The longtime host of NPR’s All Things Considered offers a topical and sanguine memoir in essays.
“The best stories should surprise us,” writes Shapiro, “they should defy our expectations and veer in directions we weren’t expecting.” The author sets a high bar for himself, and he mostly succeeds. This work encompasses subjects ranging from Shapiro’s coming out when he was a teenager to his four years covering the White House. The opening piece is ostensibly about nature, but it serves as further introduction to Shapiro because it enumerates his driving, lifelong curiosity. “My parents raised me to believe that the more you learn about the world,” he writes, “the more interesting life becomes.” By extension, “the best journalists…enjoy the feeling of moving from ignorance or confusion to understanding.” This ethos has guided Shapiro throughout his two decades at NPR. Other essays delve into more personal territory, including “You Can’t See Schvitz on the Radio,” describing how the author sweats profusely. Throughout, Shapiro comes across as appealingly relatable and, like any human, fallible. A singer in the band Pink Martini since 2009, he relays entertaining vignettes about this unexpected turn. “Going on tour feels like a reality TV show where nobody gets kicked off,” he writes. The author’s sense of humor is also on full display. Of his appearance in a photograph taken the day he accidently interrupted a meeting that included Barack Obama and Joe Biden in 2010, Shapiro compares himself to “a meerkat who wandered off the savanna into the Oval Office.” The organization of the essays feels random, which results in a lack of a flowing narrative arc. Still, the topics are varied and interesting enough to make the montage coalesce, and the writing is engaging. This collection’s success is due to the author’s companionable, ever sincere tone, his willingness to be vulnerable, and his unwavering magnanimity.
A clever and compulsively readable crowd pleaser.