Here are our favorite books of 2019, brought to you by the writers and editors of Hyperallergic.
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December 16, 2019

 

Letter from the editor:

I think it's a pretty common occurrence for writers and readers to have stories about how a book changed their life and transformed their understanding of the world. If we grew up with books, then we know how in the pages of certain books we can often find refuge and be understood in a way that few other things in our lives make us feel seen. So picking the best books of the year is a very personal and emotional choice for writers and editors, and I think that is reflected in our choices for the top 25 books of the year. 

This is Hyperallergic's inaugural book newsletter, which joins our city guides (NYC, LA) and film newsletter, as yet another focused summary of the rich content Hyperallergic offers. I hope you'll take a moment to peruse these titles and just maybe find something that will shift your perspective and remind us why we fell in love with books in the first place.

 

 
 
 

Best of 2019: Our Top 25 Books

Here are our favorite books of 2019, brought to you by the writers and editors of Hyperallergic.

 
 
 
 

Penelope Rosemont’s Essays Expand the Surrealist Canon

Threaded through this collection is an optimistic belief in Surrealism as a world-changing political and poetic practice.

Marcella Durand

 
 
 
 

A Poet Takes Up Biography

Baron Wormser offers empathetic but unflinching portraits of a diverse group of historical figures.

Carl Little

 
 
 
 

Merce Cunningham Takes the Book Out of the Box

More of an art- or archival collection than a typical book, Cunnigham’s recently reissued Changes gathers sketches, notes, photographs, programs, and all other manner of ephemera in a creative package.

Abbey Bender

 
 
 
 
 
 

The Unique Legacy of an American Indian Modernist

Mary Sully’s artwork reflects her cultural moment, but it is also as a blueprint for rewriting history to include marginalized perspectives.

Sarah Rose Sharp

 
 
 
 

Changing the Tune of Globalization

In her new book on changing patterns of cultural production and consumption, Fatima Bhutto posits that it’s not American pop songs but K-Pop that has become the soundtrack of globalization.

Shiva Balaghi

 
 
 
 

Fighting for the Future in President Zuckerberg’s Dystopian America

In her graphic novel The Hard Tomorrow, Eleanor Davis explores how different people react to living in a pressure cooker of rising fascism amidst dire inequality and a collapsing ecosystem.

Dan Schindel

 
 

A Peek Into Some of the Best Art Books of 2019

Paula Rego, John Ruskin, Donald Judd, Lucian Freud, Hokusai, and, yes, Leonardo da Vinci.

 
 
 
 

The Polymathic Mind of John Ruskin

Paula Rego, John Ruskin, Donald Judd, Lucian Freud, Hokusai, and, yes, Leonardo da Vinci.

Mark Scroggins

 
 
 
 

The Radical Side of Suburbia

In Radical Suburbs, author Amanda Kolson Hurley argues that the failures and achievements of suburban life offer a roadmap to future sustainable and equitable housing.

Kealey Boyd

 
 
 
 

A New Book on Women Artists Is Welcome, But Uneven

The title of Great Women Artists is complete with a strikethrough across “women,” to indicate that the artists within are “great artists” regardless of gender. Visually, it’s arresting, but its intention is murky.

Bridget Quinn

 
 
 
 

Giorgio de Chirico’s Dream-like Verse

These poems channel the artist’s restlessness and longings into uncanny, animated visions.

James Gibbons

 
 

More book reviews:

  1. A Novelist Mines the Profound Humor of Human Life
     

  2. A Novel Set in the Berlin of the Future Pokes Fun at the Creative Class
     

  3. How Surrealism’s Playful Aesthetic Was Deeply Political
     

  4. Artists Who Have Addressed Sexual Trauma Since the 1970s
     

  5. Andy Warhol’s “Screen Tests” Inspire an Investigation into Criticism, Failure, and Time

 
 
 

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