THE QUESTION

What two books would you recommend for summer reading -- the first, to learn, and the second, to escape?

Posted by David Ignatius on July 23, 2007 10:21 AM

FROM THE PANEL

Michael Young is the Opinion Editor and a columnist for Lebanon’s The Daily Star newspaper. He is also a contributing editor and contributor at Reason magazine, where he writes bi-weely articles.

A Morbidly Entertaining Stalin

I'm not sure learning and escaping are so contradictory. Some might object to one of my suggestions, Simon Sebag Montefiore's remarkable "Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar," as a summer tome, but you'll learn a lot and, somehow, it's morbidly quite entertaining.

Michael Young Beirut, Lebanon | 5 COMMENTS
Jul 26, 2007 at 4:27 PM
Lamis Andoni is a Middle East consultant for Al Jazeera, the Qatar-based news station. She has been covering the Middle East for 20 years. She has reported for the Christian Science Monitor, the Financial Times and the main newspapers in Jordan. She was a professor at the Graduate School in UC Berkeley.

Female Arab Novelists Defy Repression

"The Lemon Tree: An Arab, a Jew, and the Heart of the Middle East" is a great piece of literary non-fiction about a Palestinian and an Israeli whose two families take refuge in the same house. Readers can learn a lot from these human stories behind the conflict, as well as from the female Arab novelists who risk so much to tell theirs.

Lamis Andoni Doha, Qatar | 27 COMMENTS
Jul 25, 2007 at 10:10 AM
Ignacio Gil Vázquez is the managing editor of Spain’s second largest circulation newspaper, El Mundo. He previously served as foreign correspondent in France and as Culture section editor. He has covered wide-ranging events throughout his career, including the Basque conflict, Catalan politics, Francois Mitterrand’s final years as president of France, his successor Jacques Chirac’s election, and the death of Princess Diana.

Relive Past Glory, Escape Present Mediocrity

"In Europe" is perfect for summer reflection. A fresh, first hand chronicle takes you on a trip through the Old Continent's last hundred years: from the optimistic cosmopolitan Paris of 1900 to a snowy Sarajevo recovering from the century's last civil war in 1999. Then read "Los Girasoles Ciegos" to escape the much less exciting present.

Ignacio Gil Vázquez Madrid, Spain | 9 COMMENTS
Jul 25, 2007 at 8:10 AM
Mubashar Jawed Akbar is a leading Indian journalist and author. He's the founder and editor-in-chief of The Asian Age, a daily multi-edition Indian newspaper with a global perspective and editor-in-chief of The Deccan Chronicle, a news daily based in Hyderabad. He has written books including Blood Brothers, Nehru: The Making of India, Kashmir: Behind the Vale, Riot After Riot, The Shade of Swords, and India: The Siege Within.

After Tamerlane: Two-In-One

"After Tamerlane" by John Darwin is a good two-in-one -- read it to learn, and also escape -- because the thriving detail is great fun, because it subverts official wisdom about the British and other empires with great panache, and...

M.J. Akbar India | 3 COMMENTS
Jul 25, 2007 at 7:01 AM
James Fallows is National Correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly. In addition to working for the Atlantic, he has spent two years as chief White House speechwriter for Jimmy Carter, two years as the editor of US News & World Report, and six months as a program designer at Microsoft.

Read Rumsfeld and China

My summer reading recommendations: To Learn: "Rumsfeld" by Andrew Cockburn; "To Change China" by Jonathan Spence....

James Fallows China/USA | 6 COMMENTS
Jul 24, 2007 at 4:05 PM
Former Washington-based columnist for The Hong Kong Standard, The New York Sun, and Insight on the News, an online weekly published by The Washington Times. Covered economic and political relations between the United States and East Asia, with an emphasis on China, Taiwan and Hong Kong. Former chairman of the Hong Kong Journalists' Association. Currently a business executive at a Chinese-language newspaper in Hong Kong.

China Fantasies: Rolexes and Reform

My pick to learn is "The China Fantasy: How Our Leaders Explain Away Chinese Repression," and to escape: "An Apple a Week" by Hong Kong's Renaissance man. But feel free to swap the two. You can certainly learn from Tang's writings on Hong Kong Rolexes and fung shui, and James Mann does offer a fantasy world in questioning China's future.

Kin-ming Liu Hong Kong | 14 COMMENTS
Jul 24, 2007 at 10:08 AM
Dr. Njogu is C.E.O of Twaweza Communications. He was previously Associate Professor of African languages and literatures at Kenyatta University.

From Kosovo to California

I recently read "Emergency Sex" on the workings of the United Nations around the world, from Kosovo to Liberia, Somalia and Haiti, and enjoyed it tremendously. There is no sex in "Emergency Sex" per se. But the book tells of the intensity with which UN staff work in conflict situations around the world. This one's definitely for learning.

Kimani Njogu Nairobi, Kenya | 0 COMMENTS
Jul 24, 2007 at 9:18 AM
Miklós Vámos is a Hungarian novelist, screenwriter and talk show host. He is one of the most read and respected writers in his native Hungary. He has taught at Yale University on a Fulbright fellowship, served as The Nation’s East European correspondent, worked as consultant on the Oscar-winning film Mephisto, and presented Hungary’s most-watched cultural television show. Vámos has received numerous awards for his plays, screenplays, novels and short stories, including the Hungarian Merit Award for lifetime achievement. The Book of Fathers is considered his most accomplished novel and has sold 200,000 copies in Hungary.

Pick Novels and Forget Escaping

I am a novelist. Forgetting those "how to" books, when you say the word BOOK to me, I think fiction. And fiction doesn't teach, nor should its reader want to escape. A fiction reader should dive in and hope to stay as long as possible. With that in mind, pick novels this summer -- even if they're Harry Potter.

Miklos Vamos Budapest, Hungary | 3 COMMENTS
Jul 24, 2007 at 8:04 AM
Daoud Kuttab is a Palestinian journalist. He was born in Jerusalem in 1955. Presently he is a visiting professor at Princeton University in the United States. Mr. Kuttab is the former director of the Institute of Modern Media at Al Quds University in Ramallah, Palestine and the founder of AmmanNet, the Arab world's first internet radio station. His personal web page is www.daoudkuttab.com

Struggle for Humanity in Jerusalem

If you read the news and/or have any interest in the Middle East, Sari Nusseibeh's autobiography "Once Upon a Country" definitely fits the learning category. He provides a rare view into the life of a Muslim Jerusalemite, one who struggles to retain his humanity while living through violence and remaining loyal to his Palestinian nation.

Daoud Kuttab Princeton, NJ | 12 COMMENTS
Jul 23, 2007 at 12:17 PM
Leon Krauze is a Mexican blogger and a founder of letraslibres.com.

This Summer, Try Horror!

This summer, I have decided to go back to my late adolescence and read some horror literature (what better way to deal with terrorism that to read about ghosts and demons while walking down Broadway?). But I've been disappointed, what has happened to horror fiction these days? The best stuff was still written in the 19th century.

Leon Krauze Mexico | 3 COMMENTS
Jul 23, 2007 at 12:16 PM
Soli Ozel teaches at Istanbul Bilgi University's Department of International Relations and Political Science. He is a columnist for the national daily Sabah and is senior advisor to the chairman of theTurkish Industrialists' and Businessmen's Association. He is the editor of TUSIAD's magazine Private View and the editor of the Turkish edition of Foreign Policy a journal published by the Carnegie Endowment in the USA.

Interpreting Murder in Freud's New York

This summer, I am reading a delightful book both to escape and learn: Jed Rubenfeld’s "The Interpretation of Murder." It's about a murder and an attempted murder on the day Sigmund Freud first set foot in the U.S. You get a good mystery and learn about New York social life at the beginning of the 20th century. What more can one say?

Soli Ozel Istanbul, Turkey | 1 COMMENTS
Jul 23, 2007 at 11:20 AM

READER RESPONSE

» Anju Chandel, New Delhi, India | For Learning: "Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny" by Amartya Sen, the Nobel laureate, to understand the root cause of most of the ills a...
» beebeisme | To start off, what better escape than Harry Potter? But if you're not into that then for the summertime I like to get back into the "classics," those...
» Wellington W. Sculley | For a compelling and prescient read on the future of the global environmental sustainability, pick up Lehman Brothers' "The Business of Climate Change...
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