Back to news
Book reviews: 'Face With Tears of Joy: A Natural History of Emoji' and 'Blood Harmony: The Everly Brothers Story'
@Source: theweek.com
SUBSCRIBE & SAVE
Less than $3 per week
View Profile
The Explainer
Talking Points
The Week Recommends
Newsletters
From the Magazine
The Week Junior
Food & Drink
Personal Finance
All Categories
Newsletter sign up
Culture & Life
Book reviews: 'Face With Tears of Joy: A Natural History of Emoji' and 'Blood Harmony: The Everly Brothers Story'
The surprising history of emojis and the brother duo who changed pop music
Newsletter sign up
The journey of emoji to ubiquity is "more complicated than you might think"
(Image credit: Alamy)
Jump to category:
'Face With Tears of Joy: A Natural History of Emoji' by Keith Houston
'Blood Harmony: The Everly Brothers Story' by Barry Mazor
The Week US
12 August 2025
'Face With Tears of Joy: A Natural History of Emoji' by Keith Houston
"Emoji blew up right around 2011," said Laura Miller in Slate, and we're lucky they did. So many more of our online text interactions would have led to misunderstandings and arguments without the hearts, smiley faces, and scores of other pictographs we can now call up instantly on our phones. Keith Houston's "breezy, witty" new "natural history" of emoji doesn't oversell their significance. He pushes back against the claim that emoji comprise a language all their own, preferring to call them "insurgents within language." But "his assertion that these little images have become an inextricable part of our culture feels credible," and he makes the most of the subject's entertainment value. In fact, "one of the primary pleasures of Face With Tears of Joy is the opportunity it offers to revisit the online culture of the 2010s, when the internet still felt fun."
The journey of emoji to ubiquity is "more complicated than you might think," said Megan Garber in The Atlantic. Yes, emoji fever took hold in 2011, the year Apple added an emoji keyboard to its iPhones, and the set of emoji we've known since then can be traced back to images created by Japanese engineer Shigetaka Kurita in 1999. But Houston shows that Kurita has been wrongly credited as the inventor of emoji—a word derived from the Japanese for "picture" and "written character"— because even pagers and typewriters sold in Japan in the 1980s gave users access to pictorial characters. When the explosion arrived decades later, things moved fast. By 2015, the world's most popular emoji, the titular "face with tears of joy," was selected by the Oxford English Dictionary as the word of the year, and the Unicode Consortium, a nonprofit charged with maintaining a unified roster of emoji, was clearly scrambling to manage the task. Was adding a choice of skin tones to a thumbs-up emoji more or less racist than providing no choice? And why was there no emoji for a female police officer, or doctor, or lawyer?
"As Houston's fascinatingly geeky history shows, emoji have always been political," said Steven Poole in The Guardian. Fortunately, he also appreciates that people are too creative to get locked in by the intended meaning of any particular emoji. The human skull emoji is now Gen Z's "face with tears of joy," connoting dying of laughter. The upturned thumb is the same cohort's "OK, Boomer." And perhaps we shouldn't be surprised. Houston, after reviewing the history of hieroglyphs and other pictographic characters, "makes the intriguing argument that the age of the mechanical typewriter represented an unusual historical interlude of expressive poverty. Once humans were freed from the unnatural restrictions it imposed, there was bound to be a new flourishing of symbolic play."
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.
SUBSCRIBE & SAVE
Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
'Blood Harmony: The Everly Brothers Story' by Barry Mazor
It goes without saying that between 1957 and 1962, Don and Phil Everly "imprinted themselves into the pop-music canon," said Marc Weingarten in the Los Angeles Times. But why did the brothers then seem to disappear, and where did their pioneering blend of country, rock, and pop come from? Barry Mazor's "rigorously researched" new biography gives the Everly Brothers a "long overdue" close look, and the author proves "quick to refute many of the myths that have accreted around the pair." Yes, Don was born in Kentucky, and he and his younger brother were coached by their guitarist father to perform as a duo from a young age. But the family moved often, exposing young Don and Phil to the sounds of Chicago and, later, Nashville. Their song-writing reflected "a sophisticated grasp of various musical genres."
"Practically from infancy, the brothers sang together with shocking beauty," said Elizabeth Nelson in The Washington Post. Their signature hits, including "Bye Bye Love," "Wake Up Little Susie," and "When Will I Be Loved," combined their lush harmonies with "a rough-hewn twin-guitar sound," and "it didn't hurt that they were preposterously handsome." When they signed a new $1 million record deal in 1960, "their creative and commercial dominion seemed to have no limit." Ironically, though, their fans included the Beatles and the Rolling Stones, and when Beatlemania swept the States in 1964, the Everlys, at just 25 and 27, were suddenly cast as passé.
Already they were abusing amphetamines, and they'd also fallen into "the mother of all brother feuds," said Eddie Dean in The Wall Street Journal. "Both Everlys felt trapped by the brother act they'd been born into," and five years after recording 1968's influential Roots album, they stopped talking to each other altogether. In Blood Harmony, "Mazor strikes a balance between the Everlys' stormy lives and their enduring music," and he finds a heartening coda in the duo's early 1980s reunion, which yielded a minor hit and more than 20 additional years of touring. "Mazor argues convincingly that money was not the motive; the brothers finally realized how much they missed each other."
Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.
The Week US
Social Links Navigation
Helen Schulman's 6 favorite collections of short stories
The award-winning author recommends works by Raymond Carver, James Baldwin, and more
How will Ford reinvent EV manufacturing to compete with China?
Today's Big Question
Henry Ford's assembly line system is being replaced
The latest entry in Ethan Coen's queer trilogy, a Jeff Buckley documentary and the rare children's horror flick in August movies
the week recommends
The month's film releases include 'Honey Don't!,' 'It's Never Over, Jeff Buckley' and 'Sketch'
You might also like
Helen Schulman's 6 favorite collections of short stories
The award-winning author recommends works by Raymond Carver, James Baldwin, and more
A tour of southern Greenland
The Week Recommends
New international airport has given this 'bucolic' island a welcome boost
Bonnie Blue: taking clickbait to extremes
Talking Point
Channel 4 claims documentary on the adult performer's attention-grabbing sex stunts is opening up a debate
Broccoli and lentil salad with curried tahini and dates recipe
The Week Recommends
Flavoursome and healthy, this creamy salad is perfect as part of a mezze
Savages: a tragi-comedy set in a 'quirky handcrafted world'
The Week Recommends
This new animated film by Oscar-nominated filmmaker Claude Barras is undeniably political, but it has a hopeful message
Merryn Somerset Webb chooses five books on how the world works
The Week Recommends
The financial columnist picks works by Peter Turchin, Adam Smith and Christopher Clark
6 sturdy post-and-beam homes
Featuring a wood stove in New York and hand-hewn beams in New Hampshire
The Naked Gun: 'a dumb comedy of the expert kind'
The Week Recommends
Liam Neeson shows off his comedy chops in this reboot of Leslie Nielsen's crime spoof
View More ▸
Contact Future's experts
Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy
Cookie Policy
Advertise With Us
The Week is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.
Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street
Related News
31 Mar, 2025
Colin Montgomerie reckons ex-Premier Lea . . .
08 Apr, 2025
Sports News | Jasprit Bumrah in Good Nic . . .
30 Mar, 2025
Thai cop alleges Shane Warne death 'cove . . .
09 May, 2025
Cruz Beckham, 20, takes his mind off the . . .
18 May, 2025
Shack Chat: Which city should get a Nint . . .
24 Jun, 2025
France's court of auditors estimates $6. . . .
15 Apr, 2025
White Lotus star Aimee Lou Wood breaks d . . .
30 Jun, 2025
Sergio Garcia Secures LIV Golf Open Cham . . .