Categories
In Reading Color

Un-banned Books

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

So apparently, there’s a chance my home state, Tennessee, may enter the ring with Pennsylvania and Texas for recent book bans. *heavy sigh* This isn’t much of a surprise, considering how they had already banned schools from teaching Critical Race Theory a little earlier this year. The far right group waging war against books isn’t just after those that center non white narratives, though. They’re also coming for books about sea horses, hurricanes, and Galileo. Galileo. As in, the Galileo who already caught a case back in 1633 for saying that the earth revolved around the sun. My mans can’t even catch a break in death almost 400 years later. You hate to see it.

The protest against Galileo is fitting, though, I think. It shows how this brand of thinking is literally antiquated and seems to be at least partially a result of a response to increased diversity. I doubt it’s a coincidence that the types of books that tend to be banned center queer people and people of color. Because of that, and the start of Banned Book Week, I’m highlighting books that have been banned or otherwise publicly contested.

Rebel with a Book

cover of Fry Bread by Kevin Noble Maillard, illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal

Fry Bread: A Native American Family Story by Kevin Noble Maillard, Juana Martinez-Neal (illustrator)

This adorable picture book extols fry bread, a traditional bread made by Indigenous people that originated as a result of forced relocation. In 1864, Native Nations were forced on the “Long Walk,” in which they had to travel 300 miles to unfamiliar lands. After many starved, the U.S. government stepped in to give rations of flour, baking powder, and salt — ingredients for the beloved fry bread. The dish is not without its critics, though.

cover of Sulwe by Lupita Nyong'o, illustrated by Vashti Harrison

Sulwe by Lupita N’yongo and Vashti Harrison (illustrator)

Academy Award winning actor and Black Panther’s boo, Lupita N’yongo’s book about a girl trying to find her way is beautifully illustrated. We follow Sulwe, whose beautiful dark skin leaves her feeling less than confident. She pines to have lighter complexion like her mother and sister. Once she goes on her magical journey, though, her thoughts around beauty change and her confidence is reinvigorated.

I wanted to make sure to include a couple children’s books to show how even those aren’t safe from banning. Look at these precious covers! How do you look at that and think negatively?

cover of The Book of Unknown Americans  by Cristina Henriquez

The Book of Unknown Americans by Cristina Henríquez

Arturo and Alma Rivera leave Mexico with their daughter Maribel. They hope that living in the U.S. will help Maribel to heal from a serious injury. They soon realize just how many obstacles there are in the way of them achieving their American dream, however.

Meanwhile, Maribel is having realizations of her own. The neighbor’s kid, Mayor, and her have a burgeoning romance that inspires gossip. But the two teenagers see in each other what others fail to notice in this novel showing how incorrectly immigrants are labeled.

cover of None of the Above by I.W. Gregorio

None of the Above by I.W. Gregorio

What if what you thought you knew about yourself was wrong? That’s the case for Kristen Lattimer, whose life seems to be going pretty well when we first meet her. She’s got scholarships lined up for college, friends, and a great boyfriend. One day, when she and her boyfriend decide to take the next step and attempt to have sex, Kristen realizes something is wrong. She goes to the doctor and finds out she’s intersex and has male chromosomes. In addition to this revelation, she has to contend with the rest of her high school finding out. This book explores how deeply entrenched gender is with our identity, and what it means to identify as male, female, or intersex.

cover of Ghosts in the Schoolyard- Racism and School Closings on Chicago's South Side by Eve Ewing

Ghosts in the Schoolyard by Eve Ewing

“Failing schools. Underprivileged schools. Just plain bad schools.”

Ewing opens Ghosts in the Schoolyard with this straight-to-the-point description of Chicago’s public schools before the Mayor announced an unprecedented amount of school closings in 2013. The idea, according to Mayor Rahm Emanuel, was to make way for better schools by combatting lower enrollments rates, budget woes, and purging the bad schools. This sounds well and good until you consider how the decision was met with widespread protest, which begs the question: if the schools were so bad, why did parents, teachers, and students still want them open? Ewing answers this question by examining the elements of race and class that have influenced Chicago’s public education system. This may focus on Chicago, but I reckon many of the things explained here are mirrored in many cities across the United States.

A Little Sumn Extra

More on banning books by Kara Yorio at School Library Journal.

This is cool: open source e-reader you can make yourself from parts

Lena Waithe and Gillian Flynn to Start Book Imprints


Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with reigning Queen of YA, Kelly Jensen, as well in the In The Club newsletter.

Categories
In The Club

Only Murder Books in the Building

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. Book club besties, can we talk about Only Murders in the Building?!

Let me start off by saying that when I saw ads for the show, I was like “eh.” I wasn’t a super big fan of anyone starring in it (although I like them all well enough), and it didn’t seem worth trying to battle my short attention span for. One day, I felt like watching something kind of low-key and possibly mildly funny, so I turned it on. I was pleasantly surprised.

It’s got just enough whimsicality, broadway, and people dropping F-bombs to feel so authentically New York City. There are also the main characters, who, in addition to having their own fun personality quirks, have some dark secrets of their own. It’s campy, murder-y fun that has the added bonus of showing beautiful Manhattan condo interiors *cries in broke*. And, although it fully embraces today’s technology (it’s all about how the main characters are making a podcast), I think it also has nods to some more classic elements of crime stories. It got me thinking back to those noir detective movies that took place in New York City that always involved some dame and a guy named Johnny.

And with that, we’re on to the club!


Nibbles and Sips

Get into this vegan tres leches cake with strawberry (!!) from Anita’s Coconut Milk Yogurt founder and fair trade advocate, Anita Shepard. Support sustainable Latinx owned businesses like Anita’s, too, if you’re able.

Noir in the City and Beyond

cover image of Harlem Shuffle showing a collage

Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead

This uptown caper from two-time Pulitzer Prize winning author Whitehead is an obvious choice, being set in 1960s Harlem and all. It follows Ray Carney as he tries to escape his heritage as a crook by supporting his family with selling reasonably priced used furniture on 125th street. Problem is it’s not quite enough to pay bills, or even keep his wife’s bougie parents from talking mess. To supplement, his cousin Freddie brings him side hustles…of the illegal variety. Freddie’s latest opportunity for Ray involves robbing the Hotel Therese, which is the nicest hotel in Harlem. That goes about as well as you’d expect, in this novel with a cast of characters that include everyone from gangsters to crooked cops and “pornographers.”

Velvet Was the Night Book Cover

Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

That S.M.G. reign just won’t let up. She manages to release interesting titles back-to-back and even in different genres! Similar to Harlem Shuffle, this is also a bit different from the author’s norm. This one is set in 1970s Mexico City, though. In it we find Maite, a secretary who, amidst the political upheaval of her city, seems to only live for the escapism that romance comics can provide (I feel you, girl). Maite suddenly finds herself trying to find out what happened to her beautiful and intriguing neighbor, Lenora, who went missing. As she’s looking for her, so is Elvis, an enforcer for a government backed anti-uprising team. He finds himself becoming more and more intrigued with Maite and the many things they have in common as he also tries to find out what happened to Lenora. Coming closer to unraveling the mystery of Lenora’s disappearance means surviving dangers, some of which come in the form of Russian spies and government agents intent on maintaining Lenora’s secret.

Side note, we actually see real-life examples of Maite’s desire for the happy endings that romance novels provide. This post by Trisha Brown shows how people read more romance during the pandemic.

Winter Counts cover image

Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden

Virgil is who victims of violent crimes go to on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota when they are failed by the U.S. government, and the Tribal courts. He suddenly has to turn his efforts to his 14-year-old nephew, who becomes wrapped up in the heroin trade that’s blossoming on the reservation. Virgil and his ex set out to stop the influx of drugs and chase down leads all the way to Denver as new tribal initiatives are enacted and Virgil must grapple with his Native identity.

Book Club Bonus: All three books deal with people of color who display seemingly shady moral character. They are also part of a group of people on the other end of privilege. They are the descendants of people whose communities and cultures were ravished in order to carve out a space for a protected class, free from the mire that comes from being them, essentially. Discuss if it is fair to judge them based on the same set of rules that is applied to those from higher socioeconomic classes who had more opportunity. Or, does criminality not allow for gray area? Are the main characters ultimately unredeemable?

Suggestion Section


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_ . You can also catch me choppin’ it up with Kelly Jensen on the Hey YA podcast every couple of weeks.

Until next week.

-E

Categories
In Reading Color

Fresh Fall Finds

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

As excited as I am to be rid of this 90+ degree heat and embrace all the pumpkin flavored tingz, I’m just as excited for all the new book releases that fall brings. Below are just a few from different genres to get you started.

The Newness of It All

cover image of Black Birds in the Sky- The Story and Legacy of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre by Brandy Colbert

Black Birds in the Sky: The Story and Legacy of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre by Brandy Colbert

Hopefully you’ve heard of the Tulsa Race Massacre, but I wouldn’t be surprised if you haven’t. I had literally never heard about it until I was an adult. I think the fact that the public schools I attended didn’t shy away from showing America’s cruelty for Black people, but yet still never mentioned Tulsa is a testament to just how hard the United States have tried to forget the massacre. Award-winning author Brandy Colbert answers the questions of “how did it come to pass? What exactly happened? And why are the events unknown to so many of us today?” in this Young Adult historical nonfiction. Out October 5th.

Bonus: If you want a visual that explores what happened in Tulsa and other issues like homophobia while gracing you with Regina King as a bomb ass superhero, get into HBO’s Watchmen. It had to be one of the best things I watched in 2019.

cover of Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki

Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki (September 28)

In a bid to avoid eternal damnation, Shizuka has made a deal with the devil to deliver seven violin prodigies’ souls. She’s just heard her final candidate, runaway trans girl Katrina, when she crosses paths with retired starship captain and refugee, Lan, in a donut shop. The three women’s lives become intertwined in this novel that has been likened to Good Omens (another great watch!), The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet. It also has Faust teas, naturally. Out September 28th.

cover image of Shelf Life: Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller by Nadia Wassef

Shelf Life: Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller by Nadia Wassef (October 5)

In 2002, amidst country-wide turmoil, Wasseff, her friend, and her sister opened Diwan, an independent bookstore at a time when books were considered a luxury. This was also despite the fact that none of the three Egyptian women had any relevant experience. Wassef recounts “starting a bookstore at this moment of cultural atrophy seemed impossible—and utterly necessary.” Decades later, Diwan is a success with ten locations and a loyal fanbase. It has even gained the reputation of being a safe space for women. Wassef’s voice is straightforward and at-times humorous as she details all it took to realize her dream.

cover of Notable Native People by Adrienne Keene

Notable Native People by Adrienne Keene (October 5)

This is a collection of accessible biographies of 50 Indigenous people from the Americas and Polynesia assembled own voices author Keene. There are past as well as contemporary figures– including activists, artists, athletes, and scientists– that are highlighted in this gorgeously illustrated book.

cover image of Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth by Wole Soyinka

Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth by Wole Soyinka

Soyinka was the first Black person to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. Now, while I don’t mean to detract from giving Soyinka his flowers, I always have to side eye an organization that has been giving awards for literature since 1901 and only just started awarding Black people in 1973. But, that’s another topic for another newsletter, no doubt. In his first novel in nearly 50 years, Soyinka delivers satire in an imaginary Nigeria where a surgeon tells his engineer friend of stolen body parts from his hospital being repurposed for rituals. How greed can utterly corrupt a country is explored here with biting precision.

cover of My Sweet Girl by Amanda Jayatissa

My Sweet Girl by Amanda Jayatissa 

Paloma has had a nice life since being adopted from a Sri Lankan orphanage at 12 by philanthropists. Now 30, she’s cut off her parents and drinks too much. She also believes the same ghost that haunted her orphanage may be haunting her, still. Add to that how she found her roommate dead. She flees, but upon her return, she finds that he’s gone, along with every trace of his existence. Yikes. To say her life is less than desirable would be an understatement. Jayatissa shows how the past can come back to bite in this thrilling debut. Out now.

cover image Reparations Now! by Ashley M. Jones

Poetry

“What is the price of a life, a stolen culture, a stolen heart?”

Ashley M. Jones is the first Black Poet Laureate for Alabama. In Reparations Now!, she wades through histories, both personal and political, with a mind to repair. Listen to a short interview with her at NPR here. The collection is out now.

Genghis Chan on Drums by John Yau, out October 1st.

My Darling from the Lions by Rachel Long, out now.

Make Me Rain: Poems & Prose by Nikki Giovanni, September 28th.

A Little Sumn Extra

Children of Blood and Bone author Tomi Adeyemi ATE at the Met Gala and left no crumbs:

Tomi Adeyemi in stunning gold dress at Met Gala, 2021

Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with reigning Queen of YA, Kelly Jensen, as well in the In The Club newsletter.

Categories
In The Club

Women in STEM

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I hope you all had nice weekends. I recently started leading a weekend prep course through a public library again. This course began last year through a public library in Jersey City, NJ free to students. All of my students are Asian, Black, Middle Eastern, and/or Latinx and are super lovely. I’ve been surprised not only at how proactive they were to seek out a course for themselves, but also that they are willing to sit in front of a screen for even longer trying to study for a tedious standardized test.

They’re also really interesting. In getting to know them, I’ve found out they code for fun. Literally. Like, I asked what they do to chill when they have down time, and they said they code. And all the students who said that were girls! Meanwhile, some people in my generation. When I tell you this younger generation is built different! Sheesh! As we lift our thoughts and prayers to Sultan in his Excel endeavors, I feel inspired by my students to talk about women in STEM.

Let’s get to the club!


Nibbles and Sips

Fellow Rioter Susie Dumond reviewed some cookbook recipes for buttermilk biscuits in this article that has my southern heart tingling.

Here’s one of the recipes. I know they’re technically different from scones, but I still think they’d be delicious with some clotted cream and jam. Just saying.

And Now For Some STEM

cover image of The Tenth Muse by Catherine Chung

The Tenth Muse by Catherine Chung

Katherine grows up knowing she is different. She’s the child of a Chinese mother and white father in the mid-twentieth century, sure, but it’s more than that. Her parents are not exactly who they’re letting on to be. From the first sentence, we’re given an explanation– an apology of sorts, even– of the narrator’s womaness: “I suppose I should warn you that I tell a story like a woman, looping into myself, interrupting.”  Her otherness as a girl/woman is felt when she is discovered to be a math prodigy as a child as well as when she is one of the only female students at MIT. Her desire to solve one of the greatest mysteries in math, the Riemann hypothesis, leads her to theorems and equations that may help her also solve the mystery of her parents.

Book Club Bonus: The book opens with a story of the Muses of ancient Greek mythology and how they must sing into and through men. How does this relate to the current state of women being in certain professions? How does it relate to Katherine and what some of the men she encounters want from her?

cover image of Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

Gifty is a on her way to getting her PhD at Stanford in neuroscience when her mother starts to experience severe depression again. She had experienced it before when Gifty’s brother, a 16-year-old gifted high school athlete, died of an opioid addiction that started with a prescription for an injury. Gifty hopes to find salvation for her family in the lab mice’s brains she examines as she finds herself turning back to her evangelical upbringing to cope with loneliness in this novel that grapples with depression, grief, addiction, and the juxtaposition of science and faith.

Book Club Bonus: Gifty’s pastor father sent her mother to her “folding her up the way you would a jumpsuit.” Discuss how women are often made to feel like they should take up less physical space. How does this relate to taking up space in other arenas of life?

Honey Girl book cover by Morgan Rogers

Honey Girl Morgan Rogers 

Grace Porter has always done everything the right, Porter way and followed her father’s instructions on life. This includes getting a PhD in astronomy by the age of 28. Now, despite this great accomplishment, she’s finds herself unfulfilled. During a celebratory Las Vegas trip, her need to break free comes to a head and she drunkenly marries a stranger. When she sobers up, she realizes she doesn’t even know her name and, what’s more, the woman is on her way back to New York City. As the pressures of her father’s expectations and what it’s like to be the only queer Black woman in a mostly white field mount, she decides to leave the West coast for an opportunity to see if maybe this marriage is worth saving. She and Yuki get to know each other in a testament to good friendships in the queer community and finding your own way.

Book Club Bonus: Grace seems to have a community of people supporting her, but still feels alone. What does this say about the true nature of loneliness?

Suggestion Section

Exciting news! We’re looking for an Ad Ops Associate at Book Riot. If you or anyone you know may be interested, please click here to apply by September 30, 2021.

Amerie’s Book Club selection for September is Night Bitch by Rachel Yoder.

Support these Indigenous owned bookstores if you can!


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_ . You can also catch me choppin’ it up with Kelly Jensen on the Hey YA podcast every couple of weeks.

Until next week.

-E

Categories
In Reading Color

Lit Latinx

Welcome to the second In Reading Color newsletter! This is a space to focus on literature by and about people of color.

September 15- October 15 marks Latinx heritage month. While we obviously celebrate Latinx authors all year round, cultural awareness months are sorely needed as there is still a fight waging to erase certain narratives. Because the history of some nonwhite groups in the Western world is inherently tied to racial animus, many conflate the teaching of that history as being anti-white or anti-American. You can read about an instance of this in this article by Rioter Sarah Hannah Gómez about Florida’s ban on Critical Race Theory.

Below are some books from different genres by Latinx authors for you to get into.


image of in the dream house book cover

In The Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado

Machado speaks of the female perpetrator and queer abusers as ghosts that have “always been here, haunting the ruler’s house” in this unique memoir that details the author’s experiences being in an abusive, queer relationship. The narrative takes different forms– among them an erotica, an academic analysis of female queerness, a haunted house– in detailing the many aspects of what it’s like to be abused by an intimate partner, showing just how complex and layered the experience is. With the use of second person, Machado snatches all hopes you might have had in staying distant from the abuse. You’re inserted front-and-center and made to live out her experiences.

image of Wild Tongues Can't Be Tamed 15 Voices from the Latinx Diaspora edited by Saraciea J. Fennell

Wild Tongues Can’t Be Tamed edited by Saraciea J. Fennell

This anthology features some of the most poppin’ Latinx writers. The poems and personal essays featured here cover everything from immigration, sexuality, music, and more, showing glimpses of the rich tapestry that is the Latinx community. Editor Fennell centered the collection on “letting our truths run wild, and pushing against whatever it is you think is the ideal Latinx individual.” Let ’em know!

image of the worst best man cover image

The Worst Best Man by Mia Sosa

Lina Santos is a wedding planner that was left at the altar. I’ve got one word for sis: Tragic. Since then, she’s continued to run her wedding planning business with a fair amount of success in D.C. until one day she’s offered a big opportunity by someone important. The catch is that it’ll mean working with the man who convinced her former fiancé to leave her high and dry– his brother, Max. This is a fun romp through the hate-to-love romance trope, and has been described as giving serious 90s teas.

cover image of Indivisible by Daniel Aleman

Indivisible by Daniel Aleman 

Mateo is a 16-year-old queer kid with dreams of becoming an actor when the one thing he’s always feared happens: His parents are detained by I.C.E. His father goes to jail, and his mother a detention center. Suddenly, he has the weight of the world on his shoulders in the form of his 7-year-old sister and the family bodega. While he tries to maintain his dream of going to Tisch School of the Arts, he keeps his struggles from his two friends (one of whom is a possible love interest) in this heartbreaking novel about the effects of separating families.

cover image of Sabrina & Corina- Stories by Kali Fajardo-Anstine

Sabrina & Corina: Stories by Kali Fajardo-Anstine 

“Ever feel like the land is swallowing you whole, Sierra?”

The eleven stories here speak of heritage and land and how the two things relate to Indigenous Latinx women based in Colorado and Denver. The stories span from following a child abandoned by a woman who was made a mother too young, a sex worker and her daughter who make a big move into hostile territory, how a family struggles with a breast cancer diagnosis, and more.

cover image The Lost Book of Adana Moreau by Michael Zapata

The Lost Book of Adana Moreau by Michael Zapata 

Dominican born Adana Moreau writes a science fiction novel in 1929 New Orleans with her son Maxwell at her side. Before she can finish its sequel, she falls ill and she and her son burn the manuscript.

Eighty years later, Saul Drower sets out for New Orleans as Hurricane Katrina prepares to hit the city in order to fulfill his dead grandfather’s request of returning a mysterious manuscript to a man named Maxwell Moreau, a physicist who speaks of parallel universes. Zapata pays homage to the power of storytelling in this imaginative historical fantasy.

A Little Sumn Extra

Exciting news! We’re looking for an Ad Ops Associate at Book Riot. If you or anyone you know may be interested, please click here to apply by September 30, 2021.

Karen Tei Yamashita to receive honorary National Book Award

Fellow Rioter Laura Sackton gives us a list of Indigenous bookstagram accounts to follow


Thanks for hanging with me! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with reigning Queen of YA, Kelly Jensen, as well in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next week!

Categories
In The Club

Fantastical Novellas

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. We’re now in that weird transition period where it still feels hot, but all the Halloween decorations and spooky book releases have me ready to hop into an all black turtle neck ensemble. I may even be ready for a pumpkin spice latte or two *hangs head in basic shame*. I’m starting to lean into all the fall vibes, I just need for the temperature to catch up!

And with that said, to the club!


Nibbles and Sips

I have been on a tofu kick lately as I have been consciously trying to eat more plant-based meals. I grew up thinking tofu was super flavorless and have since learned the error of my ways as an adult. Try these Vietnamese sandwiches with marinated tofu and let me know what you think! The key I think is the baguette (you want fresh! soft on the inside, but crunchy on the outside) and to marinate the tofu. If you’re not feeling the tofu, of course you can switch it out for another protein.

Magical Short Stories

You know how there are teachers that you’ll always remember because of something they side that kind of blew your (at the time) little mind? I’ll never forget how one of my science teachers in middle school said how so many modern inventions first made appearances in books and movies before they became a reality. It made me have a whole new appreciation for books and the power of writers’ imaginations, which was saying a lot as I was already a little bookworm.

Today I’d like to focus on some science fiction and fantasy books that not only re-imagine history, but also think of new inventions. This list will serve the double purpose of recommending great SFF reads as well as offering them up in short and sweet novella form. Sometimes it’s honestly hard to find the motivation to read an entire book, especially with life and everything going on. I think book clubs have served such a special function for the past year, going on two of the pandemic (*ugly cries*) as they have allowed us an easily adaptable way of still socializing while having good conversations. So, if the group needs a shorter book for the next meetup, then keep these in the reserve! You can even discuss a couple at a time if you like.

A Dead Djinn in Cairo by P. Djeli Clark

A Dead Djinn in Cairo by P. Djeli Clark

I’m just getting into Clark’s worlds, and I can’t believe it’s taken me this long. This very short story set in 1912 Egypt centers on Special Investigator Fatma el-Sha’arawi as she investigates the death of a Djinn, which is a kind of supernatural creature based on ancient Mesopotamian mythology. Magic had been brought to the land and history rewritten as the Egyptians used it to fight back against colonial rule. It’s a great start, but you’ll wish this story was longer as you see Fatma reconcile being one of few female investigators in this steampunk world with ghouls and mechanical angels. Luckily, there is a full length novel that comes after: A Master of Djinn.

cover image of the empress of salt and fprtune

The Empress of Salt and Fortune by Nghi Vo

When I tell you that Nigh Vo is THAT. GIRL. In this first of a series with surreal elements, Vo has cleric Chih meet an aging woman named Rabbit who was sold to the emperor for a basket of dye as a child. Rabbit’s world is sent spinning once she befriends the emperors new and lonely foreign wife, and the tale she has for Chih could mean ruin for the current empress. Vo is a master of concise, yet beautiful prose and Rabbit’s story had me in my feelings. Whew!

cover image showing a slightly pixelated red cardinal is mirrored by a blue bird with a white stomach; both are against a light blue background

This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone

An agent finds a letter that reads “burn before reading.” What follows is correspondence between two time traveling agents who fight for opposite warring factions. As their rivalry expresses itself, so does a romance in this very unique story that features queer romance. El-Mohtar is also a poet, so expect beautiful writing, naturally.

Book Club Bonus: Another aspect of SFF I like is how it often discusses social issues in a nuanced (or sometimes very blatant) way. Discuss what parallels these foreign worlds have to ours. For instance, how does the role of women compare to women’s roles the world over? Given the advances, do you think these roles were realistic? Additionally, could you see any of the advancements making their way to our reality?

Suggestion Section

Inaugural poet and my play sister Amanda Gorman has signed a deal with Estee Lauder and also looks AMAZING in purple.

Get into this Indigenous led book club if you haven’t already!

Several People Are Typing by Calvin Kasulke is the Good Morning America September book club pick.

Also, L.A. Weather by María Amparo Escandón is Reese’s September pick.


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_ . You can also catch me choppin’ it up with Kelly Jensen on the Hey YA podcast every couple of weeks.

Until next week.

-E

Categories
In Reading Color

A Remixed Welcome

Welcome to the first issue of In Reading Color! This is a space to focus on literature by and about people of color.

It’s been great to see all the attention and acclaim that writers of color have been receiving just in the past few years alone. Of course, there is more work to be done in terms of truly making the literary world fair and equitable, but I’m glad to see how much progress has been made. Also, the stories are amazing, so there’s that. I’m fairly new to the Riot crew, but am a longtime follower and am super pumped (Eoww!) to get silly and real with y’all as we delve into works by authors of color.

Today’s topic: retellings.


The Mood is: Remixed

— or taking something familiar, rearranging it, and making something new.

Song Suggestions: Heart-Shaped Box and Thong Song (yes, that Thong Song, and you’re welcome) both covered by Amber Mark.

image of singer Amber Mark sitting with her back to the camera in a fluorescent pink and orange dress

“I can look for my story among the witches of Salem, but it isn’t there.” – Maryse Condé, I, Tituba Black Witch of Salem

This line from Maryse Condé’s 1986 novel– which I will definitely reference again before the year is over– is one of erasure. The past few hundred years have been a testament to how much entire cultures, traditions, etc. can be actively destroyed and lost to the annals of history. There are the Taino of the Caribbean, other Indigenous peoples of the Americas, and Black Americans, just to name a few, who have all had their stories rewritten, reimagined, or very simply erased in favor of a narrative that was deemed more convenient.

Because of this, I want to focus on retellings by authors of color. Why? Because I think many retellings are stories that have nestled into certain parts of our brains, providing a lens through which to see the world. By centering people of color in these narratives, a place in the collective subconscious is carved out for us, showing how we should have been there all along.

cover image of Pride- A Pride & Prejudice Remix by Ibi Zoboi

Pride: A Pride & Prejudice Remix by Ibi Zoboi

This Pride and Prejudice retelling features all characters of color. Zuri Benitez is a proud Afro-Latinx Brooklynite who is witnessing her neighborhood becoming more and more gentrified, but can do little to stop it. When the wealthy Darcy family moves in, she’s definitely not feeling their two teenaged sons– especially judgmental Darius– no matter how charming they may be. Well…. not at first, anyway. Zuri balances the pull of four rambunctious sisters, college applications, cute boys, and the realization that Darius might not be so bad after all.

Cover for The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo

The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo

In this more overtly queer retelling of The Great Gatsby, a Vietnamese Jordan Baker tells the story of Daisy Buchanan’s and Jay Gatsby’s doomed relationship. Jordan’s adoption into the Baker family has brought her into a new world of old money and new magic where she tries to ignore the exoticism she’s labeled with. This is a perfect story to retell with a character of color as I feel like The Great Gatsby is about The American Dream (TM) and all the trappings of class and race that come with it. Plus, Vo just has beautiful prose. I mean, I can’t help but to stan.

cover image of Love in Color by Bolu Babalola

Love in Color by Bolu Babalola 

Rom-com expert and Queen of shooting her shot (I see you, sis) Bolu Babalola has assembled 13 short stories about love. All of these stories are retellings from mythology, and include everything from West African lore to Greek myths and Middle Eastern legends. She revisits tropes and fairy tales with an eye towards decolonization.

frankenstein in baghdad by ahmed saadawi book cover

Frankenstein in Baghdad by Ahmed Saadawi, translated by Jonathan Wright 

When local oddball Hadi goes to the site of a car bombing to collect his assistant’s body for burial, he finds not one body, but a collection of pieces from different bodies. In an effort to have those that died treated with respect, Hadi assembles the body parts into one to be buried. The only issue is that the newly assembled body goes missing and a string of strange murders start turning up all over the city. Saadwi was the first Iraqi to win the International Prize for Arabic Fiction for this brilliant retelling of the horror classic.

New Releases

So Many Beginnings: A Little Women Remix by Bethany C. Morrow

This book out today rethinks a story that has become an American standard and tells it in 1863 when the Civil War is in full swing. The March family has established itself in the developing Freedmen’s Colony of Roanoke Island where recently emancipated people have set roots. We follow the four March daughters– Meg the teacher, Jo the writer, Beth the seamstress, and Amy the dancer– as they come into their own. I feel like I don’t come across enough stories of Black people during this time that don’t have us in chains, so seeing a different side of Black family life during this time is refreshing.

cover image of Certain Dark Things by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Certain Dark Things by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

As we become more acquainted, I’m sure you’ll notice my absolute adoration for Silvia Moreno-Garcia. Here, street kid Domingo meets Atl, a beautiful and mesmerizing descendent of Aztec blood drinkers. They try to make it out of Mexico City alive with the threat of rival vampires, cops, and criminals closing in on them from all sides. This re-release is also out today.

A Little Sumn Extra

C.L. Polk’s award-winning Kingston Cycle is being adapted for T.V.

The Boston Library is going through it.

Here is an Indigenous book club to join

Fellow Rioter Danika Ellis gives us a way to make sure we don’t just talk about Trans books when there is a tragedy.


It’s been awesome hanging with you! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with reigning Queen of YA, Kelly Jensen, as well in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next week!

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In The Club

The Girls Are Adapting

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. Whew, so the last few days of August decided to keep up the raggedy standard with the hurricane that hit Louisiana and nearby states on the anniversary of hurricane Katrina. Now, one million people are without power with it possibly taking weeks before they have it back. I found my big sister mode switched fully on when I asked my little brother if he was prepared for the storm, as Nashville was in its path. Naturally, he asked me “what storm?” and I proceeded to turn into my father by stating all the things he needed to make sure he had (flashlights, toilet paper, drinking water, canned food, etc.) before making an annoyed point that he needed to watch the news more. For context, he’s about to be 25. I don’t know when I started transforming into my parents, but I suddenly feel attacked by these commercials, smh.

With all of that said, I hope everyone in the path of the storm is safe and that this nightmare ends soon.

Now on to the club!


Nibbles and Sips

I think we can all be real and say that we need a drink. Well, I can, in any case. This watermelon sorbet and Prosecco looks bomb and easy to assemble. It’s also a nice way to close out the summer, I think. Here’s a recipe for watermelon sorbet. *Pro Tip: If you throw extra fruit into it, it counts as healthy.

To the books!

Adaptions

The Cowboy Bebop live action series was announced and got me feeling some type of way. I just don’t think it’s giving what it’s supposed to give. One problem with it is that they’re debating whether they should have a key character in a show where the relationships between the main characters are a major part of the story. Now, how that would work is beyond me, but they need to stop trying to ruin my childhood memories of staying up past my bedtime and watching Adult Swim on Cartoon Network. Just throw it all away.

This got me thinking about some books being adapted into movies or shows that I am actually hype about. I also think reading a book and then watching its film or show adaption offers more opportunities for discussion, or, you know, just more fan-girling.

cover image of Fever Dream by Samantha Schweblin

Fever Dream by Samantha Schweblin, translated by Megan McDowell 

This is being adapted into a movie by Netflix called Distincia De Rescate. Amanda is dying in an Argentinian countryside hospital. A child, David, sits beside her, insisting that she tell the story of the trauma that led to her current condition. David is not her child. We’re led through an unsettling deathbed narrative, as we ponder the mystery concerning her hospital stay and just why this child David is there with her. It has been described as “a nightmare come true, a ghost story for the real word, an inquisitive tale and a love story” by its director.

image of Queenie by Candice Carty-Williams

Queenie by Candice Carty-Williams

The author herself has been commissioned to create a drama series for Channel 4. Queenie follows its namesake, a young British woman of Jamaican heritage, as she stumbles through her dating life. Emphasis on the stumbling part, because she seems to keep making some of the same mistakes, but at least has the support of her group of friends and some ultra traditional Jamaican parents. It has been dubbed a Black Bridget Jones, which was also adapted into a couple movies.

cover image of Passing by Nella Larsen

Passing by Nella Larsen

Passing will be on Netflix in November. It stars Ruth Negga and Tessa Thompson *lightly squeals*. Passing is the classic 1929 story that shows the very real practice that some lighter-skinned Black and mixed people did to pass as white back in the day. Irene is living it up in Harlem with her doctor husband when Clare comes back into her life. Light-skinned Clare had left the Black community years ago in order to “pass” and enjoy the benefits afforded to white people. Turns out Clare is a hot mess, and Irene is shook. Chaos ensues.

Both Passing and Queenie give plenty of opportunities to discuss the intersection of race, class, and gender for the female protagonists. There’s also the chance to discuss how those aforementioned things are influenced by location (i.e. The United States vs. England). How are things the same and how are they different? Fever Dream gives opportunities to talk about gender as well, especially as it relates to motherhood.

Side note: I love that all of these adaptions are being or were written by women, with the Fever Dream and Passing adaptions having also been directed by women. The girls are outchea adapting! We love to see it.

Suggestion Section

There’s still a little time to bid on some romance novels for Haitian earthquake relief if you’re able to.

Fellow Book Rioter Annika Barranti Klein lists more Netflix adaptions coming out.

Oprah Announces The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois by Honorée Fanonne Jeffers as her new book club pick.

There is a Terry Pratchett book club going on over at Tor.com: Terry Pratchett Book Club: Witches Abroad, Part I

Dr. Imani Perry joins the Noname Book Club digital meetup to discuss August picks Looking for Lorraine by Imani Perry and The Autobiography of Malcolm by Alex Haley.


As always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_ . You can also catch me choppin’ it up with Kelly Jensen on the Hey YA podcast every couple of weeks.

Until next week.

-E

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In The Club

Understanding Afghanistan

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I, like everyone else I imagine, was shocked when the Taliban moved right in after the U.S. started to withdraw from Afghanistan. More shocking, though, might be how little I know about a war my country has been fighting for the past twenty years. I’d like to correct that now and explore with you all what life is like for Afghani people and start to try to understand what they are facing (and how this mess came to be).

If you’d like to help, here’s a list of different ways you can. Many local mosques are also accepting donations.

With all of that said, let’s get to the club!


Nibbles and Sips

I don’t know about y’all, but I love fresh hummus. Store bought hummus, on the other hand, makes me regret all my life choices leading up to the moment I decided to buy store bought hummus. The duality is interesting. Apparently, it’s not that hard to make at home, though, so here’s a recipe for sriracha hummus to be coupled with some crispy pita chips. If you’re not feeling the heat aspect, just leave the sriracha out. Also, I know some people have this thing with cilantro (to each their own), so you can substitute with parsley if you prefer.

A Decades Long War

cover of The Pearl That Broke Its Shell by Nadia Hashimi showing an Afghan woman holding a child's hand

The Pearl That Broke Its Shell by Nadia Hashimi

This fictional account of what it’s like for girls and women is included because I’ve always felt like I learned more from fiction at times. I chalk this up to the immersive experience it grants. Here, in Kabul in 2007, young Rahima and her sisters can’t leave the house and can only occasionally go to school because they are girls. She finds out that a great-aunt used a custom to change her life around a hundred years ago called “bacha posh,” which allows one to live as a boy/man (so, pretty much to be free), and decides to do the same. With her new found freedom she can go to school and be a chaperone for her sisters. The only issue is, girls are supposed to go back to having women’s lifestyles once they mature, but how will Rahima be able to give up her freedom when the time comes?

cover of The Afghanistan Papers by Craig Whitlock

The Afghanistan Papers by Craig Whitlock

To say that the timing of this book is impeccable would be an understatement. Good timing or not, though, this account of the war in Afghanistan by an investigative reporter from The Washington Post is scathing. Whitlock draws understandable parallels between the Vietnam war and the one in Afghanistan. Apparently, the U.S.’s efforts were a mess from the start in Afghanistan as well, and it was never set up to be a successful endeavor. The documents that The Washington Post unearthed and share here show all of the inadequacies that got us to where we are now.

cover of Dancing in the Mosque by Homeira Qaderi

Dancing in the Mosque by Homeira Qaderi

This is it. This is the one. Qaderi writes of her extraordinary life where she survived a brutal Russian occupation of Afghanistan, only to have to suffer through the Taliban rule of the early 90s right after. As they took over the country, the Taliban immediately started their campaign of misogyny by closing girls’ schools and forbidding them to read. Engaging in these forbidden things might result in being whipped or worse. To put this more in perspective, if I had been caught writing this newsletter by the Taliban in the 90s (and now?), I would have been gravely punished. Lucky for those around her, Qaderi was a rebel and held private tutoring lessons where she taught boys and girls and even some Taliban members at home and at a mosque. She clearly has Mother Teresa-level forgiveness capabilities, because I could never. In this account, Qaderi also tells of the everyday dangers she faced simply for being a woman, what other women and girls suffered, and how she had to ultimately leave her son behind.

Suggestion Section

More books about Afghanistan that are written by women in this list compiled by Carolina Ciucci.

Here’s a great article written by Teresa Preston on discussion questions for book clubs: 40 Great Book Club Discussion Questions For Any Book

So, Jeopardy finally axed that guy that nobody (literally nobody) asked for. My fellow Book Rioter Kelly Jensen tells the Jeopardy team what they need to go ahead and do.

Dictionary.com decided to throw their hat in the ring and gave a quick lil tug to Mike Richards’ wig with this tweet. Don’t you love it when people are rightly called out?

Also, here’s a chat that will take place between Bitch Media and Nicole Perkins about her book I mentioned in last week’s newsletter, Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be (on Tuesday, August 31, 2021).


As always, thanks for joining me today! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com.

Categories
In The Club

That New Hotness

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I know not too long ago I was bemoaning it already being August, but now I’m ready for August to be over. It’s still hot and things are in shambles all over the world. At the very least, I can say we’re starting to get the new fall releases! I have a feeling we’re going to start having more time to read again, so these new releases are something to look forward to.

On to the club!


Nibbles and Sips

Being back in Jersey City allowed me to visit one of my favorite ramen places where I could get some Taiwanese popcorn chicken again. The dish takes a little prep work, but it’s super satisfying to pop these marinated and crunchy little bad boys in your mouth as you discuss books. Here are some substitutes if you can’t find or don’t have Chinese five spice.

Now for the books!

New Tings

cover image of The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass showing a drawing of a Black teen boy about to be grabbed by a ghost

The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass

As we continue to get to know each other, I’m sure you’ll learn I love fantasy stories, especially involving witchy things and magic, so a Black teenager in Atlanta who can see ghosts and who’s medium powers are burgeoning will always be right up my alley. We meet Jake as he constantly deals with micro aggressions from students and teachers in his very white private school. I like how Douglass constructed the world here. At times it’s grotesque, but it’s also kind of lush and beautiful. Jake comes to be haunted by a white kid named Sawyer who shot up his school before turning the gun on himself. He has to figure out how to get rid of him before Sawyer ruins his life. Some reveals in the second half had me looking like shocked pikachu, and I liked how realistic Jake’s reactions to things were. Dealing with micro aggressions is real and gone are the days where we just grin and bear it. There’s also a cute romance that develops.

Book Club Bonus: Phew, there is a lot to talk about here. There’s a lot to say of child abuse and its long term effects on the child, but also of the parent’s state of mind during the abuse. Are they forgivable?

cover image of Fuzz- When Nature Breaks the Law by Mary Roach showing an iron on patch with a bear, a cougar, and an elephant

Fuzz: When Nature Breaks the Law by Mary Roach

When I say I need to read more nonfiction, I’ve always been recommended books by Mary Roach. She is the reigning queen of taking obscure topics, researching them, and making them actually fun to read about. This one is about the conflict that arises when the human and animals worlds collide, but more specifically, when animals commit crimes. Apparently, a few hundred years ago, offending animals would be given representation and put on trial. I mean, that’s more than some people get now *side eyes the justice system*. Roach speaks of her travels across the globe where she consulted wildlife experts, as well as saw firsthand some of the animal offenders. It’s a great addition to the ongoing and needed conversation of humanity’s impact on the world and what we can do to prevent further damage.

Book Club Bonus: The United Nations released a rather damning report on the state of the climate. Discuss how Roach’s book factors into the report. Also, discuss why humans are considered separate from animals. Is there some inherent quality that makes us different?

cover image of Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be by Nicole Perkins showing the drawn torso of a Black woman with her hand squeezing a peach

Sometimes I Trip On How Happy We Could Be by Nicole Perkins

First of all, I love this cover. And the title. And Nicole Perkins. Perkins is a pop culture and social commentator as well as a 2017 Audre Lorde Fellow, a 2017 BuzzFeed Emerging Writers Fellow, and a 2016 Callaloo Creative Writing Fellow for poetry. In other words, sis can write. Through her podcasts and writing, she explores pop culture and desire through a feminist lens. She lays herself bare in this memoir as she explores her life growing up as a Black girl in Nashville, TN and how she struggled with depression, as well as a drug-addicted father. She also talks about self-care and the show Frasier (which I also love).

Book Club Bonus: Discuss how the digital era has affected feminine desire. Has it liberated or stifled it by further objectifying women?

Suggestion Section

In a lil more Olympic related news, soccer star Megan Rapinoe has a book club!

In game show news: Jeopardy decided to be real messy and hire Mike Richards as one of the hosts and not LeVar Burton, to many people’s dismay. I would wager that people are upset because LeVar is wonderful (period) and Mike is a hot mess who has had two lawsuits from his days at The Price is Right. John Oliver also had some shade for the choice. Tsk tsk


As always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com.