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WGN Radio’s October Book Club choices

WGN Radio’s October Book Club choices

Update: 2025-10-20
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It’s mid-October and we’ve been getting the first taste of cooler weather. As the chilly season settles in, there’s time to think about some good books to keep us occupied during the cold winter ahead. Fortunately, we’ve got a book club to help with that! Here are some new recommendations from Steve Alexander, Bob Kessler and Sara Tieman. (John Williams is taking the month off, having recently returned from a trip to Portugal. But he’ll have some new selections for the November list.)







Steve Alexander (agribusiness reporter)





Cher: The Memoir Part One (2024)





I don’t have much to add to John’s review in January: “Every few pages it’s another ‘wow, what a weird life she led!’ You’ll cheer Cher on from page one even though you know Sonny will be nothing but trouble.”





Nor, to Sara’s review in May: “…wow, what a life Cher has led starting with a tumultuous upbringing and colorful family past. The name drops and stories are fun and the author bio is a fitting mic drop in and of itself: ‘Cher is a global icon.’” 





I will add that Sonny was a—-well, no, I won’t speak ill of the dead.





A Marriage at Sea (2025) by Sophie Elmurst





I think John or Sara or Bob or all three of them raved about this true story from 1972. A young couple were stranded at sea after a whale knocked a hole in their boat and they watched from a rubber raft as it sank. That’s when a months-long oddysey of often hair-raising and improbable survival began. I’ll just add that if you battle high blood pressure, you may want to skip this one, or consume it in small doses. It’s intense, exhausting, and hard to put down. And I loved it.





No Time Like the Future: An Optimist Considers Mortality (2020) by Michael J. Fox





Somehow, I missed this one five year ago but it was available on my library app as I waited for my books on hold. 





This is his third memoir (Lucky Man and Always Looking Up) and as hard as his life had become, it becomes even more difficult in this book thanks to a spinal tumor, and a devastating fall. His unfailing making-lemonade-out-of-lemons optimism is challenged to the point where he talks about “getting out of the lemonade business.”





Despite those fleeting dark thoughts, there are many times I found myself smiling, even laughing. He is a funny man, often self-deprecating. All of the emotions he’s feeling as he tells his story come through in his voice—and that’s what I recommend: Listen to this one. Michael is the narrator. His speech has been affected by Parkinson’s Disease to the point where it’s often difficult to understand him. I had to slow down the speed on the app by 10 percent to make it easier. It’s well worth it. As fond of, and impressed by, Michael J. Fox as I was before, I was even moreso after finishing this one.





Currently, I’m reading Tom Lake (2023), a novel by Anne Patchett. 







Bob Kessler (news)





The Doorman (2025) Chris Pavone





An historic Manhattan residential building serves as a metaphor for the hierarchy of modern society. What starts out as an examination of the lives of those who live and work there – and how vastly different they are – becomes a worthwhile page-turning thriller involving police brutality, urban protests and international arms dealing.





Via Ápia (2022) Giovanni Martins





Contemporary life in the Rocinha favela in Rio de Janiero, Brazil is told through a series of intertwined vignettes.  The characters, both admirable and flawed, struggle with the many issues related to poverty yet community support, deep friendship, romantic and parental love endure amidst the hardships.





Absolute Beginner (2023) Kevin Armstrong





The author appeared on some of the best David Bowie recordings in the later part of his career and I’ve always wondered about him as a person. This memoir shows his deep love of music and it shows in his writing not only about Bowie but also other collaborators including Iggy Pop and Thomas Dolby. He’s definitely someone who is comfortable not directly in the spotlight, but adjacent to it, which provides a unique perspective on music making.





The Natural (1952) Bernard Malamud





I watched the Robert Redford film soon after his death and it inspired curiosity about the source material. While both share most of the characters and much of the story architecture, the tone is very different. The book is less of a celebration of the game of baseball as the film and it’s a much bleaker outlook on humanity.  While the movie packs an emotional punch, the book is a more subtle examination about the relationship between ability and achievement and the ways both often don’t fit into the modern world.





Sara Tieman (promotions & public relations manager emeritus and station book club international correspondent)





The Impossible Fortune (2025) – Richard Osman





Osman took a year’s hiatus from his bestselling “The Thursday Murder Club” series to release We Solve Murders in 2024 which is to become its own detective series with the characters of Amy Wheeler and her father-in-law Steve Wheeler. But for 2025, Osman has returned to the Coopers Chase retirement home to reconnect with Elizabeth, Joyce, Ibrahim, and Ron. The book begins at the wedding of Joyce’s daughter Joanna to Paul where the best man enlists the help of Elizabeth before going missing. Joanna and former union leader Ron take more of the starring role in this installment. As always in “The Thursday Murder Club” series, there are poignant moments that are both sweet and sad. If you’re new to this series, please start with the first and work your way through (the first book still reigns supreme for me). But if you’re looking for a fun book with smart writing and believable characters you’ll care about, this book (and the series overall) are for you. Fans of these books should know Osman plans to switch off between the two series, so it appears we won’t reconnect with the four crime-fighting retirees until 2027. 





Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism (2025) – Sarah Wynn-Williams 





If you are a Facebook user, then you should read this memoir by Sarah Wynn-Williams who writes of the years she was employed by what was then Facebook and is now Meta. The former diplomat from New Zealand pitched what she saw as her dream job to Facebook, helping to lead global public policy because she saw Facebook’s potential and believed it could change the world for the better. In reality, it is careless people with too much money, power, and their own whim who run a platform that has incited genocide, taken advantage of teens, propelled people to power, cooperated with authoritarian regimes, and created division and mistrust. Not to mention working at the constant threat of sexual harassment from all corners. Meta has sued Wynn-Williams over this book and they don’t want you to read it. Seems an even better excuse to pick up a copy. 





On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century Graphic Edition (2021) – Timothy Snyder and illustrated by Nora Krug





I pulled this book out of my personal collection for a re-read in anticipation of John’s upcoming staged conversation with Founding Father Thomas Jefferson. “History does not repeat, but it does instruct….History can familiarize, and it can warn.”  In addition to that quote from the prologue,I’ll also share this, and you can see why this book and the discussion between John and TJ align: 





“We might be tempted to think that our democratic heritage automatically protects us from such threats. This is a misguided reflex. In fact, the precedent set by the Founders demands that we examine history to understand the deep sources of tyranny, and to consider the proper responses to it. Americans today are no wiser than the Europeans who saw democracy yield to fascism, Nazism or communism in the twentieth century. Our one advantage is that we might learn from their experience.” 





The graphic edition is adapted from Snyder’s 2017 book of the same name and it packs a punch in 120 pages. The observations imparted here are eye-opening and some have already reached our doorstep. I love this collaboration with Nor

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WGN Radio’s October Book Club choices

WGN Radio’s October Book Club choices

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