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Nonfiction November: Book Pairings

By Curlygeek04 @curlygeek04

This week’s Nonfiction November prompt comes from Julie @ Julz Reads:

This week, pair up a nonfiction book with a fiction title. It can be a “If you loved this book, read this!” or just two titles that you think would go well together.

Nonfiction November: Book Pairings
Nonfiction November: Book Pairings

Dopesick is an in-depth look at opioid addiction, particularly at how the drug company pushed OxyContin in rural areas where people would be most susceptible to it (my full review here). Macy balances medical, business, and legal information with personal stories. The opioid epidemic is one that touches many people, whether rich or poor, but Macy really shows how this crisis fell on the backs of the poor. Reading this book, I was infuriated to know how far back this goes and how little was done until wealthy people started dying. For example, OxyContin’s manufacturers were told early on that they needed to do something to their pills to prevent them from being crushed or injected, yet they did nothing. (Interestingly, just last month Purdue Pharma settled a huge lawsuit, though it’s probably not nearly enough.)

I learned a lot from this book about how addiction destroys families, not just the person who is addicted. Macy writes about family funds being depleted and parents spending years trying to heal from the problems in their children’s lives (or their too-early deaths). I also learned that treatment/rehabilitation for opioid addiction is complicated, expensive, and not available to most people.

Yaa Gyasi’s second novel, Transcendent Kingdom, is completely different from her first, Homegoing, but it’s every bit as good if not better. The main character is Gifty, a young woman from a Ghanaian family pursuing a doctorate at Stanford, studying how pleasure-seeking behaviors affect the brain and how they can be treated. When she was young, her older brother Nana suffered from opioid addiction, devastating the family and leaving Gifty struggling with issues of trust, hope, and faith.

I was knocked out by how good this book was, from an author who is so young and has only written one other book.

While Transcendent Kingdom covers many issues like mental illness, science, and religion, it’s also the perfect illustration of what Macy describes: how opioids were prescribed to blameless people who were helpless to resist its addictive qualities, and how opioid addiction tears apart families, with impacts that last for years. Both Macy and Gyasi write about how hard it is to fight addiction, how people go through cycles of withdrawal and rehabilitation, only to go back again and again. And how families give everything they have, watching helplessly while the person they love becomes a stranger.

I’m fortunate that I haven’t experienced any of this directly. It’s easy to blame people who use drugs, thinking they are criminals or must be weak, but these two books will give you a very different perspective.

Another book I just read that pairs well is Liz Moore’s Long Bright River. It’s not nearly as good as Transcendent Kingdom, but I recommend for people who like dark mystery-thrillers, especially those that focus on troubled families (like the books of Tana French and Jane Foster).


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