the resistance he was met with from all sides when he first tried to break the story. This book is engrossing and reads quickly, but it鈥檚听also deeply unsettling. By now, thanks to the work of Farrow and other reporters, Weinstein鈥檚 crimes are widely known鈥攂ut the degrees of interference, intimidation, and even surveillance that Farrow went through before his reporting was finally published are truly shocking. Farrow鈥檚 dramatic flair makes the book read like fiction, so it鈥檚 all the more disturbing when you remember that everything he describes is real. (And if you can鈥檛 get enough of this story, Farrow just that goes even deeper behind the scenes.)听

鈥擬olly Mirhashem, digital deputy editor

I just finished , a wonderful coming-of-age novel by Canadian author Richard Wagamese. When the story鈥檚 protagonist, Saul Indian Horse, lands in a treatment center after an alcohol overdose, he鈥檚 encouraged to draft his life story鈥攁nd it鈥檚 an incredible tale. As a young northern Ojibwa听boy growing up in the 1950s, Saul was removed from his family and taken to a Catholic school where Native children were stripped of their culture and and suffered horrific abuse. For Saul, the only silver lining was discovering his natural gift for hockey; his skills eventually caught the eye of scouts听and provided a ticket out.听

鈥擟hris Keyes, editor

Is 听allowed on 国产吃瓜黑料 lists? As a new member of the edit staff and transplant to Santa Fe, I oriented myself this month by reading editor-at-large Hampton Sides鈥檚 history of the Southwest. Blood and Thunder delves deeply into the characters and events that shaped American takeover of the region by tracking the life of trapper, explorer, and eventual U.S. Army officer Kit Carson, alongside an array of other characters. The book is gorgeously written, stunningly detailed (from descriptions of battles to local topography and plant species), and well researched. My feelings were complicated by Carson, Sides鈥檚 chosen protagonist: in the dazzle of prose this rich, with a reader鈥檚 inclination to root for the narrative lead, scenes that described Carson鈥檚 one-off murders and his prolonged hand in genocide went down almost too easily. Even that might be a compliment to the author, though. It checks out that a history of conquest, written and read by regional settlers, would leave you feeling both dazzled and queasy.

鈥擷ian Chiang-Waren, associate editor

What We Listened To

November can be dreary, so I listened to a lot of happy, easy music. Kindness鈥檚 album听, released in September, was the perfect accompaniment to dinner parties turned living-room dance parties. 鈥淪upalonely,鈥 from the teeny EP by Benee, soundtracked a few sunny-morning kitchen boogies. 鈥溾澨齜y Max听had me shimmying at stoplights every time I got in the car. 鈥溾 by Easy Life set a perfect beat from my phone speaker when I was biking through town.

鈥擜bbie Barronian, assistant听editor

I鈥檓 a bit of a true-crime nerd听and binged the podcast on my way back from Boulder, Colorado, a few weeks ago. It was incredibly reported and narrated. I found myself actually taking the long way home so I could finish it.听

鈥擪aelyn Lynch, assistant travel editor

What We Watched and Otherwise Experienced听

This month I traveled to San Francisco鈥檚 Curran Theatre to see Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, a play by Jack Thorne (in collaboration with J.K. Rowling and John Tiffany)听about Harry encountering an entirely new beast: fatherhood. The acting was tremendous, and the live special effects took the production to unbelievable heights (sometimes literally). Expect to witness incredibly artful, real-life magic. Next up,听I鈥檓 eager to dive into that goes deep into the making of the play.听

鈥擩enny Earnest, audience development director

I鈥檓 almost four years late to watching (now on Netflix). Seriously, if you haven鈥檛 seen this miniseries yet, do it. The show dramatizes both the public reactions and the minor emotions of major players that shaped the O.J. Simpson trial, and it really helps you understand where the country was politically and culturally at the time. I binge-watched it in a week.听

鈥擡mily Reed, video producer

I just started watching Ken Burns鈥檚听 documentary series. I鈥檝e been going nuts overthe podcast ,听like everyone and their cousin, and found myself wanting more country. I鈥檇 never thought much about the genre one way or another, but the show frames it as this international music of rural nostalgia. It made country music feel suddenly relevant to me.听

鈥擯hilip Kiefer, editorial fellow

Over Thanksgiving听I went to Napa Valley, California,听with my family for a day of wine tasting and found my new, hands-down favorite winery: . For starters, Turnbull makes amazing cabernet sauvignons; it鈥檚 located in the Oakville American Viticultural Area, a premium growing district in Napa renowned for that dark, red variety. The wine is pricey (it is Napa, after all), but it鈥檚 wine that makes you think, Life鈥檚 too short not to drink nice wine.听Turnbull also doubles as a gallery, with stunning black and white photography by the likes of Ansel Adams, Dorethea Lange, and Walker Evans, among other renowned 20th-century greats. The photos all belong to听the winery鈥檚 owner, who can boast听one of the largest private collections听of Adams鈥檚 work in the world. The photographs on display are switched up every six months.

鈥擥loria Liu, features editor

A friend introduced me to a great tabletop strategy game called 听over Thanksgiving. It鈥檚 basically chess with bugs: the hexagonal playing pieces feature assorted crawlies that move in different ways (the spider moves three spaces per turn, the beetle can climb on top of other pieces, and so on), and the goal is to capture the opponent鈥檚 queen bee. Unlike chess, there鈥檚听no board, so this game is begging to be played during downtime around the campfire or on the tailgate.听听

鈥擜leta Burchyski, associate managing editor

This month听I rented from our local library. It鈥檚 a hand-drawn animated film based on Celtic mythology, which follows two siblings, Ben and Saoirse, as they adventure through Ireland and come to understand the importance of family, home, and responsibility. The entire viewing experience is enchanting and heartwarming, with a captivating score and family-friendly moral. While the movie was made for children, the world that director Tomm Moore builds with his team is magical for all ages.

听鈥擪yra Kennedy, photo editor

Lead Photo: kristen leigh/Unsplash

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