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Our second best friend on a camping trip: a good book.
Our second best friend on a camping trip: a good book. (Photo: Patrick Hendry)

What Our Editors Loved Last Month

The books, movies, music, and podcasts we couldn't stop talking about in October

Published: 
Our second best friend on a camping trip: a good book.
(Photo: Patrick Hendry)

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 weather鈥檚 getting cooler, and so are our picks. Moody music and 鈥90s cannibal horror movies are cool, right?

What We Read

On a recent trip, 国产吃瓜黑料 editor Chris Keyes told me about a book he was reading鈥. I鈥檓 about halfway through, and the connection to the outdoors is pretty tenuous, but it鈥檚 a fascinating read that engages in everything ambiguous and confusing about Rome. Yes, I鈥檓 late to the party鈥攖he book came out in 2015鈥攂ut it鈥檚 still worth picking up.

鈥擲cott Rosenfield, digital editorial director

I鈥檓 in the middle of reading , a book of essays by Durga Chew-Bose. It鈥檚 incredibly predictable that I love it, as I already raved about Jenny Zhang鈥檚 Sour Heart last month, and the books definitely appeal to the same sort of reader. Chew-Bose鈥檚 writing is beautiful and full of lines you鈥檒l want to write down. (In the first essay, 鈥淗eart Museum,鈥 her description of sisterhood is so spot-on that I took a photo of an entire page and sent it to my own sister.) The book is short, but it鈥檚 one that makes you want to read slowly so it鈥檚 not over too soon.

鈥擬olly Mirhashem, associate editor

I鈥檓 a quarter through a tech book that just launched this month called . It is extremely well-researched and insightful, and oftentimes surprising. I would highly recommend it for anyone interested in the rise of the tech giants鈥攁nd what it means for us in the future. Here鈥檚 one fun fact for free: 鈥淎pple鈥檚 cash on hand is nearly the GDP of Denmark.鈥

鈥擩enny Earnest, assistant social media editor

I finally got around to reading Elif Batuman鈥檚 first novel, . Critics tend to focus on her love of Russian literature, but it鈥檚 her voice that always keeps me reading, no matter what she鈥檚 talking about. She has this dry, reserved way of poking fun at the absurdity of certain parts of the elite intellectual world鈥攚hether they be famous authors, professors, works of literature, or universities鈥攜et she never stops loving their quirks, magic, and eccentricities. The novel is essentially a love story set during college, but with a lot of delightfully tangential observations along the way.

鈥擶ill Ford, editorial fellow

I just read , and it聽blew me away. Gabriel Tallent showcases incredible emotional empathy and nature writing in this novel about a young woman named Turtle, who鈥檚聽my new favorite character in all of fiction.

鈥擜xie Navas, executive editor

What We Listened To

Two good road-trip albums: Margo Price鈥檚 , for those who like Dolly Parton鈥檚 1980s output, and the new album from Abigail Washburn and Bela Fleck, who never cease to amaze.

鈥擩onah Ogles, articles editor

I鈥檓 a total sucker for all things food鈥攅verything from its nutrition and sourcing to its role as a cultural conduit. In one month on Mother Jones鈥 , I listened to stories about pumpkin spice protein powder, the effect of Trump鈥檚 administration on farmers, and how Napa farms and vineyards have vowed to rebuild and flourish after the fires. Suffice it to say I was never bored.

鈥擟arly Graf, assistant editor

I have a soft spot for sad folk music, and the new album from Jeffrey Martin, a Portland-based singer-songwriter, has been on repeat this month. Every track on the album tells a powerful story, and you can鈥檛 help but get hooked in by Martin鈥檚 deep voice and poetic songwriting. If you ask anyone at the office, I鈥檝e more than likely sent them the Spotify link and forced them to listen to it in full, because it鈥檚 just that good.

鈥擬arie Sullivan, associate video producer

Phoebe Bridgers鈥 debut album came out at the end of September, the same week that the aspens started changing color here in Santa Fe, so of course I immediately latched onto it as my Fall Mood Album. Driving, hiking, running, hammock-testing, wallowing in autumnal sentimentality鈥攊f I鈥檓 not listening to Phoebe Bridgers, I am thinking about how Phoebe Bridgers would be the perfect soundtrack to this activity. Two favorites: 鈥淕eorgia鈥 and 鈥淜iller,鈥 the latter of which starts with a reference to Jeffrey Dahmer and only gets better from there.

鈥擡rin Berger, associate editor

What We Watched

I went to see , a documentary about the Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh and his retreat center in France called Plum Village. It was a real antidote to the crazy, noisy lives most of us are living, and very inspiring to see the service they are doing around the world, like teaching meditation in prisons.

I also saw the movie , about the hotshot firefighters who died while fighting the Yarnell Hill fire in Arizona. The movie is a compelling portrait of what life is like on the front lines, and especially relevant as the United States experiences more and more gigantic, destructive fires each year. Warning: It鈥檒l rip your heart out at the end. If you want to read more about what happened in Yarnell, check out the story that Kyle Dickman, a former hotshot himself, wrote for us about it.

鈥擬ary Turner, deputy editor

I love a good backcountry horror flick, and 鈥 Manifest Destiny cannibal romp through the Sierra Nevada is one of the very best. Bonus points for its old-timey mountaineering montage and bonkers soundtrack.

鈥擜leta Burchyski, copy editor

started ten years ago as a Vice web series that looked behind the tricks and into the lives of professional skateboarders, through the lens of former Thrasher and Vice magazine photo editor/photographer Patrick O鈥橠ell. It鈥檚 back as a , and it鈥檚 still pulling the human element from skateboarders鈥 histories. From on how the loss of his childhood friend drove him further into alcoholism and how skateboarding is his saving grace, to on the Zen of accepting the possibility of failure and injury when trying thought-to-be-impossible tricks, to the spark of childlike play that skateboarding represents for Oscar-winning director , this show is about people more than anything.

鈥擟hris Thompson, visual producer

Lead Photo: Patrick Hendry

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