1. Mason Currey, Making Art and Making a Living: Adventures in Funding a Creative Life. The best overall book I know on the different methods top artists have used to keep themselves going financially. It is perhaps more anecdotal and less theoretical than I would prefer, still a nice work.
2. Mangol Bayat, Mysticism and Dissent: Socioreligious Dissent in Qajar Iran. A very good, clear, and useful book on different dissident religiouis developments in Iran, leading up to the Bahai faith. Recommended, one of the best books I have found for grappling with the history of current Iran.
3. Lena Dunham, Famesick: A Memoir. Not exactly my thing, so I did not finish it. But it is pretty good, so if you are tempted give it a try.
4. Iain Pears, Parallel Lives: A Love Story from a Lost Continent. A delightful story/indirect memoir, telling the tale of the lives and marriage of Frances Haskell, the British art historian, and Larissa Salmina Haskell, a Russian woman who survived the siege of Leningrad as a girl. Pears had the full cooperation of Larissa, at an age where she doesn’t give a damn any more. This story truly comes to life, and that is helped by Pears’s background as a writer of very good fiction.
5. Lázár, by Nelio Biedermann. An excellent novel of ideas, in the style of earlier Continental literature, by a 23-year-old Swiss phenom. It is very good in German, I have not sampled the translation.
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