The Best Book I Read This Month: On Writing by Stephen King

I love that the cover of my paperback edition looks like a cover for one of King’s horror novels.

I love that the cover of my paperback edition looks like a cover for one of King’s horror novels.

The best book I read this month was actually a re-read of an old favorite, Stephen King’s On Writing. I read the book when it first came out in 2000, and reread it this month with my writer’s group. It’s still one of my favorite books about writing and, for the most part, it holds up after twenty years.

On Writing is part memoir, part philosophy. King recounts his journey from childhood to best-selling author and, in an epilogue, tells about the horrific accident that occurred during the writing of the book. My favorite anecdote in the book is the story of how his wife, Tabitha, saved Carrie. She literally pulled the manuscript out of the trashcan. That book turned out to be the one that launched his career.

In addition to telling the story of his life, King also shares his thoughts on the craft, process, and business of writing. When I first read this book twenty years ago, as a baby writer, I took every word he wrote as gospel. After all, he is the Great and Powerful Stephen King. Now, with twenty years of writing experience under my belt, I came away with a different view, one much less absolute than King’s.

Much of what King says holds true for me—the importance of reading in order to write, the importance of writing for yourself first before sharing your writing with others, the importance of having a command of the basics of language. But now I see the privilege that allows him to make such grand pronouncements as “You must write X words a day.” He could spend hours a day churning out thousands of words because he didn’t have to do the mundane day-to-day tasks of running a household. His wife did/does that. (All this made me wish I had a wife like Tabitha to take care of all my household stuff so I could also have hours a day to write.) Because each of us had different life circumstances, I think my view is more “find what works for you”—and that may not be writing every day or writing thousands of words a day, as King recommends.

Where King got it absolutely wrong was in his advice about finding an agent. I’m in the Query Trenches now in my own search for an agent, and King’s advice is flat out wrong. It may have been right when he was a newbie writer looking for representation, and it may even have still been true when the book was published in 2000, but it absolutely is not true now. So if you want an literary agent, find another source of information. This book will steer you wrong in that regard.

That said, this is still one of my go-to writing books. I love King’s down-to-earth tone and his use of humor, and his advice about the craft of writing feels timeless. I suspect I will be re-reading this again down the line.

My Favorite Books About the Twenties

In honor of being back in the Twenties (the 2020s), here are my favorite books about the last Twenties (the 1920s).

Classics

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  • The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

  • The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett

Ghost Story

  • The Haunting of Maddie Clare by Simone St. James (My review here.)

Mysteries

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  • The Ian Rutledge series by Charles Todd

  • The Wyndham and Banerjee series by Abir Mukherjee (My reviews here and here.)

  • The Perveen Mistry series by Sujata Massey

Nonfiction

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  • Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann (My review here.)

  • The Radium Girls by Kate Moore

The Best Book I Read This Month: A Necessary Evil by Abir Mukherjee

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The best book I read this month is A Necessary Evil, the second book in Abir Mukherjee’s Wyndham and Banerjee series. The series follows opium-addicted WW1 veteran Sam Wyndham and Sergeant “Surrender Not” Banerjee as they solve murder mysteries in 1920s India.

What struck me the most in the first book in the series was its vivid descriptions. As a reader, I could almost feel the oppressive humidity of the Calcutta summer. The descriptions in this book are just as vivid, although the setting is different. In A Necessary Evil, monsoon season has reached India, and Wyndham and Banerjee are sent to one of India’s independent kingdoms to investigate the assassination of a prince. This time, the description that stuck with me is one that churned my stomach: Mukherjee’s description of an execution. It’s a short scene in the book, but holy cow, it was a powerful one.

It was also gratifying to see Mukherjee’s portrayal of Wyndham’s opium addiction. In the first book, Wyndham claimed to have his addiction managed, but here, we see that he’s getting worse. The time between hits is getting shorter. He’s almost constantly craving the next one. Wyndham is no static character. He’s clearly going to change—and hopefully, grow—as the series goes on.

I hope the same is true of Sgt. Banerjee, who I find endearing but not quite as developed a character as Wyndham. I look forward to reading the next installment of their adventures.

The Best Book I Read This Month: A Dangerous Crossing by Ausma Zehanat Khan

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The best book I read this month was A Dangerous Crossing, an Esa Khattak mystery by Ausma Zehanat Khan. This isn’t the first time Khan’s series has appeared in this blog series. The previous installment in the series—Among the Ruins—was also a Best Book I Read.

This episode of the series focused on the Mediterranean refugee crisis and the Syrian civil war, as Esa Khattak and his partner, Rachel Getty, are sent to Greece to locate a missing aid worker—who happens to be a childhood friend of Khattak’s. Khattak and Getty are overcome by what they find in the camps in the Greek islands, and they soon find themselves trying to solve two mysteries: the missing aid worker and a missing Syrian refugee.

The story is gripping and harrowing, with well-plotted twists and turns. The characters of Khattak and Getty are as engaging and sympathetic as always. There are a couple of romantic subplots in the book, one of which works and one of which didn’t (for me). The one that works is one that has been hinted at in earlier installments in the series. With the foundation that’s been laid, the development of the romance here made sense. It felt organic. The other one seems to have come out of the blue. While the characters do have a history, explained in previous books, the romantic development here felt rushed and forced, in a way. I felt blindsided and confused by it. But these subplots are minor and do not overshadow the tension and stakes of the larger missing person mysteries.

The next book in the series, A Deadly Divide, came out earlier this year. Don’t be surprised if I end up writing that one up too!