| Last month I asked you to share what you're reading. I'm currently reading "Handbook for a Post-Roe America: The complete guide to abortion legality, access, and practical support" by Robin Marty. Here are two reader responses from last month: "I Who Have Never Known Men" was my favorite find during a recent trip to NYC where I visited four independent bookstores. Written by Jacqueline Harpman and translated by Ros Schwartz, this is a close, reverent tale of a woman whose name we never learn, and whose earliest memories are of living among 39 other women in a bunker. First published in 1995, the book was an underground success, and one that I cannot recommend enough for people who, like all of us, are living in a post Roe v. Wade and Handmaid's Tale world. –Marlena H., Madison "Booth" by Karen Joy Fowler is a fresh take on a complex family whose most famous member looms large in American history. Fowler never disappoints, regardless of her subject matter — this is a book to wander and get lost in, and emerge with new perspectives about love, loyalty, and the sacrifices we make for our beliefs. –Sarah M., Mount Horeb Your turn: What are you reading right now? Please reply to this email or click the red button to share your book recommendations. | | | | Hot off the presses from the current issue of Madison Magazine | | I've said it before and I'll say it again: This job has its perks. Last month it was wrangling Madison's most adorable pets for a photoshoot; this month I got a personal sunset flight tour of the isthmus. Shane Baker, pictured with me above, is just one of the many general aviation pilots that live in the area. I got to know the people behind the pilots' certificates and the reasons for their passion, which I shared in a feature story called "Ordinary, Everyday Pilots." | | | | Our July issue is now in subscribers' hands and on newsstands throughout the city. The cover story on vegetables is another visual stunner that really celebrates the highlighted dishes for what they are. There's also a 25th anniversary look at the Monona Terrace by Neil Heinen, a lovely meditation on fatherhood from essayist Matt Geiger, and stories on a boatmaker, a geneticist with an artistic flair, adventurous eats, mushroom mania and more. | | | | | | |