 Good morning, Hank, it's Tuesday, so I realize I'm a smidge biased here, but I really do think books make the best gifts, because they last. I mean, obviously the stories last in your mind. But the books themselves often do, too. I mean, I still have the copy of Tom Sawyer mom gave to me when I was 10. But which books to give? Well, it's hard to go wrong, although not impossible. But I have some recommendations for you this holiday season. First, my favorite book of the year, Between the World and Me by Tanahasi Coates, a short, relentless, and brilliant meditation on race and history in the United States. Also in the recommended to everyone on Earth category, The White Boy Shuffle by Paul Beatty. This book is almost 20 years old, but it's still as hilarious and frenetic and heartbreaking as ever, and I really think it should be a classic. I've never recommended it to anyone who didn't love it. Okay, moving on. For the person in your life who loves reading but thinks they hate classics, Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather and The Color Purple by Alice Walker. Both these books are captivating and page-turning and intensely moving, despite being read in schools. For graphic novels fans, Alice and Beckdell's Are You My Mother is the perfect gift for your mother, provided that you and your mother have a very, very dysfunctional relationship. And I also recommend City of Clowns, illustrated by Sheila Alvarado and written by Daniel Alrican, who beat me in 1994 in our high school's creative writing contest. He's since gone on to even greater things, including this brilliant story about a young journalist in Peru grieving his father. Then we have Eugenia Porter's book Beauty for Mashes, which I highly recommend because it is the place where I store my whiskey flask. If you have a giftee who likes quote-unquote literary fiction for quote-unquote adults, I have several recommendations beginning with Hania Yanigihara. Her first novel was a very strange book with a deeply unreliable narrator who discovers the secret to eternal life is drinking the blood of a certain kind of turtle. It's excellent, but her new book, A Little Life, is even better. I mean, if you thought The Fault in Our Stars was sad, this is sad. An older book I always like to recommend, Gilead by Marilyn Robinson, which is both an excellent novel and kind of a religious one, which is a very rare combination in my experience. And then there's A Brief History of Seven Killings by Marlon James, which is just a brilliant novel that uses an oral history format to tell this massive, sprawling story that all revolves around the shooting of Bob Marley in Jamaica in 1976. For science fiction fans, or also fans of A Brief History of Seven Killings, I recommend Nalo Hopkinson's Midnight Robber, which is set in a world colonized by Caribbean peoples. It's really stuck with me, and I've just started her book of stories, Falling in Love with Hominids, which is a great title and so far also a great book. Okay, books about art and being an artist. Sarah and I both really love The Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner, and we also love Just Kids by Patti Smith, which I can't find my copy of because ever since we moved my home library has been very poorly catalogued. Religion! Anyone who wants to understand Islamic history or contemporary Islamic thought and practice should really read No God But God by Reza Oslin. Over the years I've read and reviewed dozens of introductions to Islamic history, this is my favorite. History! I loved Mary Beard's recent History of Ancient Rome SPQR, although sadly it is also lost somewhere in our home library. For poetry fans, this year I read two books of poetry I absolutely loved, A Thousand Mornings by Mary Oliver and Faithful and Virtuous Night by Louise Gluck. Glick? Gluck? I don't know. Both these books are full of precise and profound poems that are moving without ever being pretentious. Young Adult Novels, I haven't read enough YA this year, but two recent books I really enjoyed first and then by Emma Mills, a.k.a. Elma Phi on YouTube, which is funny and my kind of romance-y, and The Boy in the Black Suit by Jason Reynolds, which is about a young man who's worn a black suit every day since his mother died. Also, it occurs to me there may be a new generation of YA readers who haven't read a bunch of books published ten or more years ago, so I have some recommendations on that, Front Valiant, A Modern Tale of Fairy by Holly Black, Ball Don't Lie by Matt De La Peña, The Truth About Forever by Sarah Dessen, and Speak by Lori Haltz Anderson. Those are very different books, they'd probably be called respectively a fantasy, a sports book, a romance, and a contemporary realistic book, but they all make great gifts and with book gets I'm a big fan of bundling different kinds of things together. For younger kids, say 10 to 14, I really love Jacqueline Woodson's Miracles Boys, and lastly, Henry's two favorite books this year were Last Stop on Market Street by Christian Robinson and the aforementioned Matt De La Peña, and The Adorable Boot and Shoe by Marla Frazy. You can find links to all these books in the doobadoo. Hank, full disclosure, you're getting some of these for Christmas, so get excited! I'll see you on Friday.