I love book lists, but I also kind of hate them — I always think other people's lists are wrong.
So when the good folks at the Power of Storytelling narrative conference in Bucharest, Romania, asked me for a list of great nonfiction, I pounced. Finally, I thought. A list that will be right! (And then, after sending it, I continued to tinker. Because it wasn't quite right; no list can be.)
This is not a top 10 list, just a list of 10 great books of narrative nonfiction.
A summer spent reading these books would be a wonderful summer indeed.
1. Darcy Frey's "The Last Shot." On Coney Island, Frey spent a year with black teens who believed that a professional basketball career would be their way out of poverty. For just one of them — Stephon Marbury — it was.
2. Adrian Nicole LeBlanc's "Random Family." The writer spent a decade hanging out with a family in the Bronx, observing how years of poverty grind people down and affect generations. This is immersion journalism at its finest.
3. Anything by Erik Larson, the former Wall Street Journal reporter who now writes narrative books of history. His new book, "Dead Wake," about the sinking of the Lusitania, is fascinating, but probably his most entertaining book is "Devil in the White City," a true story about a serial killer prowling the 1893 World's Fair.
4. "Mountain City" by Gregory Martin is a beautiful memoir about the quirky people in his tiny hometown, now a ghost town in Nevada. Quiet, understated, but carefully and lovingly observed.