What's Good Wednesdays

What’s Good Wednesdays™, January 7, 2026

Read:“How Sondheim Can Change Your Life” by Richard Schoch. Four years after his death at 91, Stephen Sondheim’s legend only continues to grow on Broadway and beyond. In this thoughtful examination, Schoch, a theater historian, makes a compelling case that Sondheim wasn’t just a musical genius, but also a modern-day philosopher. Drawing on lyrics from shows like “Company,” “Follies,” and “Sunday in the Park with George,” Schoch explores how Sondheim’s lyrics about ambition, love, and the messy business of becoming yourself offer practical wisdom for navigating real life. It proves that the smartest insights can come in 3/4 time. – Tony

Read: “The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny” by Kiran Desai. Shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 2025, this novel follows the story of two young Indian immigrants who come to the United States to study in the late 1990s. The plot is simple, but what makes the book exceptional is how Desai describes the feeling that almost every immigrant faces: the fear of loneliness. It also dives deep into societal pressures by overbearing families, political climate, racism, and toxic relationships. The near-700-page saga quickly became one of my favourites of 2025. – Suhani

Read: “Pachinko.” Min Jin Lee’s historical fiction from 2017, named after a parlor game that has allowed Japanese people to circumvent gambling rules, is a glorious read. The book follows a Korean family that migrates to Japan in the early part of the 20th century, around the time that Japan annexed Korea. With Japan-China tensions rising today, and South Korea attempting to build bridges with Beijing, this novel beautifully encapsulates some of the older tensions between all three of these countries, as well as some of the horrendous sins committed, making for an important, insightful and emotional book. – Zac

Read: “Motherland.” How did Russia go from being one of the most progressive feminist countries in the world under Lenin to a self-styled bastion of ultra-traditional values under Putin? Part history, part family memoir, part contemporary reporting, Russian-born journalist Julia Ioffe’s bookMotherland: A feminist history of modern Russia tells the country’s story from the perspective of the women — in the Kremlin, on the fronts, and in the factories — who shaped, and were shaped by it. As she tells it, the lassitude and machismo of Russian men ultimately left women with a “double burden”: full-time work and full-time homemaking. At a time when questions of gender roles are at the center of debate in so many countries, Julia’s book is relevant far beyond the Motherland. – Alex


More For You

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi greets his supporters as he arrives at the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) headquarters, as the BJP won the Assam state assembly election and was on course to win West Bengal, in New Delhi, India, May 4, 2026.
REUTERS

India’s Modi consolidates grip after historic state election win, Venezuela and Guyana are back in court over border dispute, Trump administration weighs a hands-on approach to AI

Natalie Johnson

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney attended a meeting of the European Political Community in Armenia this weekend, a first by the leader of a non-European country. He was invited to discuss common interests in trade, energy, and security. In a speech that echoed his address to the World Economic Forum in Davos two months earlier, Carney called on middle powers, including Canada and European nations, to work together in the wake of disruption of the established world order — implicitly pointing to the United States. “It’s my strong personal view that the international order will be rebuilt,” he told the crowd in Yerevan, “but it will be rebuilt out of Europe.”