The Bests of My 2018

2018 has been the longest year on record.

As I compiled these little lists, I was shocked more than once about how far back the start of this year seemed to be—“whoa, that was this year?” ad infinitum.

Was 2018 the best year of your life? The worst? The middlingest? All of that is okay.

You are here because you are interested in what kind of 2018 I had. Onward!

The Best of the Books I Read in 2018

  1. The first book I read was so good that it was basically downhill from there all year, but that’s an okay problem to have, really. Hanif Abdurraqib’s They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us was, as I have come to expect from him, full of correct opinions about things I didn’t know we were forming opinions about. It also invited me into his deep grief, which is a sacred space. He has a new book coming in 2019 and you can bet you’ll find it on that best-of list—if he wrote a book that year, it was one of the year’s best.

  2. Though she wrote the book more than a decade ago, Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle changed my life in 2018. We all know that I am not about to dedicate my life to subsistence farming, but this book reminded me of the incredible blessing of my life in Northern California, where growing food and eating food grown locally is almost too easy. We built three raised garden beds in our backyard this summer and we have eaten whole salads that used to be seeds I held in my own hand! How is that even real!?!?!? I love earth.

  3. I heard Stacey May Fowles interviewed on Rhea Butcher’s baseball podcast, ordered Baseball Life Advice before the interview was even over, and started to read it the day it arrived in the mail. It arrived in the midst of my reading drought, and is responsible for bringing me back to life. It made the 2018 baseball season even more enjoyable for me as a fan, too. What can’t this book do!?

The Best Podcasts I Started Listening to in 2018

  1. Somewhat inexplicably, the Binge Mode: Harry Potter podcast is produced by The Ringer, a sports website. The concept is that Mallory Rubin and Jason Concepcion close-read the seven original Harry Potter books (though they make reference to the wider Potter canon [such a wide canon]) a few chapters at a time, and discern themes and lessons and make note of easter eggs and innuendos and cry about Dumbledore’s death (and like literally everything else) and speculate about forthcoming Wizarding World content. It is a truly deranged undertaking, as was my decision to basically listen only to the backlog of episodes (three or four books worth?) until I caught up with them. I do not even want to estimate the number of hours I have spent listening to them cackle, though I have enjoyed every minute of it. If you want to test your commitment to The Boy Who Lived, try listening to this podcast.

  2. In probably like 2016 or something, BuzzFeed published a listicle of podcasts produced/hosted/etc by Latinas. As I am late to every party, I finally found a new favorite in Alicia Menendez’s Latina to Latina in 2018. She’s Latina (Cuban, from New Jersey) and she interviews one Latina (so many kinds, from so many places) per episode. Essentially, it highlights the myriad ways to be Latina, and the incredible life stories and work of Latinas across the US. I learn so much about so much!

  3. I stopped listening to Dear Hank and John in 2017 (though it is still going on) and then in 2018 John began The Anthropocene Reviewed, a monthly podcast with a nearly opposite vibe. In each short, scripted episode, John gives two very human things—Googling Strangers and Kentucky Bluegrass, for example—starred reviews. That’s the best episode, by the way. Each episode is a delightful ~25 minutes, in general. I give it four stars.

The Most Memorable 2018 Episodes of Podcasts I Have Been Listening to Since At Least 2017

  1. Through a very unexpected turn of events, December 2018 saw the commutation of Earlonne Woods’ prison sentence, and so change is afoot at Ear Hustle. There’s a great mini episode about his release, but the most memorable episode of 2018, for me, was The Row. Life inside a prison may seem homogenous to us on the outside, but Death Row is a mystery even to the general San Quentin population. Earlonne and Nigel were able to communicate with some of the men there, and I was riveted. If you, like me, are interested in working to abolish the death penalty, visit NCADP to find out what you can do in your state.

  2. Obviously I would just recommend that you listen to every episode of my all-time favorite podcast, Call Your Girlfriend, every Friday. They interviewed some I N C R E D I B L E women in 2018, so perhaps start there: Hot and Bothered with Cecile Richards, Pay Caregivers Fairly with Ai-Jen Poo, A Woman’s Anger with Rebecca Traister, Be a Good Ancestor with Stacy Abrams, Rewriting Herstory with Alexis Coe, and Delicious Company with Samin Nosrat! Ugh, the Ladyweb is strong.

The Approximately Four Things I Watched On Screens in 2018, Which I Would Recommend

  1. Holy forking shirtballs, you guys, I love The Good Place. I binged the first two seasons on Netflix with Jonathan in like...four days. I am still catching up on Season 3 (which just ended) on Hulu, so I won’t be current until Season 4 (which just got ordered). I am fascinated by how much TGP is like my other beloved Michael Shur project, Parks and Recreation, and how it’s unlike anything else going on on TV. It’s so smart—I mean, they go to Philosophy class half of every episode in S1—and I love every character’s absolutely bonkers terribleness. One of my favorite things that is not actually about the show is how many people on twitter thought that Blake Bortles was a made-up name for the show, not the actual quarterback for the Jacksonville Jaguars.

  2. Can you even believe that Black Panther came out in 2018? It honestly feels like 100 years ago. I loved this movie so much that I watched it on an airplane with closed captions because my dumb iPhone headphones don’t plug into the thing. It was like the fourth time I’d seen it and I just needed to pass some turbulent time. I digress! If you don’t like comic book movies or whatever, you should still see this one. It’s gorgeous, the music is fantastic, bad guys are vanquished, what more could you want?

  3. As a general rule, I do not watch stand-up comedy, because it’s just...not for me. This year, though, I enjoyed two (two!) entire stand-up specials, and so you should know about them. John Mulaney’s Kid Gorgeous and Hannah Gadsby’s Nanette have nothing to do with each other besides being things I watched. You have probably read (or scrolled past) a thinkpiece or twelve about Nanette. It gets right at why I, as a general rule, do not watch stand-up comedy. Kid Gorgeous has perhaps changed my working life for the better, if only because our staff now routinely intones “the bread of bread is bread” at all available opportunities. Laughing is good for you, but be sure what you’re laughing at should be laughable.

The Best of the Things I Did for the First Time in 2018

  1. If you are reading this, you probably are also subscribed to my fortnightly email newsletter, A Little Bit of Sunshine, which I launched in January. It is delightful (and challenging) to repackage all of the things I’m consuming into this format—someone to meet, something(s) to listen to, something(s) to read, and a closing poem—and stave off the apocalyptic news cycle we’re all already dealing with. It’s not incredibly consequential, but it’s a little bit of sunshine. The first edition of 2019 hits inboxes on Friday, January 4.

  2. If you've been reading my writing for a while you may recall that I ceremonially announced my reading list in December/January and then in May I abandoned my reading list. That's not a thing I do. I do not mean to imply that I always finish everything I start. On the contrary, I often draw things out for an unnecessary long while and feel very bad about essentially quitting them. The "first" in this instance was that I dumped a project and refused to feel shame about it. Life is too short to read things you don't want to read when you could be reading all sorts of things you do want to read!!!!! Go read.

  3. Jonathan and I bought a house! This is the wide open internet so I am definitely not going to tell you our address or post a virtual tour or whatever, but you are invited to visit us in Woodland, CA at your earliest convenience. Owning a home is one of the parts of the American Dream that seems the most unfair. We could not have done this without the generational wealth of our families, who generously contributed to our down payment. Everyone should be able to live safely and securely, and I intend to keep that in mind as housing regulations come through the legislature and onto my ballot—how are we ensuring that more people have housing, not just that our housing is worth more? I hope you are thinking about that, too—especially if you own a home.

The Best of the Places I Went in 2018

According to TripIt (an app you should be using if you travel even a little bit), I spent a total of 71 days this year traveling 32,313 miles to 24 cities in 5 countries. What a year!

  1. On our honeymoon, Jonathan and I spent 4 days in the Italian city of Genoa, from which many delicious culinary inventions hail—Genoise sponge cake (known in Genoa as pan di Spagna), basil pesto, and dried pasta, to name a few! It's not just that the city of Genoa was among the best places I went in 2018, but especially A Small Kitchen in Genoa, where we spent half a day cooking and eating and learning with Enrica Monzani. I don't know if a trip to the Italian Riviera is on your agenda, but if you get the chance to swing through, Enrica will enrich your stay significantly.

  2. In October, I spent a whirlwind week doing several holy things. I started by flying to Denver, meeting up with my mom, and driving to Grand Junction, CO for the ordination of my friend Ben. Then we drove to Fort Collins, CO for the baptism of a beloved babe, Hannah Christian. Mama K flew home, but I flew on to St. Louis, MO for the Episcopal Service Corps Program Director meeting. Over the course of those 9 days, I saw dozens of people I love who are doing incredible things for the world by their very lives. I also enjoyed two the sights and sounds of three communities that matter to people who matter to me. I am not, perhaps, recommending these cities for your next vacation, but recommending that you get in the car or on a plane to the people you love, when you can.

“That’s it. That’s all. That’s all there is.” —The Beastie Boys

Want to #ReadFewerWhiteDudes with me?

It's nearly 2017, dear ones!

I have spent 2016 doing a fair amount of reading, and 2017 shall be no different. As I have made my custom the last few years, I shall endeavor to read 29 books, as I will turn 29 in 2017. 

In 2016, I committed to only reading books written by women. This was so excellent and I am having a really wonderful literary year. Inasmuch as I might like to keep this up as a life goal, there were some very exciting things written by men in 2016 (and earlier, I suppose) that I'd actually like to enjoy. Fortunately, the good people at Where Are You Press have blessed me with an accurate life reading goal: Read Fewer White Dudes.


So that's what's up. I shall read fewer dudes, and the dudes I shall read shall probably not be white dudes, or a white dude who writes a book with a not-white/not-dude-identified person. You get the picture.

I have noticed in the last few years of setting reading intentions, that I have woefully lacked authors of Asian descent. In high school and college, I read a ton of fiction by Middle Eastern authors, a few Indian authors, and Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go. Somewhere along the line, that dwindled. In the last two years I have greatly increased my familiarity with African, African-American, and African-British authors. This shall not change. But it is time to diversify further! (Shout out to my personal librarian Dory for recommending a zillion Asian and Asian-American [Vietnamese, Korean, Chinese, Indian, Pakistani, Afghani, Pacific Islander, Japanese] faves in anticipation of 2017.)

Last year, I participated in the Bustle Reads challenge, with the added bonus of only reading books that satisfied those prompts AND were written by women. I also read a handful of books that had nothing to do with the list. Somewhere in the middle of last year, I learned about Book Riot (where have I been?) and that they also do a challenge called Read Harder. I'm switching allegiances!

This year, I have concocted my own reading challenge based on the 2017 Read Harder challenge, my life goal of reading fewer white dudes, and my understanding that part of my participation in our political resistance will be via reading. 

There are, therefore, three hashtags: #ReadHarder, #ReadFewerWhiteDudes, and #ReadTheResistance. Books that I read will fall under at least one of these categories. When I share my completed books, I also include the hashtag #bookcasey, so that I can look at all of them at once when I'm trying to remember what it was that I read whatever months ago. 

If you are interested in what I intend to read, my 2017 reading concoction is in this Google doc. If you would like to read along with me, go for it! The order in which I will read the books is not super set, so I'm not a very orderly reading partner. But some (like the ones that are related to history months) are clear.

I am not really on the lookout for additional reading for this year, since this list is pretty full as it stands. But of course book recommendations are my love language so you are always welcome to tell me about something wonderful you read that you think will make me a better me. Maybe I'll squeeze it in. :)

So! What are you reading this year?

We like books and we don't care who knows.

It's been an unintentionally long while since I've written anything of substance, here. Being back at school last semester was really exhausting, word-wise, and I think that's the excuse I'm going to stick with. I'm back at school for the spring, again, so no guarantee you'll be hearing from me on the regular again. But I read a fantastic piece today about reading, and my imagination responded so strongly that I had to put pen to paper. Err, finger to keyboard. Not as romantic a notion.

The piece is called "28 Books You Should Read If You Want To" and it's not actually a list of titles, but rather ways in which one comes across a book (if you didn't click that link, go look and come back) just by living one's curious life.

Thinking about how I've come to know and love the stories that I cherish brings the beginning of tears to my eyes. Y'all know how much reading is a part of my identity. I love, in the totally great chick flick You've Got Mail, when Kathleen talks about how the books you read (especially as a child) help you to become who you are. I don't think this ever stops, but I think the rate at which we read and subsequently become tapers off rapidly in our adult lives and so we think that reading just isn't as necessary as it once was. Many of my peers (non-students) maybe slog through a book a year or something, or maybe read the latest series that's become films so they can get the whole story. Most adults don't sit, mystified, deep in the world that these words and their imaginations have formed for them somewhere "other" than themselves, like they did as children.

Even if the writing and printing of books stopped right this minute, so many have been penned that you could never read all of them in your life! And new books are published every day! New books worth reading can be in your hot little hands (or your ears, if you're of the audiobook persuasion) practically instantly! There's no end to where you can go and who you can be and what you can feel.

I hear out of the mouths of teenagers and young adults and adult adults (whatever) all the time that they "just don't like reading" or that "there's nothing really worth reading out there right now" AS THOUGH they've scoured every possible choice and come up empty? Please.

Janet Potter, the author of the piece I told you to go back and read (I'll wait) didn't give you actual titles -- she gave you room to imagine what there is out there in the world to experience, based solely on the happenstance of who you encounter in seemingly mundane situations that can be UN MUNDANED (whatever) if you bring a book along.

Lemony Snicket, whose books I'll admit I've never read (haha) is quoted as saying that he doesn't trust anyone who didn't bring a book along. Man after my own heart. During the semester, I bring homework everywhere I go, just in case I get a free minute. When I know I'll have many free minutes and not a lot of homework (cross-country flights) I bring leisure reading, too. Sometimes, I bring two books, out of sheer anxiety that I'll finish one and be stuck, bookless, for even the shortest duration of free time. This is a shining example of my being a classic Enneagram 6 as well as a word nerd (unsurprisingly, a characteristic of sixes).

I scoped the hefty lists that Janet Potter links to at the beginning -- full disclosure, I'd already compared my catalog to the Amazon list, and have read more than half of them (and of the remaining titles, have little interest in completing) and so I'm not going to say that those lists  have absolutely no merit. But what bothered me about all of them, and about anonymous book recommendations in general, is that I have no clue what's good about those books. I don't know what made the person who compiled that list love them enough to include them -- of all the novels ever written!

YouTube awesome person John Green posted a video today in which he recommends 18 books he loves that aren't super popular. I watched it, and I've never read any of them, and was only familiar with like two of the authors. Here. Watch it.


What's great about this video is that John tells you (very rapidly) precisely what is so great about these books you've yet to encounter, and why you might like to encounter them. Some of them are by well-known authors, and yet more than once he says that their other book is more famous but that this one is better. Just because it's a "bestseller" or a "classic" doesn't mean it's the end all be all! One time, I bought a book that had won a Pulitzer and it bored me half to death and I stopped reading like a quarter of the way in.

And when it comes to recommending classic novels, I kind of barf, because some of those are classic because no one wants to be the one to say "we can be done with this one now" and be shamed out of the literature nerd club forever. Or whatever. Certainly, there are some "classic" books that I've loved. I'm above averagely willing to read Shakespeare. I loved Heart of Darkness and The Stranger and Old Man and the Sea and Crime and Punishment when we were assigned them in high school. But y'all can take your Jane Austen and shove it. A thing I say a lot is that not everything has to be for everyone. (Except The West Wing. I don't want to know if you can't appreciate the best television show ever made. Full disclosure, I think that's actually MASH, and also I've never seen Breaking Bad, which a lot of people really liked. So.)

I have written a lot of posts about books. Maybe scope them, if you've got nothing better to be doing and want to linger inside my brain a while longer. If you don't do that, at least go back to this one. I could edit it or expand it or something but it's truth as it is. I like books, y'all.

Please read.