Well, mostly I’m not: as it is for many of you, it’s fiction that tugs hardest at my heart.

But Bron’s personal reading project for 2026 is headquartered here, and I liked the idea of seeing how comfortably just two volumes of non-fiction could nestle into my stack each month.

Particularly pulled from a certain set of shelves that had become increasingly crowded during the past year, after Mr BIP surprised me with several bookish volumes and writers’ memoirs/biographies. (I wouldn’t want to deter additions there, later this year, right?)

You already know about some of these, like Isabella Cosse’s book about Mafalda and Rebecca Romney’s Jane Austen’s Bookshelves, but here’s a quote from near the end of Romney’s book, describing the sense of connection between readers and books:

“Every time I read a new book or article saying something smart about these women, I momentarily felt sheepish for having missed their work for so long. But all of us who dare to navigate the labyrinth of the past will feel this way at some point. The most important realization was that I was not alone in that labyrinth.”

Mélikah Abdelmoumen’s Baldwin, Styron and Me and Edwidge Danticat’s We’re Alone—were both also featured in February’s ReadIndies, contemplating more bookish relationships.

Abdelmoumen writes: “I write, I write my life, I rewrite, I evolve, I change, but in all my writings, whether they are good or bad, failures or successes, predictable or unexpected, those that resonate with books written by others, and those that seem to come out of nowhere, it’s always still me, addressing you, the reader. It’s me attempting to make a connection with you the reader. The Other.”

In contemplating creativity, Danticat quotes D’Angelo Neard (“…people write, it’s because the world is an act of language”), Adrienne Rich (“…writing is re-naming”) and Audre Lorde (“…no new pains. We have felt them all already” which nods to James Baldwin).

Then came Stacey D’Erasmo’s The Long Run (2024), a memoir like a “desire path” that explores how one continues to create art over time: a “subjective, partial, incomplete” work that engages in conversation with others on this theme, including writer Samuel Delaney and visual artist Cecilia Vesuña.

Often, when writers’ memoirs shift into discussion of art forms and artists other than writing, I feel as though I’m actually learning more about the memoirist’s friendships and relationships, and I simply long to return to the topic. D’Erasmo highlights their creativity, and even though she begins the memoir with talk of how disorganized she’s felt at times, I ended up interested in each one of these artists, whether a dancer or a landscape architect.

But, ultimately, it’s D’Erasmo’s connection with stories and language that secures my affection for this work; here is a long quote about how books intertwine with memories.

“But here we come to the course of my true education, which hasn’t much taken place in classrooms. The first woman I ever slept with was reading Tillie Olson’s Yonnondio. I read Alice Munro because another lover was reading one of her books. The women I asked to dance in The Duchess was reading Elizabeth Bowen’s The Little Girls that summer after she left me; in the fall, I read that book, wanting to know what had drawn her attention. I’ve been a Bowen devotee ever since. A man I was seeing for a while just after I turned fifty was a fan of Yoko Tawada. The man left, but Tawada is with me still. J gave me a copy of Jean Stafford’s The Mountain Lion, and for years thereafter we quoted lines of it to each other; I never pick up that book without smelling J, hearing her voice.”

Elaine Castillo’s How to Read Now (2022) provoked a lot of quiet yes-yes-yes-ing alongside no-no-no-ing, which makes sense because Castillo makes sweeping absolutist statements. There’s not much room for nuance in her work, and that’s part of the appeal: her passion, her declarative tone.

So, for instance, she believes that a certain novel could not have been published unless every single solitary person involved in its making had avoided considering whether the author was appropriately positioned to tell that particular story. (In reality, one might simply have not cared, or one might have cared and had their opinion dismissed, or one might have actually considered it and believed it was appropriate.)

What I really enjoy is how attentively she reads particular texts (and how abundantly she quotes relevant passages) and how much it all matters. This quote is from “Reading Teaches Us Empathy and Other Fictions”:

“The story I’m telling is not just something for you to feel sympathy for, rage against, be educated by: it’s a story about you, too. This work has left a will, and we are all of us named in it: the inheritances therein belong to every reader, every writer, every citizen. So, too, the world we get to make from it.”

Jazmina Barrera’s On Lighthouses (2017; translated by Christina MacSweeney, 2020) landed in my stack with Cross Stitch (which Rebecca recommended, same translator) but, as usual, I dragged my heels ; with her non-fiction.

Fans of Valeria Luiselli’s essays will likely enjoy these six short pieces, regardless of one’s feeling about lighthouses. (But, really, does anyone actively dislike lighthouses?)

Her travels to specific destinations with friends and acquaintances make you feel that you’re part of the trip, whether a reservation has gone wrong or an accidental but fortuitous encounter. And the bookish bits (Robert Louis Stevenson, Jonathan Franzen—for instance) and musings on solitude and how one approaches and avoids danger on the rocks were especially good reading.

“There’s only one part of that story I should include here; at the end of that day, after dark, I found a postcard with the definition of the Celtic word hiraeth: the nostalgia for a home to which one cannot return or that never existed. I wonder if, during his travels through Scotland, [Sir Walter] Scott ever heard that word.”

Later in April, I’ll read Aisha Sabatini Sloan’s Dreaming in Ramadi in Detroit (2024). And, in May, I will finish the letters exchanged between two Jewish writers, childhood friends in Poland, who lived on different continents after WWII: one immigrating to Canada and one to Sweden. (I started these at the end of last year: wonderful.)

On the same bookcase—but poetry isn’t non-fiction in my mind, only in the Dewey Decimal system—is Reginald Dwayne Betts’ new poetry collection.

His Felon was one of my favourites in 2020; I borrowed it from the library, renewed it as long as I could, and finally bought my own copy. Sentenced as an adult for a crime (carjacking) he committed at sixteen, Betts spent nine years in adult prisons. His 2010 memoir reflects on his experience and, as W.W. Norton & Company summarises, “homelessness, underemployment, love, drug abuse, domestic violence, fatherhood, and grace.”

When I read about Doggerel (2025), I wasn’t keen, but I knew that he would change my mind. It turns out it’s not doggerel verse (although why do I think I’m informed as to what verses I like and what ones I don’t /shrug) and, also, there are actual dogs. It also turns out that I can’t really say why I love his poems, except that it seems like he spends a hundred years on each one, but also like they’re birthed whole in a sneeze that’s over in a millisecond. And that I’ll be buying the next collection too.

Do you think of poetry as non-fiction? Are you riding along, informally but investedly, with someone else’s reading plans for 2026?

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