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Summer is here! While the European Policy Centre winds down its activities during the hottest holiday weeks, you can take a dip in our first-ever EPC summer recommendations list. Whether you will be relaxing on a sunny beach or in your garden, lounging on a balcony, a sofa or a hammock, here are some books, podcasts and movies our colleagues love and recommend to keep you company. We hope you will like them just as much.
Elizabeth Kuiper, Associate Director and Head of the Social Europe and Well-Being programme (@kuiper_em)
Stefan Sipka, Policy Analyst, Sustainable Prosperity for Europe programme (@sipka_stefan)
Irina Popescu, Programme Assistant, Sustainable Prosperity for Europe programme (@_irinapopescu)
Andrea G. Rodríguez, Lead Digital Policy Analyst, Europe’s Political Economy programme (@agarcod)
Clara Sophie Cramer, Project Assistant, Connecting Europe
Lucasta Bath, Programme Assistant, European Politics and Institutions programme (@LucastaBath)
Finally, like any self-respecting Gen Zer, I have a summer playlist: this year, it’s mostly filled with more laid-back music from artists like Tom Misch, Mayer Hawthorne and Tuxedo.
Helena Hahn, Policy Analyst, European Migration and Diversity programme, (@H__Hahn)
Nathalie Henry, Events Executive
This is a story of identity, sexuality, love, grief, friendship and the need to live the life you want, even if doing so might be deadly. It’s also a story of a mother desperate to understand her child. I won’t forget this novel anytime soon.
It’s not particularly deep, it does not take the genre to new levels or make you think about something new, and yet it did feel different. Evelyn Hugo’s story is so delicious and compelling that it kept me turning pages in a desperate need to discover the stories behind her seven husbands (yes, I finished it in one sitting) and the answer to the one question everyone wants to know: Who was her greatest love?
Emi Vergels, Executive Editor
British presenter and writer Johny Pitts travels through continental Europe – Stockholm to Marseilles, Lisbon to Berlin – in 2019 and returns with fieldnotes on black Europe. He even covers our very own Brussels, where, incidentally, the term Afropean was born. Reflecting on his travels, Pitts provides a rare, intimate study of racial diversity in Europe and scrutiny of ‘Europeanness’. A quasi-ethnography of “[b]lack Europe from the street up” containing personal observations and analyses of European urban planning, African and European histories, American exceptionalism and class dynamics. As a lover of post-war literature, the Baldwin and Fanon chapters are personal faves.
If you can overlook the occasional over-poeticising and forgive the not-so-occasional assumption as subjective impressions, you’re left with a compassionate and urgent call for plurality in European identity. A valuable exploration of what it means to be black in Europe, and a non-white European.
Elizabeth Kuiper, Associate Director and Head of the Social Europe and Well-Being programme (@kuiper_em)
- Cultural Evolution: People’s Motivations Are Changing, and Reshaping the World by Ronald F. Inglehart
- The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
- Pod Save America
Stefan Sipka, Policy Analyst, Sustainable Prosperity for Europe programme (@sipka_stefan)
- Yes Minister (1980-1988)
- Bad Banks (2018-present)
- En thérapie (2021-present)
Irina Popescu, Programme Assistant, Sustainable Prosperity for Europe programme (@_irinapopescu)
- Silent Spring by Rachel Carso
- This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate by Naomi Klein
- We Organize to Change Everything: Fighting for Abortion Access and Reproductive Justice, edited by Natalie Adler, Marian Jones, Jessie Kindig, Elizabeth Navarro and Anne Rumberger
Andrea G. Rodríguez, Lead Digital Policy Analyst, Europe’s Political Economy programme (@agarcod)
- The Europeans by Orlando Figes
Clara Sophie Cramer, Project Assistant, Connecting Europe
- On All Fronts: The Education of a Journalist by Clarissa Ward
Lucasta Bath, Programme Assistant, European Politics and Institutions programme (@LucastaBath)
- On Nationalism by E.J. Hobsbawm
- The Black Obelisk by Erich Maria Remarque
- Tunnel 29 hosted by Helena Merrimn
Finally, like any self-respecting Gen Zer, I have a summer playlist: this year, it’s mostly filled with more laid-back music from artists like Tom Misch, Mayer Hawthorne and Tuxedo.
Helena Hahn, Policy Analyst, European Migration and Diversity programme, (@H__Hahn)
- The Ezra Klein Show hosted by Ezra Klein
- It’s What I Do: A Photographer’s Life of Love and Way by Lynsey Addario
- Babel: Around the World in Twenty Languages by Gaston Dorren
- Hot Money by Naomi Klein
Nathalie Henry, Events Executive
- The Death of Vivek Oji by Akwaeke Emezi
This is a story of identity, sexuality, love, grief, friendship and the need to live the life you want, even if doing so might be deadly. It’s also a story of a mother desperate to understand her child. I won’t forget this novel anytime soon.
- The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins-Reid
It’s not particularly deep, it does not take the genre to new levels or make you think about something new, and yet it did feel different. Evelyn Hugo’s story is so delicious and compelling that it kept me turning pages in a desperate need to discover the stories behind her seven husbands (yes, I finished it in one sitting) and the answer to the one question everyone wants to know: Who was her greatest love?
- A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman
- The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett
Emi Vergels, Executive Editor
- Afropean: Notes from Black Europe by Johny Pitts
British presenter and writer Johny Pitts travels through continental Europe – Stockholm to Marseilles, Lisbon to Berlin – in 2019 and returns with fieldnotes on black Europe. He even covers our very own Brussels, where, incidentally, the term Afropean was born. Reflecting on his travels, Pitts provides a rare, intimate study of racial diversity in Europe and scrutiny of ‘Europeanness’. A quasi-ethnography of “[b]lack Europe from the street up” containing personal observations and analyses of European urban planning, African and European histories, American exceptionalism and class dynamics. As a lover of post-war literature, the Baldwin and Fanon chapters are personal faves.
If you can overlook the occasional over-poeticising and forgive the not-so-occasional assumption as subjective impressions, you’re left with a compassionate and urgent call for plurality in European identity. A valuable exploration of what it means to be black in Europe, and a non-white European.
- Rough Translation from NPR
