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What to watch, listen to and read this weekend

Jan 24, 2022 02:21:41 PM
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What to watch, listen to and read this weekend

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Snail Mail's sophomore album is called Valentine. Tina Tyrell/Courtesy of the artist hide caption

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Tina Tyrell/Courtesy of the artist

What to watch, listen to and read this weekend

Snail Mail's sophomore album is called Valentine.

Tina Tyrell/Courtesy of the artist

This week, Baby Yoda flew above the streets of New York at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, Ridley Scott's House of Guccimade its debut and the Grammy nominations were announced. Here's what NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour crew was paying attention to — and what you should check out this weekend.

What to watch, listen to and read this weekend

Books Here are the Books We Love: 360+ great 2021 reads recommended by NPR

Piranesi, by Susanna Clarke

What to watch, listen to and read this weekend

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Piranesi, by Susanna Clarke Bloomsbury Publishing hide caption

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Bloomsbury Publishing

What to watch, listen to and read this weekend

Piranesi, by Susanna Clarke

Bloomsbury Publishing

I loved Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, both the 2004 novel and the 2015 BBC adaptation. But somehow I never got around to her 2020 novel, Piranesi, which is about a credulous young man who lives in a massive house made up of vast halls and vestibules that are lined with statues. For all he knows, the house is the entire world. He's lived there for as long as he can remember, which isn't very long.

It is such a dreamlike setting that at first you almost wonder if it's going to work as a narrative or if it's going to do more Murakami dream logic stuff, which really isn't my bag. But then he starts interacting with someone else who lives in the house, and we, the readers, start to intuit a lot of things about what's going on. The mystery of it starts to give way to something more concrete and more dark. The book, and the audiobook version, read by Chiwetel Ejiofor, cast a spell. It might not work for listening around the house, so save it for a long trip. It's only four hours long. — Glen Weldon

The Fergamerican National Anthem: A Civic Story by Rob Anderson

Fergie’s star spangled banner but it’s a children’s book pic.twitter.com/JIKGlh4k8C

— Rob Anderson (@smartthrob) November 9, 2021

Picture this. It's 2018. You're watching the NBA All-Star Game and then this happens. Fergie performed an infamous rendition of the national anthem that year.

The reason I bring it up again is because YouTube star Rob Anderson created a children's picture book that commemorates this moment. It's called The Fergamerican National Anthem: A Civic Story, and he recently shared an amazing tweet pairing Fergie's audio with a tour through each page of the book. It just made me so happy.— Aisha Harris

Valentine, Snail Mail

We are coming up on the end of the year, which means the whole NPR music team has been picking over the year in music to identify the best songs and albums. At the same time, several major album releases have come up, and we're frantically trying to assess, "Is the Adele record one of the best of the year? Is the Silk Sonic record one of the best of the year?" These late-in-the-year albums can run the risk of getting lost in the shuffle. And one that jumped out at me is Valentine, by Snail Mail.

The album came out in November, and I think it is one of the best rock records of the year. It manages to be slick and warm at the same time. — Stephen Thompson

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