Catapult Extra
| Roundup
#CatapultReads: Staff Picks
Catapult staff members share their current reads
Megha Majumdar, Editorial Assistant
Rain: A Natural and Cultural History by Cynthia Barnett (Crown)
Casey Gonzalez , Associate Editor, Black Balloon; Assistant to Publisher
Red Sorghum by Mo Yan (Penguin Books): It is an absolute gut punch—cutting and ornate. A must-read for lovers of One Hundred Years of Solitude , Absalom , Absalom! , or East of Eden . Rarely is rural China’s devastating beauty so vividly on display for Western audiences.
Yuka Igarashi , Web Editor in Chief
Toddler-Hunting and Other Stories by Taeko Kono (New Directions): Powerful, oddly shaped, fascinating stories about women, obsession, pain, sex. Here Rivka Galchen says she is enamored with the title story, ‘about a woman who goes to great lengths to buy other people’s little boys beautiful sweaters that she then is obsessed with watching them struggle into and out of.’”
Allie Wuest , Web Intern
Paul Chan: Selected Writings 2000-2014 by Paul Chan (Schaulager, Laurenz Foundation/Badlands Unlimited)
Leigh Newman , Editor at Large
These Heroic, Happy Dead: Stories by Luke Mogelson (Tim Duggan Books)
Morgan Jerkins , Web Editorial Assistant
Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi (Knopf): I’ve heard such great things about this, including from Ta-Nehisi Coates.
Julie Buntin , Director of Writing Programs
Fortune Smiles: Stories by Adam Johnson (Random House)
Jonathan Lee , Senior Editor
Sweetbitter by Stephanie Danler (Knopf): “ He loved watermelon-flavored Smirnoff, Jake, cocaine, and pop music. Those subjects provided just enough overlap between us for me to occasionally warrant his attention.” — from the book
Colin Drohan , Writing Programs Assistant
Proxies: Essays Near Knowing by Brian Blanchfield (Nightboat)