Many works of fiction explore what it is to be human. An
honest look at human behavior can reveal the insecurities beneath polished exteriors
and the unacknowledged emotions that play into the decisions we make and the ways
we treat each other. However, my favorite books are usually the ones that leave
me feeling hopeful and a little bit inspired at the end. Following are three
very different novels that explore the messier sides of being human while also
revealing something of the brightest parts.
The Humans by
Matt Haig

Sent to earth to impersonate a Cambridge professor in order
to prevent the professor’s recent mathematical breakthrough from becoming part
of human knowledge, this is the story of an alien being who is thrown into
human life. Matt Haig’s writing is funny and engaging and the protagonist’s
first experiences on earth are mostly humorous misreadings of cultural norms.
Initially, he’s repulsed by what he sees and it’s hard not to sympathize with
his perspective as he reflects on the absurdities of human behavior and our
willful ignorance of so much of what is happening in the world beyond our
immediate surroundings.
However, the more time the protagonist spends as a human,
the more often he finds himself inexplicably moved – by music, by poetry, a
caring gesture, the companionship of a dog. Through the lens of this alien
narrator, Haig peels back all of the strangeness and ugliness in human behavior
to reveal the complexity and the vibrancy that are at the heart of what it is
to be a living, breathing human being.
Etta and Otto and Russell and James by
Emma Hooper

One day, eighty-two-year-old Etta leaves her home is
Saskatchewan and sets out to see the ocean, travelling on foot across the
country to Nova Scotia. She leaves behind Otto, her husband of many years, and
Russell, a friend who has loved her since they were young. Etta’s memory is
starting to slip and she often finds herself lost in her husband’s war-time
memories, believing she is marching through Europe with an army instead of
through the Canadian wilderness.
The novel’s point of view shifts frequently, following Etta
as she travels, then moving to the perspective of Otto as he awaits her return,
then traveling back to the 1940s when Etta and Otto were falling in love and
facing the realities of war. Interspersed throughout are the letters Etta and
Otto send each other while Otto is away at war and then again while Etta is on
her journey to the sea. The novel's threads weave together to give the reader a sense
of the fullness of these lives quietly and generously lived and the beauty and
breadth of these relationships that span so many years.
Station Eleven by
Emily St. John Mandel

Station Eleven takes place before, during, and after a flu
outbreak that wipes out most of the global population. There’s the pre-outbreak
story of Arthur, a famous Hollywood actor who has married and divorced three
women and rarely sees his young son. There’s Jeevan, an aspiring paramedic who
stocks up on shopping carts full of food and tries to wait out the pandemic in
his brother’s apartment. And there’s Kristen, who was eight years old when the
virus hit. Kristen has survived for twenty years in the lawless post-flu
landscape and has become a traveling Shakespearean actor, bringing beauty and
something of the lost world to the small communities that dot the former United
States.
I expected Station Eleven to be a disturbing, difficult read
– and at times it is. But St. John Mandel’s clean, graceful writing gives
pleasure to the reading experience. Her characters feel complex and real as
they try to live their lives as best they can in very different circumstances. Although Station Eleven delves
into some of the uglier sides of human nature, what struck me most was how it
illuminates the goodness in people – the generosity, the braveness, the desire
to create, the capacity to love.
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