Two very different books centered on aspects and offshoots of the petroleum industry. One is Steve Early's Refinery Town, about the California city of Richmond where Chevron's footprint has been huge since the WWII era (and has been countered hugely as well by progressives in later times, in a heady clash of interests including those of the oil industry, green energy activists, religious leaders, construction unions, real estate developers and aficionados of casino gambling). The other is a book by Michael Patrick F. Smith, The Good Hand, a memoir about his time in 2013 working the shale oil fields of the Bakken Formation in North Dakota near the then boomtown of Williston.
And because not everything is about fossil fuels (or decidedly mixed feelings that they were ever taken up from the ground?), I've also been spending time with two books about classical music lately, mostly because I've been listening to a lot of Mozart and Beethoven, and so have reverted to consulting bits of Jan Swafford's enjoyable biographies of both composers.
Somewhere in amongst all those adventures I'm starting to think harder about this summer's "deep dive". Last year's was about the perils and joys of translating literature from one language and culture to others. This year I might revert to reading fiction of a particular region or culture, not sure yet. Last year's summer focus was endless fun and later spun into reading some works I had bumped into along the way, that were not in the least related to each other in any way except none was written originally in English. Still I didn't come away from the summer with that sense of immersion that a concentration on one author, time or culture has otherwise offered up from those deep dives. So time will tell but anyway I'm conscious of time moving on towards when I should be assembling a reading list!