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7 honest books on ageing that are good for the soul
7 honest books on ageing that are good for the soul

Tatler Asia

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Tatler Asia

7 honest books on ageing that are good for the soul

2. 'This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage' by Ann Patchett Above 'This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage' (Photo: Bloomsbury Paperbacks) Though this isn't a book on ageing, the undercurrent of time's passage runs through every essay. Ann Patchett brings a novelist's discipline to nonfiction: her sentences are crisp, her stories layered. She writes about the long arc of friendship, the slow-building nature of creative work and what it means to live alone by choice. Her reflections are rarely framed as epiphanies; instead, they unfold gradually, shaped by age, habit and hard-won self-knowledge. For readers seeking quiet insight rather than dramatic reinvention, this collection offers exactly that. 3. 'No Time To Spare' by Ursula K Le Guin Above 'No Time To Spare' (Photo: Mariner Books) Ursula K Le Guin, best known for her speculative fiction, turned her sharp gaze inward in her final years, publishing essays that read like conversations with a brilliant, slightly irritable aunt. She writes about cats, breakfast and the arrogance of youth—subjects that seem small but reveal her larger argument: that old age is not a diminishing, but a different kind of richness. Her tone is brisk and occasionally cranky, especially when addressing ageism or internet culture. Among books on ageing, this one is notable for resisting both complaint and inspiration; Le Guin is simply living, and thinking, out loud. 4. 'A Life's Work' by Rachel Cusk Above 'A Life's Work' (Photo: Picador Paper) Ostensibly a book about early motherhood, A Life's Work is in fact a study of identity breakdown—a theme that mirrors the emotional terrain of ageing. Rachel Cusk interrogates the body's mutiny, the evaporation of former selves and the awkward collisions between expectation and reality. Her prose is spare and confrontational, stripped of the usual maternal glow. What makes it relevant to ageing is its unsentimental treatment of transformation: the sense of becoming unrecognisable to oneself. If you're looking for a book that insists on intellectual and emotional honesty, even when it's uncomfortable, Cusk delivers. 5. 'This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism' by Ashton Applewhite Above 'This Chair Rocks: A Manifesto Against Ageism' (Photo: Celadon Books) Ashton Applewhite isn't interested in gently guiding readers into acceptance, but in dismantling the entire system of cultural ageism. Backed by research and fuelled by righteous irritation, her book calls out the ways society marginalises older people, especially women. She tackles everything from workplace discrimination to the cult of youth in media with sharp wit and unflinching analysis. Unlike many books about ageing that focus on coping strategies, this one demands structural change. It's energising, at times confrontational, and deeply clarifying—particularly for readers tired of being told to age 'gracefully'. 6. 'Late Migrations' by Margaret Renkl Above 'Late Migrations' (Photo: Milkweed Editions) Margaret Renkl, a columnist for The New York Times , blends personal essays with observations from the natural world in this quiet but resonant book on ageing. She writes about the deaths of her parents, the slow rhythm of her Southern backyard and the brief but meaningful rituals of family life. There is a calm attentiveness to her voice, even when describing loss. The book doesn't offer solutions, just presence. Its approach to ageing is reflective rather than corrective—Renkl lets the reader sit with time, rather than race against it. Among books on ageing, this one stands out for its stillness. 7. 'The Year of Magical Thinking' by Joan Didion Above 'The Year of Magical Thinking' (Photo: Vintage) A clinical, unsparing portrait of grief, this book is often shelved under 'bereavement', but it also speaks profoundly to ageing's disorienting effects. Didion documents the year after her husband's sudden death with the precision of a surgeon. She tracks her irrational thinking, her physical exhaustion and the ways time can warp under trauma. There's no comfort here, no platitude—just the cold light of loss. What it offers is not catharsis but clarity. For anyone facing ageing as a series of absences—of people, of faculties, of certainty—Joan Didion's account feels devastatingly accurate.

Margaret Atwood's 10 best books – ranked!
Margaret Atwood's 10 best books – ranked!

The Guardian

time19-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Margaret Atwood's 10 best books – ranked!

After more than 30 years, Atwood caved to pleas to write a sequel to The Handmaid's Tale. Not since Harry Potter had a publication caused such a sensation: computers were hacked in search of the manuscript and advance copies were kept under lock and key. With classic Atwood timing, the novel coincided with the phenomenal success of the TV adaptation of the original – not to mention the arrival of Trump at the White House. The Testaments won Atwood her second Booker prize, shared (controversially) with Bernardine Evaristo's Girl, Woman, Other. A world ravaged by a deadly global pandemic? Atwood got there first in her dystopian MaddAddam trilogy, which also includes The Year of the Flood (2009) and MaddAddam (2013). We meet Snowman, apparently the lone human survivor, along with genetically engineered smart pigs (pigoons) and the humanoid Crakers (untroubled by sexual desire and sunburn). Globalisation, rogue science and big tech are all targets for Atwood's satire. Reviewing The Year of the Flood in 2009, the late Ursula K Le Guin took her friend to task for resisting the label of science fiction. Atwood's many sci-fi fans may be cross it's not higher on this list. Atwood herself described it as 'a fun-filled, joke-packed, adventure story on the end of the human race'. After agreeing to rewrite The Tempest for Shakespeare's 400th anniversary, Atwood reread the original three times and then again, backwards. Betrayal, revenge, grief, freedom and creativity: you can see why this is the play she picked. Prospero's island becomes a prison in Canada in 2013, with Felix, the wronged artistic director of a theatre festival, mourning his daughter Miranda. 'So many contradictions to Prospero! Entitled aristocrat, modest hermit? Wise old mage, revengeful old poop?' Felix reflects. Atwood puts her own inimitable spin on the play. Atwood's first published novel, a satire on consumerism and misogyny, was written when she was 24, the dark result of 'speculating for some time about symbolic cannibalism', as you do. Atwood later insisted the novel was 'proto-feminist', because 'there was no women's movement in sight' when she wrote it in 1965. Thus began her unofficial role as feminist figurehead and soothsayer. Here we see her sharpening her teeth. 'Ten days after the war ended, my sister Laura drove a car off a bridge.' So opens Atwood's epic novel, told by 82-year-old Iris Chase. The book's key object is a steamer trunk, a fitting metaphor as Atwood throws everything into this story-within-a-story-within-a-story: the social and political upheavals of 20th -century Canadian history; a host of narrative tricks (flashbacks, multiple time schemes); and a mix of genres including sci-fi, whodunnit and romance. According to the New Yorker's Michiko Kakutani, of all Atwood's novels, The Blind Assassin 'is most purely a work of entertainment'. It won her the Booker prize for the first time. Atwood became a writer when a poem suddenly came to her on a school football pitch when she was 16. Paper Boat brings together 60 years' worth of poems from her first collection, Double Persephone (1961), to her last, Dearly, published in 2020, the year after the death of her partner of 48 years, Graeme Gibson. As the years pass, youthful questioning gives way to grief and wisdom. Atwood has called poetry 'the most joyful' of literary forms, and it is here, perhaps, that you see the writer at her most gentle and unguarded. 'How to keep track of the days? / Each one shining, each one alone? Each one then gone. / I've kept some of them in a drawer on paper, / those days fading now.' The environment, democracy, women's rights – these are just some of the urgent issues addressed in this collection of Atwood's essays written this century (at one point she was averaging 40 pieces a year). Here you will find tips on how to be a writer (look after your back) and how to escape a crocodile (zigzag), alongside celebrations of authors and the musician Laurie Anderson. Atwood is interested in everything: from the sex lives of snails to the future of the planet, nothing is too small or vast. Many of these essays were lectures, but you never feel you are being lectured. No one combines intellect, straight-talking and silliness like Atwood – sometimes all in the same sentence. Her motto: 'Tell. The. Truth.' In 1843 Toronto, Grace Marks, an Irish Canadian scullery maid, was convicted for the double murders of her employer and his mistress. This notorious case was the inspiration for the Booker-shortlisted Alias Grace. Temptress or victim? Power, truth and the slipperiness of history, some of Atwood's favourite themes are here. The question of believing a woman's story assumed a heightened resonance with the 2017 TV adaptation, which landed in the midst of the #MeToo revelations. Hilary Mantel described Alias Grace as 'impressive at a horribly deep level' – you can't argue with that. 'Little girls are not made of sugar and spice and everything nice,' Atwood said of Cat's Eye. She is the least autobiographical of novelists, but Cat's Eye draws on her shock at leaving the Canadian outback, where she roamed wild with her elder brother, to attend school for the first time in Toronto. The narrator Elaine is thrown into 'a whole world of girls and their doings', with schoolmate Cordelia the original mean girl. Cat's Eye captures the byzantine hierarchies and covert cruelties of schoolgirl politics, usually overlooked by literature. Wolf Hall for prepubescent girls. Heartbreaking and terrifying. Atwood's feminist dystopia has entered the popular imagination as well as the canon. Even if you've never read the novel or seen the TV series, you will know that it imagines America in the grip of a theocracy where women are enslaved for their fertility. Atwood wrote the novel in Berlin in 1984 – of course she did – in response to the regressive US Reagan government, but not even she could have predicted its second life post-Trump. Famously, she didn't include anything that hadn't happened somewhere in the world already. 'If I was to create an imaginary garden, I wanted the toads in it to be real,' she wrote. Today, the pond is even murkier and the toads are bigger and uglier. All together now: 'Nolite te bastardes carborundorum.' To explore any of the books featured, visit Delivery charges may apply.

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