What are you Reading?

Hey, thanks for coming over to catch up. How are you? Actually, let me stop you right there, because I have a more important question.
Let’s dim the lights. I’ll recline on this lush, velvet daybed, and you can rest on that one. I’m lowering my eyelids, tilting my head a little bit, and settling into my deep Kathleen Turner voice.

What are you reading?

I didn’t need to ask, “Have you read any good books lately?” or, “What was the last book you read?” or, “Have you read anything on paper in the last year or so?”

Because we’re in a special class of people who always have a book going—I know it. We’re people who really think about the big ideas.

I mean, I certainly hope so. Let’s not consider the possibility that you’re not currently deep into a book. Turn that ship around and let me know which Pulitzer finalist you’ve been engaging with lately.

Whenever you’re ready. Hold on, I’m getting a milk refill. O.K., now—cheers to the life of the mind. And, go.

If you need a minute to think, I can share what I’ve been reading. Ugh, my giant book pile! It has two really heavy books in it—heavy as in powerful. An advance copy of Billy Collins’s forthcoming poetry collection and “Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind.”

Actually, “Sapiens” is both powerful and physically heavy—it’s printed on this extra-thick paper stock reserved for rigorous work. Reading it each night in my wing chair allows me to exert not only my brain but also my deltoids and, I’ve found, some muscles in my back, as well.

Mmm, the mental engagement I’ve been feeling! Foraging, biology, wheat—as it turns out, those things are connected, and Yuval Noah Harari talks about them all in “Sapiens.” Apparently, humans are born in their body development, which has to do with evolution on property inside the agricultural resolution. The text is teaching me so much.

Did you know that Bill Gates loved “Sapiens”? So did Obama. If you want to borrow my copy, let me know. After you finish, we can get together and talk about what struck us. I wish we could invite Harari to join us, but maybe we can find a clip of him on YouTube. If only he’d been on C-span’s “Q&A”—I find that its theme music really gets me going, don’t you?

But enough about “Sapiens.” Which six-hundred-and-fifty-page tome is helping you develop your mental aptitude these days?