Welcome to Quick Lit, where we share short and sweet reviews of what we’ve been reading lately on the 15th of the month.
I know I always say that once the Summer Reading Guide is out, I start reading old—as in, not just released—books, but most of today’s titles are hot off the presses. And I didn’t realize just how much I’ve been reading on audio lately until I pulled this list together. (I can say with confidence that my garden has benefited from having good books to listen to: there’s no better motivation to pull a few more weeds than to have a good story you’d love to hear one more chapter of!)
I can’t wait to hear about your recent reads in comments.
What I’ve been reading lately: the new and the notable
Dirt: Adventures in Lyon as a Chef in Training, Father, and Sleuth Looking for the Secret of French Cooking
Me and White Supremacy: Combat Racism, Change the World, and Become a Good Ancestor
All Things Reconsidered: How Rethinking What We Know Helps Us Know What We Believe
Deacon King Kong
Rodham
Disoriental
What have YOU been reading lately? Tell us about your recent reads—or share the link to a blog or instagram post about them—in comments.
P.S. Since we’re on the audiobook theme today, try these 10 audiobooks so good you’ll want to fold another load of laundry, finish washing the dishes, or just sit in the driveway for 5 more minutes, and these 10 audiobooks to listen to while you clean, purge, and tidy.
92 comments
I have three 5 star books plus a few others I’m recommending this month! https://neverenoughnovels.com/2020/06/08/june-2020-book-recommendations/
I am excited to get my hands on Rodham. I only read one book in May. SMH
https://shannanenjoyslife.com/2020/06/15/quick-lit-next-page-please-may-2020/
Shannan – I am excited about Rodham also! My gay son has observed all the problems his girlfriends have are caused by the men in their lives. He is very observant. This book answers a great question.
In total I read fewer books than usual but finally finished the 41-hour audiobook I was listening to (which I’d recommend)!
https://cocoonofbooks.blogspot.com/2020/06/what-ive-been-reading-lately-quick-lit.html
I’ve read over 30 books during sip, re- read. Team of Rivals by Doris Kerns Goodwin. My Fav. Book by far. Check it out
Thank you so much for this linkup!
Somehow I managed to have a great reading month in May despite how awful everything else was! Please visit my Cozy Burrow to see which books were my favorite and how I’m surviving the pandemic. Hint: it includes books and journals!
https://katiegilley.com/2020/06/02/may-2020-highlights/
Dirt sounds amazing! I love to cook and I love to read, so books with food as central theme are almost always a good fit for me.
Here’s what I’ve been reading lately: https://readeatrepeat.net/2020/06/15/books-in-progress-what-ive-been-reading-lately-june-2020/
I am picking up “Rodham” from the library this week! I just finished “Well-Read Black Girl” and have added a bunch of books written by Black authors to my TBR. https://incessantbookworm.com/2020/06/15/quick-lit-21-what-have-you-been-reading-lately/
This month on THE BOOKBAG I’m sharing my 5 top summertime reads from 2015 – 2019!
http://www.lindastoll.net/2020/06/the-bookbag-2015-2019-cherished-summer.html?m=1
I’m really looking forward to Rodham. I enjoyed Sittenfeld’s American Wife more than I thought I would, so I’m interested in how she handles this alternate history.
I listened to a bunch of audiobooks, most of which were excellent, and I read the new Hunger Games book, which unfortunately wasn’t. Here are my reviews: https://www.mindjoggle.com/june-2020-book-reviews/
My reading has been all over the place, from mystery to romance to memoir. This month A Good Marriage and Columbine were standouts for me.
Sorry! Forgot the link https://creatingthislife.com/june-book-report-quick-reviews-of-what-ive-been-reading/
Me and White Supremacy is sitting on my Kindle and is my next anti-racism book after Be the Bridge (which is phenomenal).
For this month’s Quick Lit post, I’m sharing reviews of three novels I LOVED, one that I hated (but that prompted some good reflection), and a fantastic parenting book.
https://kendranicole.net/quick-lit-june-2020-book-review-part-two/
I loved listening to Nothing to See Here! I also listened to a wonderful memoir to help understand being Black in America called I’m Still Here by Austin Channing Brown. Currently kindle reading Strike Me Down. A pretty good reading month so far!
I am reading The Clergyman’s Wife by Molly Greeley. I tend to stay away from Pride and Prejudice stories because I have exacting standards about Austen. Yet this book is incredible. It gives Charlotte Collins a life and a personality. Loved seeing this imagined life for Charlotte after P&P ends.
Thanks for this recommendation! I went and borrowed it on my Kindle right away. 🙂
I loved that book! It was such a sweet, simple story.
Just borrowed the audio of “The Clergyman’s Wife” from my library. I never like Austen spinoffs, but I’ll give it a try. “The Jane Austen Society” was a big disappointment, and no book has excited me for awhile. Maybe malaise from being stuck at home more?
I will look for it! After enjoying Unequal Affections by Lora Ormiston so much, I’m ready for another P & P retelling!
https://thereisnosuchthingasagodforsakentown.blogspot.com/2020/06/reading-update.html
I’m in the middle of lockdown reading here in Haiti. Here are my books #27-#33 for this year.
I have the audio of Rodham in my audible account, and can’t wait to listen to it.
Here’s what I’ve been reading. Finally got my groove back:
https://www.allthebooksihaventread.com/blog-1/2020/6/9/june-show-us-your-books
After reading Knox McCoy’s book, I wonder if you’d enjoy Alan Jacob’s book, “How to Think” as a kind of companion guide? A group of friends and I read it this month and all really enjoyed it. It is short in length and isn’t super prescriptive but more helps the reader realize when he/she is falling into faulty thinking.
Alison, I read How to Think a couple of years ago and hadn’t thought about the similarities between the two books! I’m glad you pointed that out.
Deacon King Kong is on my library hold list and I’m listening to All Things Reconsidered now (I laugh everytime Knox says “footnote” in that funny way of his!).
June 2020 Books to Read (and Skip)
https://www.sarahsbookshelves.com/june-2020-books-to-read-and-skip/
Definitely adding Me and White Supremacy to my list. Thanks, Anne!
My reading life improved last month after stalling through quarantine. The books I finished were great (which helps)! Includes: The Truth About Us and Thinking Fast and Slow.
My post also is about “What Your Reading List Says About You.”
https://www.lisanotes.com/books-i-recommend-may-2020/
Your nonfiction choices sound very interesting! Especially “Me and White Supremacy”.
This month I’m enjoying Marissa Meyer’s “Renegades” series, “When We Believed in Mermaids” by Barbara O’Neal, and learning about Ayurveda: https://lifesapearl.com/what-ive-been-reading-lately-june-quick-lit/
Thank you for hosting this link up Anne!
“Dirt” and “Disoriental” sound intriguing! I read 33 books in May, so excellent, some just “meh.”
I have been listening to more audiobooks than I normally do, finding it hard to concentrate on print, which is my usual form. I just listened to Giver of Stars by Jojo Moyes and thought it was very good. Julia Whelan is an excellent narrator! I also listened to several Kate DiCamillo books, Louise, Adventures of a Chicken, is fun! And lastly, Once Upon a River, by Diane Setterfield, with another great narrator, Juliet Stevenson.
I am currently reading “Nobody will tell you this but me” Bess Kalb
Recently I have read “Midnight at the Blackbird Cafe” by Heather Webber, “Evvie Drake starts over” by Linda Holmes, “Searching for Sunday” by Rachel Held Evans, “The Giver of Stars” by Jo-Jo Moyes, “The Scent Keeper” by Erica Bauermeister, “ The Garden of Small Beginnings” by Abbi Waxman , “The Bookish Life of Nina Hill” by Abbi Waxman, and “Somewhere Safe with Someone Good” by Jan Karon. I enjoyed them all.
I have been on a streak of 4-5 star books and I’m notoriously stingy with stars. The Vanishing Half – Hamnet – City of Girls – Girl, Woman, Other – The Warmth of Other Suns – Passing
Currently reading: The New Jim Crow (80%) + Americanah (25%)
I think I finally am getting my reading groove back. I need to check out Dirt and All things reconsidered. This what I have been reading http://myviewofthehoneypot.blogspot.com/2020/06/what-i-read-june.html
Three of my five books were on audio as well and four out of the five were hits with me. Three nonfiction and two fiction reads and I’m feeling like I am back in my reading stride after the quarantine. These are just the books I chose for my own reading enjoyment rather than for review purposes. http://www.sincerelystacie.com/2020/06/quick-lit-mini-reviews-of-some-recent-reads-june-2020-edition/
I am reading To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee. I am reading it for my book Club. I have seen the movie many times but as I read, I realize I have never read this book! The story of Scout, Jem, and Atticus Finch is like coming home for me somehow. I love the interaction with neighbors and watching Jem learn how to be a man. The way their friends and neighbors turn on the family when Atticus is assigned to defend the African American man is painful and Scout does some growing of her own. I am in the courtroom now with Atticus defending Tom. I am so glad I finally got around to reading this. I think my next read will be Go Set A Watchman.
I love food memoirs and Dirt sounds really interesting. I will have to add it to my to be read list. I read eight books in May, so it was a good reading month. I am reading way more fiction than I normally do though. https://fromourbookshelf.com/may-reading/
Can’t wait to read Knox McCoy’s new book!
I listened to two great books recently, “The Henna Artist” by Alka Joshi and “The Girl with the Louding Voice” by Abi Dare. Since the new normal means staying at home, these books transported me to India and Nigeria with their descriptive details.
These all sound good! After having a hard time focusing on anything (including reading, sadly) during the worst of Covid in March / April, your blog and podcast has helped me get back on track w/ so many great recs – so glad I found this! (I’ve started w/ ep 1 of the podcast and making my way through..) Just read the Vanishing Half (loved it), can’t wait now to read Mothers. No reading American Dirt (w/ eyes open to the critique) as well as The Real Thing and listening to The Year of Living Danishly (both mentioned on your podcast). Thanks !
(and would love to hear how you keep your reading journal – will check your blog to see if you’ve written about this already)
*Now reading (typo)
My recent completed reads include:
* All the Ways We Said Goodbye by Beatriz Williams, Lauren Willig, and Karen White – this was a good book but for some reason it took me far too long to read it, I think because I didn’t find it as compelling and gripping as I expected. 3.5 stars
* The Book of Lost Friends by Lisa Wingate (audiobook) – I loved this book until the end, which seemed rushed. It felt like the author just got tired of writing and abruptly ended the story. The main characters, Hannie and Benny, were so interesting, and voiced very well by the audiobook artists, and the addition of real historical letters to the Lost Friends column was amazing. I’ve read very few books set in the Reconstruction Era and wish there were more. 4 stars
* Illuminated by Matt Bronleewe – This is similar in style to The Da Vinci code, but based on the Gutenberg Bible. It started out strong, but as the story progressed I found it unbelievable, and bordering on ridiculous. 2 stars
* What the Wind Knows by Amy Harmon – LOVED this book! This is a beautiful love story, which also includes a mythical story, snapshots of the Irish Easter Rising and the establishment of the treaty with Britain that formed Ireland and Northern Irelend, and glimpses into the life of Michael Collins. Oh, and poetry by Yeats! So much going on here….. 5 stars
Right now I am reading The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michele Richardson, What If It’s True? by Charles Martin, and Maybe You Should Talk to Someone by Lori Gottlieb (audiobook). All of these are fantastic!
Happy Reading!
I feel like I’ve been in a rut of 3 star books this past month – good books but not wow books. Three books that stood out above the rest were Mudbound, Small Great Things and The Dinner List.
I’ve just finished Americanah, which I loved, and White Fragility which open my eyes and has given me loads to think about. I wish every progressive white person in the country would read/listen to this book! (There are also a couple good lectures of Robin DiAngelo’s on YouTube for folks that want a quick introduction…)
Also read Such a Fun Age & An American Marriage, which I would also recommend!
I adore the combo of books you recently read.
I just picked up White Fragility from a little free library and am looking forward to digging in
I just finished an online small group meeting with my church a few minutes ago in which we watched and discussed one of the videos by Robin DiAngelo! I now can’t wait to get my hands on her book. Thank you for the additional nudge!
Rodham is high on my list to read soon and I just added “Disoriental” which sounds absolutely fantastic!
Here are the books that have been occupying my time lately including “We Are Not From Here” and my current read of “The Jane Austen Society”. I also include our family’s reads such as my husband deeply engrossed in “The House in the Cerulean Sea” and my kids loving “Nanny Piggins” and “Stonewall” (among others) for read-alouds.
whoops – I forgot the link – https://www.everyoneslibrarian.com/blog/quick-lit-june-2020
I love Charles Martin’s books! Just finished reading Inheritance, by Dani Shapiro; for some reason when I started it I thought she was Dani Perino, Geeez!
I just finished Writer & Lovers from Anne’s summer reading list and loved it! Before that, I read Sara Paretsky’s Dead Land. She’s a favorite of mine for many decades and I’m happy to say she hasn’t lost a step. I started The Overstory yesterday afternoon—how have I not read this before? I’m gobsmacked by how good it is. 😊 Happy reading everyone!
I’m reading a lot of audiobooks too right now. The best ones in the past month were Kindred (I think I was just in the middle of it last month) by Octavia Butler, The Skin We’re In by Desmond Cole, and Normal People by Sally Rooney. I just started I’d Give Anything by Marisa de los Santos (haven’t read her before) and am most of the way through Burnout by Emily and Amelia Nagoski and am liking them both.
I managed something I haven’t done for years – binge reading an entire series (Anglican mysteries). And my other reading veers from an 8th century author to the Wild West!
https://susandcook.blogspot.com/2020/06/quicklit-june-2020.html
I finished “The Lovely War” (good), “The Crossing Places” (ok), “The Stranger Diaries” (good) and “The Dutch House” (did not live up to the expectations). Currently, I’m reading “The Warmth of Other Suns”, which was on my TBR since last year and “Brown Church” by Roberto Chao Romero.
Still working on “The Blue Castle” and “Seven Transforming Gifts of Menopause”.
Abandoned, “The Secrets we Kept”.
Oh, I’ve been reading a lot as well! I’ve finished the first 2 books in the Ken Folett Century Trilogy. I read and loved Bluebird, Bluebird by Attica Locke (and will pick up book #2 today at the library). I also read and loved Long Bright River by Liz Moore. My book club book this month is Big Summer by Jennifer Weiner and I didn’t find it to be a favorite.
Recently finished The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey and The Crofter and the Laird by John McPhee, and I’m currently reading (and nearly finished with) The Lake House by Kate Morton. All three have been terrific reads for me.
Next up on the towering TBR list are What the Wind Knows by Amy Harmon, another Brother Cadfael mystery, The Jane Austen Society by Natalie Jenner, and A Great and Terrible King:Edward the First and the Forging of Britain by Marc Morris. I think there’s a definite theme to my reading habits here…
I just finished Monica Hesse’s THEY WENT LEFT – YA, historical fiction – and it blew me away. Incredibly powerful, heartbreaking yet hopeful, too.
I’ve managed to read 8 books over the last month, one of them an audiobook I hightly enjoyed (shockingly for me!).
I have read some great, good, and not so good ones lately. Go follow me at instragram.com/stewardesque
Zero interest in Rodham but Me and White Supremacy is being added to my TBR. My reading life improved in May after a sad April and little concentration. https://susanbowers.typepad.com/in_the_storm/2020/06/what-ive-been-reading-may-2020.html
Thanks for sharing these, Anne! The book by Knox McCoy looks especially fascinating.
I just started up a new blog inspired by Anne of Green Gables and L. M. Montgomery, featuring books I love and celebrations of creative living. Today I did a quick review of two Anne-books my family has been loving: Anne Arrives and Anne’s Kindred Spirits, by Kallie George. I hope to have more LMM books and spin-off reviews in the near future!
https://blytheandbold.wordpress.com/2020/06/15/books-to-share-anne-chapter-books-by-kallie-george/
https://eclecticandeccentric.wordpress.com/2020/06/15/quicklit-june-2020/
I’m able to read more again, so I’ve been bingeing the Anne of Green Gables books and I’m back on my Tolkien kick. The Children of Hurin is still mainly a list of Turin’s terrible life choices that coincide with a curse, and in Anne of Windy Poplars, Anne accidentally blackmails someone. Again. She should consider a career switch.
What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty
You can find all of my recent reads and reviews here 😊 Happy Reading, friends! 🌿💕
https://www.instagram.com/indulge.your.shelf/
The Guest Book has been my June choice.
Here’s my June QuickLit post! Stop by to see what I’ve been reading and posting lately 🙂
https://mamaneedsabook.blogspot.com/2020/06/coffee-books-june-2020.html
Dirt and Me & My White Supremecy sound like books I want to read soon!
Here are my May book reviews. The biggest surprise/out of my normal genre was The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern. It was portal fantasy for the bibliophile.
https://elle-alice.blogspot.com/2020/05/may-book-reviews.html
Listened to The saffron Kitchen. It’s amazing on audio! I’m now listening to The Henna Artist. It’s also so good.
My biggest hits were nonfiction reads this month. Both are stories of many individuals sharing a similar experience.
102 Minutes: The untold story of the fight to survive inside the twin towers by Jim Dwyer and Kevin Flynn.
The Black Panthers: Portraits from an unfinished revolution by Brian Shih and Yohuru Williams.
So many more books to add to my reading list! Listening to audiobooks while weeding is a great idea! I hate weeding so much. I recently read Confessions of a Domestic Failure and it was hilarious. I would highly recommend it to any Stay-at-Home Mom.
I am currently working on 2 Reading Challenges(including the MMD Reading Challenge) so that greatly influences what I read. Right now I am reading Firefly Lane (“strong friendship theme” prompt). I recently finished A Burning (debut novel), which I thought was excellent. It was a very quick read and very thought-provoking. Before that I read Hidden Valley Road with Oprah’s Book Club. This was excellent! Oprah even interviewed some family members on Friday. This week I listened to “White Fragility“ and “I’m Still Here”. Both were excellent, but left me confused and feeling hopeless though they certainly got me thinking. So I have been reading some super heavy books lately. I just borrowed “A Year of Yes” based on your recommendation on the SRG. I think Dirt, “Disoriented” and “White Supremacy” sound like good audiobooks. I like audiobooks when I take walks and work on puzzles.
Disoriental looks interesting. Thanks for another great list, Anne.
I just finished The Satapur Moonstone by Sujata Massey. I liked it almost as much as the first one in the series, The Widows of Malabar Hill.
My favorite book I read in 2017 was Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus, so I thought about why I liked it so much and made a list of other books that had those characteristics in common.
https://purplecrayonyourworld.com/books-like-seeking-allah-finding-jesus/
I started James McBride’s The Good Lord Bird this week as part of my #BLM reading and the audiobook is amazing! It’s a cross between Lonesome Dove and True Grit – a territorial look at abolitionist John Brown and a stolen slave named Henry. The narrator does a fantastic job with the numerous cast and characters. ABout half way done and loving it.
*reader’s advisory: explicit and graphic language and heavy use of the N*word.
Thank you for including Me and White Supremacy. I just purchased it for my Kindle and it will be my first dive into this so-needed topic. It just sounds like the right first book on this for me, in a sea of so many highly recommended books. I am looking forward to learning a lot from her writing, and doing the journal reflections too.
I just finished The Glass Hotel by Emily St John Mandel over the weekend (thanks to MMD recommendation:) . I can’t get that book out of my mind! She is a brilliant author, and would probably be enjoyed by anyone who loves Ann Patchett. Happy and You Know It by Laura Hamlin was a fun, quick read. The story is set in a mom’s playgroup in New York, and centers on what happens when the playgroup hires a young, out of work musician to lead their music time. I also just finished David Sedaris’ latest book of essays, Calypso and I think it is his best work yet.
Recent reads:
Kitchen Counter Cooking School by Kathleen Flinn ( a re-read) Great cooking memoir and manual in one.
Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert ( also a re-read)
Play Piano in a Flash by Scott Houston Playing the piano again. Great book for adults who want to play popular music.
To Be Where You Are by Jan Karon
Clock Dance by Anne Tyler
Keep It Moving By Twyla Tharp
Dirt sounds good! I’ve seen it recommended elsewhere, also.
I’m currently reading:
I’m Still Here by Austin Channing Brown (So good!)
Ghost Boys by Jewell Parker Rhodes (For book club, also excellent)
The Wedding Chapel by Rachel Houck (research, but very good)
Recent reads:
A Long Time Comin’ by Robin W. Pearson
A Mosaic of Wings by Kimberly Duffy
Me and White Supremacy is next for me after I finish my current non-fiction/personal growth book (The Four Agreements). I’m adding Dirt to my TBR right now, I adore a good food memoir! I read some great things last month, including one from your SRG 🙂 https://www.shealennon.com/2020/06/reading-round-up-june.html
While I would think I would read more in lockdown, I discover that I only finished two books. https://lezendstreepje.be/2020/06/15/quicklit-6-mei-2020/ But I have been grazing A LOT lately, starting books and then let them linger until they speak to me again, plus going down the rabbit hole of housekeeping books (don’t even ask…)
I am looking forward to reading All Things Reconsidered, first in line for my library hold, whenever they finally get it!
I did less reading this month than last, some days I miss being home all the time in quarantine! My Quick Lit
my link text
Two picks each of fiction, nonfiction, and children’s lit! Plus a bunch that I started but decided not to finish… https://bealwaysfullofgrace.wordpress.com/2020/06/15/june-2020-what-ive-been-reading-lately/
I am in the middle of reading American Dirt by Jeanine Cummins.
My daughter has been urging me to read it because she was so moved by the story of Lydia and her son, not a cheerful read, but very moving.
I’m reading Lady Blue Eyes: My life with Frank by Barbara Sinatra. Fascinating read.
Upon my daughter’s urging, I am delighting in the Tuesdays at the Castle series. (Of course, that’s not all I’m currently reading!)
http://www.thephilosopherswife.net/2020/05/our-library-bag-april-2020.html
I read A Curious Beginning on your recommendation, and now I am on book four of the series! It’s so good!
Can’t wait to read Rodham! Just got a copy from my local indie ❤️ Here’s what I’ve been reading 😊 http://www.bornandreadinchicago.com/2020/06/may-book-reviews.html
Just finished The Vanishing Half. Couldn’t put it down. Thanks for the recommendation!
I’m so happy I found this blog! Totally convinced to read Rodham, now, and can’t wait. I’m still trying to make it through what I have on my “Quarantine Reading List” which is mostly comprised of older titles (Dune, House of Leaves, etc). Buying more books in the meantime doesn’t help, though…
Intrigued by Rodham and Disoriental! Listening to The Secret Life of Bees and am awestruck with Kidd’s writing, even after seeing the movie years ago. Finished Such a Fun Age, which was not for me, Bor-ing! But Ordinary Grace, which has been sitting on my shelf for months, was a 10 stars on a scale of 1-5…. Can’t wait to get my hands on This Tender Land!
Always love seeing all the books people are reading, especially the repeat titles.
Through my reading this month, I’ve traveled the world in time and place. I’ve experienced 1918 Philadelphia during the Spanish flu pandemic, an Indian immigrant community in London, a small Danish coastal town, and Norway in 2017/France in 2041. It was good month of reading with a few virtual book events thrown in.
http://www.avikinginla.com/2020/06/what-ive-been-reading-lately-my-latest-virtual-book-events-may-2020/
I’ve read six books this past month, the standout being ‘The Elegance of the Hedgehog’ which I heard about here on MMD! Very polarising it seems, but I loved it.
It’s winter in Melbourne and so I’m reading anthologies of ghost stories at night and also ‘Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry’, which I can only bear in small doses, it makes me so sad and angry.
The shortlist for the Miles Franklin Award (Australia’s premier literary prize) was also announced today, and several of the books are on my TBR list. It’s great to see good representation of female and indigenous authors, and I hope some of the books make their way to the US…
https://www.perpetual.com.au/milesfranklin
I Loved Rohdam! Very interesting. I dying to know if Hillary will read it (or Bill!).
I like the idea of Rodham, but I have an aversion to Sittenfeld. I read Prep many years ago and it was very “not to my taste.” She has obvious skill as a writer but that book is a rare 1 star rating on my Goodreads list. This means it had to offend me in some way and Prep certainly did. I have never been able to pick up another of her books again.
I just completed the book Breath by James Nestor and as one of the reviewers commented, I am expecting this to change my life. This book, well written and with some humor, shares his 10 year search into how we (should) breath to heal his ongoing sinus infections and sleep apnea. It is an eye opener; who knew that we should ALWAYS breath through our noses instead of our mouths? Can achieving better health really be this straightforward? The best part of the book is that he offers many simple ideas requiring no equipment, training or prescriptions to heal our own breathing. If you know someone with asthma or someone who is trying to excel at athletics, they will be able to help themselves if they take his advice. Highly recommend.