Haymarket

Just words on a page

Just words on a page

According to Goodreads, I read 46 books in 2024.

There is an asterisk to that number (46) but we’ll get to that.

I haven’t posted a “year in reading” since my recap of 2021. Reviewing a year of reading feels different than reviewing music or movies. Those mediums, for whatever reason, demand lists. People, it seems, love lists and, more importantly, love to bicker. It’s all fine. It’s part of being human. If we didn’t have tastes, we would just be surviving, not living. It’s fine to just survive too, by the way. Writing and reading help us both survive and live.

Anyway.

It's fun to see what books found us throughout the year.

Eduardo Galeano's Chicago

Eduardo Galeano's Chicago

Uruguayan author Eduardo Galeano passed away in 2015 and has been on my to-read list since. His books have remained elusive, seemingly banished from all Chicago bookstores. Eventually, I took advantage of the deus ex machina of Bookshop and ordered two books of his last fall, primarily because I wanted to read Soccer in Sun and Shadow ahead of the World Cup (required reading for any soccer fans or frauds like myself). Last week, I started reading the other book I’d ordered, the Book of Embraces. Here he wrote (as translated by Cedric Belfarge):

Chicago is full of factories. There are even factories right in the center of the city, around the world’s tallest building. Chicago is full of factories. Chicago is full of workers.

Arriving in the Haymarket district, I ask my friends to show me the place where the workers whom the whole world salutes every May 1st were hanged in 1886.

It must be around here,’ they tell me. But nobody knows where.

No statue has been erected in memory of the martyrs of Chicago in the city of Chicago. Not a statue, not a monolith, not a bronze plaque. Nothing.