ONE OF THE BOSTON GLOBE‘S BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR “Beautiful; bittersweet . . . he takes profound, frank, luxurious baths in the emotions of distaste and despair, which dominated during the pandemic. His memoir incisively suggests they reveal the depth of our love, actually, for other aspects of our world that we didn’t want to lose.” —Eve Fairbanks, The New York Times ‘Articulate and engaging . . . What Just Happened: Notes on a Long Year is the journal ant to write but were too busy dashing through self-checkout lanes or curled in the fetal position in front of Netflix to get anything down. Thankfully, Finch did. His keen-eyed account is vivid and witty. It will make you laugh despite the horrors . . . I am not enjoying the pandemic, but I did enjoy Finch‘s articulate take on life in the midst of it. Missing his friends and mourning the world as he knew it, Finch‘s account has a unifying effect in the same way that good literature affirms humanity by capturing a moment in time.” —Christine Brunkhorst, Minneapolis Star-Tribune “Finch’s precise and stunning day-by-day chronicle of the COVID-19 pandemic brings back all the shock and bewilderment, fear and outrage, grim humor and stark revelations . . . [Finch] is nimbly incisive, scathing, and hilarious; his political analysis keen and prescient . . . A forthright, sharp-witted, caring, and essential record of living through a tragic, transformative year.” — Donna Seaman, Booklist ‘When it became clear in March 2020 that the coronavirus was more than an annoying temporary disruption, some writers took to keeping COVID diaries. We’re fortunate that one as gifted and insightful as Los Angeles-based novelist and critic Charles Finch chose to preserve his recollections in the eloquent, fierce What Just Happened: Notes on a Long Year . . . Finch is a keen political observer whose takedowns of the Trump administration’s almost willfully incompetent leadership are both savage and, at times, savagely funny.‘ — Harvey Freedenberg, BookPage [Starred Review] ‘[A] perceptive chronicle of [Finch‘s] experience of the Covid-19 pandemic . . . Readers will feel an intimate familiarity with the bewilderment that imbues his early observations, as he laments not being able to make certain foods because of scarcity issues . . . Even at its darkest, this serves as a moving testament to the resilience of humanity.‘ — Publishers Weekly “A spirited testimony to hard times . . . related with appealing candor . . . The narrative is freshest when the author hews closest to his own life: the childhood illness that left him immunocompromised; the consolations of smoking weed, listening to music, and especially his tender remembrance of his grandmother, the minimalist artist Anne Truitt. His radiant portrait of Truitt shines as a transcendent ending to his chronicle of a dark year.” — Kirkus Reviews “Charles Finch has one of my favorite brains on the planet, and if time travel were possible, this is the book I‘d hand myself in March of 2020. Not only as a crystal ball, but as a path through the inferno. What Just Happened is a reckoning, a processing, a release—an extraordinary record of extraordinary times.” —Rebecca Makkai, author of The Great Believers ‘This book is so funny and so true. Charles Finch unpacks a year of plague, fear, shameless venality, and dizzying stupidity with an irrepressible wit and surgically precise cultural observations. I didn‘t know how badly I needed exactly this. Maybe you do too?‘ —Joe Hill, author of Heart-Shaped Box “I‘m glad someone wrote it all down. I‘m glad that someone was as acute an observer as Charles Finch. What Just Happened is a deeply thoughtful narrative of the year we‘ll too easily forget. The recounting works so vividly—furious; at times poetic, often darkly funny, and surprisingly hopeful. A remarkable and effortlessly woven blend of current events, history and cultural criticism.” —Lauren Hough, author of Leaving Isn‘t the Hardest Thing ‘When I began Charles Finch‘s diary of a pandemic year, I was skeptical about the prospect of reliving a terrible period. But Finch is so gifted as a stylist, thinker and observer that he made the familiar not only absorbing but also revelatory. His thoughts about his own life and the world at large are intelligent and original as well as deeply moral, and they unfurl in taut, witty sentences that both surprise and delight. Quietly profound, the book is also a true pleasure to read.‘ —Adelle Waldman, author of The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P.
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