BOOKS
It’s been a while since my last edition of Worth It, so the book recommendations today are plentiful. I left a couple books off this list that I didn’t love—so if it’s here, it’s a winner. 👍🏻
Tell me what you’re reading in the comments because I am almost at the bottom of my TBR!





The Float Test,
This is a literary, character-driven novel, somewhat in the vein of Claire Lombardo. Adult siblings come together in the wake of their mother’s death; misunderstandings ensue and long-held hurts surface. Really beautifully written.
Elon Musk, Walter Isaacson
I could talk about this book forever, but that’s another post, I think. Isaacson gives a pretty unflinching portrait of the man running American money. But I was surprised to come away from it hating Elon less, not more. I even bought a copy for my 11-year-old nephew, though the quantity of f-words has me nervous to give it to him.
Heartwood, Amity Gaige
A woman is lost on the Appalachian Trail, and narration switches between her and the people searching for her. Satisfying, accessible read.
I Hope This Finds You Well, Natalie Sue
This workplace comedy is hilarious in a NSFW way. So I was surprised when, near the end, it made me cry. Very fun beach read.
Broken Country, Clare Leslie Hall
Probably my favorite of this whole bunch. Compelling, emotional, moving. A complicated love story and murder trial are intertwined, and you’ll have to think hard about whose side you’re on. I read a hard copy, but my mom listened to the audiobook version and highly recommends it.





Isola, Allegra Goodman
Not the kind of book I usually go for, but I enjoyed it. A 16th-century aristocrat is stranded on an island and must figure out how to survive. Good book club book.
Run for the Hills, Kevin Wilson
Adult siblings take a cross-country road trip to find their long-lost father. Quirky and funny like only Kevin Wilson can be.
Wild Dark Shore, Charlotte McConaghy
Beautifully written, mysterious story about a family on a remote island and a woman who washes ashore. A good suspenseful read that’s a little dark.
Small Rain,
When a poet ends up in the ICU, his reflections about everything from American healthcare to romantic love are bound to be profound and beautifully rendered. This reads like a long poem, so it’s a book for language lovers.
A tiny excerpt:
It’s also why we need poems, I think: they exist in a different relationship to attention and to time; it’s impossible for harried students worrying about exams, for harried readers checking their phones, to see and feel what’s happening in them. Whole strata of reality are lost to us at the speed at which we live, our ability to perceive them is lost, and maybe that’s the value of poetry, there are aspects of the world that are only visible at the frequency of certain poems.
Real Americans, Rachel Kong
Another favorite. In three separate sections, this novel follows three generations of one family as their lives intersect in surprising ways. About race, genetics, and destiny.
SHOWS
Your Friends and Neighbors
My husband and I both enjoyed this one, but perhaps for different reasons. Let’s just say I called it “the Jon Hamm show” and he called it “the Olivia Munn show.”
Warning: If you get squeamish when people do bad things and might get caught (🙋🏻♀️), it’s going to get a little tense for you.
The Studio
Seth Rogan grates a little IMO, but this silly, low-stakes show about the movie industry is fun after a long day of contemplating the future of artificial intelligence. Or whatever it is you do with your time.
Tangentially related to both of these shows, here’s an interesting question from a Substack I love:
GOODS
Sorry to the fellas—I promise this is not usually a women’s style guide (lol), but I have two urgent recommendations this month…
One: I bought these shoes to walk around Greece, and they were amazing. They arrived the day before we left and required zero breaking in. Better than my Birkenstocks.
Two: I also got this black dress for travel. It was a splurge, but the weird, springy, jersey fabric is IMPOSSIBLE to wrinkle, and you can get a 20% off promo online. I didn’t want to confess to y’all (or any spouses of mine who might be reading this) how much I spent on it, but it is too much of a miracle to keep secret. I wore it more times on my trip than I care to admit… I just kept taking it off and leaving it in a puddle on the floor, and then the next night when it was time to go to dinner, I put it on (with the above shoes) and it looked perfect again. I was finally ready to wash it when I got home, but the care tag literally says “WASH LESS OFTEN.” So I was like who am I to argue and just hung it up. Ha.
(P.S. I could write a whole essay about how it’s called a nap dress… like what woman is napping in this? What woman is napping at all?! 🙄)
ANOTHER THING
The first (intro) email for The Away Club Challenge goes out tomorrow!
If you want to join us this round, you only have a couple more days to jump in.
It’s 10 days of challenges plus a closed community space, all to help you make intentional choices about your tech habits and how you spend your time more generally. The Away Club is the culmination of every book I’ve read, essay I’ve written, and thought I’ve had about the role of tech in modernity, and I’m very excited to share it with you.
If you’ve been around Between Two Things very long, you know everything I write is finished with a generous dollop of philosophy… less of a “tech is bad” vibe, more of a “what are we doing on this planet anyway?!?!” vibe. But like, super chill.
More here.
If you want to participate, become a paid subscriber and the emails will come straight to you.
I'm going to read the Garth book! Thank you for recommending it. I had to go back and be sure that it was the same guy you had restacked a while ago because I loved those lines so much, and it WAS him so that made me happy. Also I liked Elon more not less about reading the bio too. Now I'm reading Oliver Burkeman's new book - which I know you said was good. I would like to highly recommend for your TBR list Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried. It is one of my favorite books so far this year. I'm excited about The Away Club, except I'll be out of town most of the 10 days this time so I don't know much I'll get able to engage but I want to try to keep up as best I can.
I loved Broken Country! I just finished The Marriage Portrait which I really liked- you can borrow if you need a book. And yes- it’s the John Hamm show 🤤