Jennifer Bort Yacovissi

Jennifer Bort Yacovissi grew up in Bethesda, MD, just a bit farther up the hill from Washington, DC, where her debut novel, Up the Hill to Home, takes place. The novel is a fictionalized account of her mother's family in DC from the Civil War to the Great Depression. In addition to writing and reading historical and contemporary literary fiction, Jenny reviews for both the Independent and the Historical Novel Society. She owns a small project-management and engineering consulting firm, and enjoys gardening and being on the water. Jenny lives with her husband, Jim, in Crownsville, MD. Click here to learn more about the families in Up the Hill to Home and to see photos and artifacts from their lives.
173 entries by Jennifer Bort Yacovissi
Dream Count: A Novel
By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

After a 12-year fiction drought, the author makes it rain.
The Most Powerful Court in the World: A History of the Supreme Court of the United States
By Stuart Banner

As it turns out, our times are precedented.
Framed: Astonishing True Stories of Wrongful Convictions
By John Grisham and Jim McCloskey

A bleak look at the blatant malfeasance in our criminal-justice system.
We’re Alone: Essays
By Edwidge Danticat

The author’s conversational tone belies the rage felt on behalf of her Haitian homeland.
On Call: A Doctor’s Journey in Public Service
By Anthony Fauci

A useful reminder that it’s critical to have the right person on the job.
The Distance Between Us: A Novel
By Maggie O’Farrell

An unnecessary romance muddies an otherwise smart, stirring tale.
Rebellion: How Antiliberalism Is Tearing America Apart — Again
By Robert Kagan

A significant minority has never embraced our founding principles (and never will).
The Phoenix Crown: A Novel
By Kate Quinn and Janie Chang

Veteran authors team up to deliver a suspenseful, ripped-from-reality historical mystery.
Float Up, Sing Down: Stories
By Laird Hunt

For fans of the author’s novel Zorrie, these linked tales will feel like home.
Beautyland: A Novel
By Marie-Helene Bertino

Tender, observational wit carries the reader happily along on this extraterrestrial journey.
The Wren, the Wren: A Novel
By Anne Enright

A stirring tale of family bonds forged by absence.
The Hunt
By Kelly J. Ford

The bard of Ozark crime fiction delivers another tale of corrosive small-town secrets.
The Fifth Act
By Elliot Ackerman

A painful, essential read from perhaps the only author who could’ve written it.
Tom Lake: A Novel
By Ann Patchett

This story centers on a happy family but still the pages fly by.
Crook Manifesto: A Novel
By Colson Whitehead

Harlem Shuffle’s Ray Carney is back, and this time, he brought friends.
The World: A Family History of Humanity
By Simon Sebag Montefiore

A staggering work of scholarship that also delights in the naughty bits.
The Real Work: On the Mystery of Mastery
By Adam Gopnik

A delightful, discursive discussion of what constitutes achievement.
The Sun Walks Down: A Novel
By Fiona McFarlane

A young boy, like the community around him, is swallowed by the outback.
If I Survive You
By Jonathan Escoffery

Men are haunted by their own poor decisions in this stellar collection of linked stories.
The House of Eve: A Novel
By Sadeqa Johnson

The parallel stories of two women highlight the contaminating effect of racism across generations.
These Precious Days
By Ann Patchett
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A wry collection suffused with elegiac considerations of what brings meaning to our lives.
The Big Fix: 7 Practical Steps to Save Our Planet
By Hal Harvey and Justin Gillis

An overwhelming subject is broken into doable, daunting components.

An engaging natural (and enraging colonial) history from Down Under.
The Hero of This Book: A Novel
By Elizabeth McCracken
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Readers will be delighted co-conspirators in allowing this memoir to masquerade as fiction.
Fen, Bog & Swamp: A Short History of Peatland Destruction and Its Role in the Climate Crisis
By Annie Proulx

A passionate chronicle of a key ecosystem’s demise.
Dinners with Ruth: A Memoir on the Power of Friendships
By Nina Totenberg

A poignant ode to RBG and the strength of female bonds.
The Marriage Portrait: A Novel
By Maggie O’Farrell

This engagingly dark fable reminds us how much we don’t wish to be a princess.
The Fifth Act: America’s End in Afghanistan
By Elliot Ackerman

A painful, essential read from perhaps the only author who could’ve written it.
Mercury Pictures Presents: A Novel
By Anthony Marra

Its uncharacteristic antic tenor aside, the author’s prose still breaks hearts with the lightest touch.
Avalon: A Novel
By Nell Zink

Ironic detachment keeps the emotional stakes low in the author’s latest comic tale.
The Living Sea of Waking Dreams
By Richard Flanagan

Australia’s most celebrated novelist demands that we stop ignoring climate change, but it’s a repetitive lecture.
French Braid: A Novel
By Anne Tyler

The literary patron saint of Baltimore serves up her signature affectionate take on family dysfunction.
Thank You, Mr. Nixon: Stories
By Gish Jen

Spanning the 1970s to today, these linked tales sing with insightful, arch observation.
The School for Good Mothers: A Novel
By Jessamine Chan

This chilling debut envisions our judgmental parenting culture run amok.
Go Back to Where You Came From: And Other Helpful Recommendations on How to Become American
By Wajahat Ali

A funny, poignant appeal to our better angels.
I Came All This Way to Meet You: Writing Myself Home
By Jami Attenberg
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A now-successful author’s witty reflection on decades of struggle.
Yonder: A Novel
By Jabari Asim

The Thieves may control the plantation, but the Stolen control their own destiny.
These Precious Days: Essays
By Ann Patchett
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A wry collection suffused with elegiac considerations of what brings meaning to our lives.
Five Tuesdays in Winter: Stories
By Lily King
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The satisfying tales in this collection leave the reader wanting more.
Shelf Life: Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller
By Nadia Wassef

The author packs an entire library’s worth of subjects into this captivating memoir.
Burning Boy: The Life and Work of Stephen Crane
By Paul Auster

This weighty homage seeks to spark a renaissance in the 19th-century author’s readership.
The Lincoln Highway: A Novel
By Amor Towles

The master storyteller is back with a rollicking road trip that nonetheless wrestles with thorny moral questions.
What About the Baby?: Some Thoughts on the Art of Fiction
By Alice McDermott

A master of understated storytelling offers her insights on the craft.
The Living Sea of Waking Dreams: A Novel
By Richard Flanagan

Australia’s most celebrated novelist demands that we stop ignoring climate change, but it’s a repetitive lecture.
Notes on Grief
By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Both of-the-moment and timeless, this slim volume captures the essence of mourning.
Why Didn’t You Just Do What You Were Told?
By Jenny Diski

These selected works showcase the late author’s wit, insight, and never-boring exploration of how she fit into everything.
The Souvenir Museum: Stories
By Elizabeth McCracken
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Family lies at the center of these insightful, acerbic, witty tales told by a master of the form.
First Person Singular: Stories
By Haruki Murakami

For better or worse, the author’s latest collection is stamped with his trademark surrealism, musical taste, and go-to point of view.
Unmaking the Presidency
By Susan Hennessey and Benjamin Wittes

America’s current “I dare you” commander-in-chief underscores how completely the position hinges on the noble intent of its holder.
Ordinary Girls
By Jaquira Díaz

A scalding, extraordinary debut by a talented young author.
On the Plain of Snakes
By Paul Theroux

The legendary travel writer takes a harrowing trip deep into the mysteries and miseries of Spanish-speaking North America.
What Were We Thinking: A Brief Intellectual History of the Trump Era
By Carlos Lozada

The author has been doing a LOT of reading.
Transcendent Kingdom: A Novel
By Yaa Gyasi
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In her sophomore effort, the author tells a deeply humane tale of love and faith.
Make It Scream, Make It Burn
By Leslie Jamison

Another collection of fearless, closely observed, and — yes — empathetic essays from a master of the form.
The Boy in the Field: A Novel
By Margot Livesey
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Grace and decency suffuse this quiet mystery, offering balm to the battered reader.
OMG WTF Does the Constitution Actually Say?: A Non-Boring Guide to How Our Democracy Is Supposed to Work
By Ben Sheehan
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The thoroughly accessible civics guide America could use right about now.
It Was All a Lie: How the Republican Party Became Donald Trump
By Stuart Stevens
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A GOP strategist who helped create the monster now admits the error of his ways.
Nothing Is Wrong and Here Is Why: Essays
By Alexandra Petri
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Follow along as the political satirist draws her zany cast of characters from the world’s worst reality show.
Humankind: A Hopeful History
By Rutger Bregman
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This book makes a compelling and much-needed argument for the innate decency of humans.
Red Dress in Black & White: A Novel
By Elliot Ackerman
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The author’s signature intimate portraits are drawn against eerily familiar national protests.
Tree Story: The History of the World Written in Rings
By Valerie Trouet

This fact-packed look at the study of dendrochronology is a rollicking good read.
Galileo and the Science Deniers
By Mario Livio

A fresh reminder of the wrongheaded outcomes that result when science is thwarted by politics.

A wide-ranging search for meaning in the face of an uncaring universe.
Too Much: How Victorian Constraints Still Bind Women Today
By Rachel Vorona Cote

This part-scholarship, part-memoir debut explores the many charges leveled at unruly ladies through the ages.
Recollections of My Nonexistence: A Memoir
By Rebecca Solnit

An affecting reflection from the writer who made herself heard above the cacophony of men explaining things.
Little Constructions: A Novel
By Anna Burns

The author deploys savage wit but neglects to bring her warm, humane voice to this oh-so-dark comedy.
Unmaking the Presidency: Donald Trump’s War on the World’s Most Powerful Office
By Susan Hennessey and Benjamin Wittes

America’s current “I dare you” commander-in-chief underscores how completely the position hinges on the noble intent of its holder.
Coventry: Essays
By Rachel Cusk

Autobiographical pieces form the captivating, frustrating heart of this collection.
Ordinary Girls: A Memoir
By Jaquira Díaz

A scalding, extraordinary debut by a talented young author.
On the Plain of Snakes: A Mexican Journey
By Paul Theroux

The legendary travel writer takes a harrowing trip deep into the mysteries and miseries of Spanish-speaking North America.
Grand Union: Stories
By Zadie Smith

From post-sea-rise humanity to the mind of God stuck in a creative slump, this sharp-eyed collection offers no easy answers.
Make It Scream, Make It Burn: Essays
By Leslie Jamison

Another collection of fearless, closely observed, and — yes — empathetic essays from a master of the form.
The Catholic School: A Novel
By Edoardo Albinati; translated by Antony Shugaar

What might have been an engaging “fictionalized memoir" is buried under reams of self-indulgent, misogynistic lecturing.
Words and Worlds: From Autobiography to Zippers
By Alison Lurie

The longtime novelist tackles a range of topics in this insightful essay collection.
Laughing Shall I Die
By Tom Shippey

Being fearless in battle was important, but shuffling bravely off the mortal coil mattered more.
The Restless Wave
By John McCain and Mark Salter

The senator reminds us how our political system is supposed to work, and that compromise is not, in fact, a dirty word.
The House of the Pain of Others: Chronicle of a Small Genocide
By Julián Herbert; translated by Christina MacSweeney

Recounting a little-known massacre of Chinese immigrants in Mexico.
Biased: Uncovering the Hidden Prejudice That Shapes What We See, Think, and Do
By Jennifer L. Eberhardt, Ph.D.

No need to fear being scolded in this understanding, revealing look into the insidiousness of partiality.