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Bookish Goods

Bookish Good of the Week: August 13, 2023

Retro Bookish Sticker Pack

Vinyl Retro Bookish Sticker Pack by TheBookishMoment

This pack of cute retro stickers are vinyl, waterproof, removable, reusable, and looking at them gives a shot of those good brain chemicals. $24

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In The Club

Hunger Personified, an Astrologist Sleuth, and More Translated Fiction

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

So we all know how beneficial reading fiction can be, but did you know that it can increase empathy, thereby improving how we relate to people outside of our own experiences? This is partially why it’s important to read books written by diverse authors. It’s also partially why reading translated books by women specifically is so important. By doing so, we become more privy to the experiences — from the struggles to the joys — of women around the world. Apart from making us more empathetic to certain hardships, reading translated books by women can also open our eyes to new ways of thinking.

Since books written by women account for such a small percentage of translated works, Meytal Radzinski started Women in Translation Month to try and increase visibility. So today, I’m sharing a few translated books by women I think you should check out.

Before we do, make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index! It’s what I use to assemble new release lists and it will keep you ahead of the library holds list. IYKYK.

Nibbles and Sips

fruit empanada

Peach Cobbler Empanadas by @kimmyskreations1

I think I’ve recommended a few recipes by @kimmyskreations1 already, but I feel like y’all see why. I don’t do much with baking + fruit, but it’s still peach season and I’m looking forward to trying something out of my ordinary.

She doesn’t include printed instructions, but Creole Contessa does here.

You’ll need:

– 2 cans of peaches

– butter

– empanada wrappers

– white sugar

– cinnamon

– brown sugar

– nutmeg

– vanilla bean gel/vanilla extract

You can add amounts by eyeballing @kimmyskreations1’s video (and stopping when your ancestors say to), or just follow Contessa’s listed-out instructions.


cover of Igifu by Scholastique Mukasonga, translated by Jordan Stump

Igifu by Scholastique Mukasonga,translated by Jordan Stump 

This takes place during the Rwandan genocide and is partially fictional, partially autobiographical. Hunger has such a constant presence in characters’ lives that it’s personified as Igifu, “a cruel guardian angel.” A child searches for nourishment at the bud of a flower, a woman recounts her life before the war and after, and a young man remembers his father and the wealth that cattle promised in another time. Zadie Smith has said the collection “rescues a million souls from the collective noun genocide.”

Talk to My Back cover

Talk to My Back by Yamada Murasaki, translated by Ryan Holmberg

Is “talk to my back” the Japanese version of “talk to the hand?” I personally think so, and if it really is, then this title is serving an extra bit of life. Especially considering its subject matter: it follows Chiharu as she struggles with the state of her marriage and mothering two teenage daughters. As her husband’s disregard for her — he sees her as a domestic servant and cheats on her — becomes apparent, so too does Japan’s failing of its female population. Murasaki was the first manga artist to use manga as a medium to explore the lives of Japanese women in such an honest way, and Talk to My Back was originally published serially in the influential alternative manga magazine Garo from 1981-84.

cover of Drive Your Plow Over the Bones

Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk, translated by Antonia Lloyd-Jones

Janina is an aging astrologist who house-sits for some of her neighbors, who usually only return to their houses in her small Polish town for vacations. She also translates the poetry of William Blake, which is an interesting combination of activities (listen, get you someone who can do both). When the bodies of some of her neighbors, people she knew not to respect nature, turn up dead, she assumes that animals are taking their revenge. This is a mystery that has possible supernatural elements, with a main character who is eccentric and just as passionate about the lives of animals as she is that of humans.

cover of still born

Still Born by Guadalupe Nettel, translated by Rosalind Harvey 

This was shortlisted for the International Booker Prize and follows two homegirls and their ever-changing views on motherhood. Since forever, Laura and Alina have thought that becoming mothers wasn’t for them, instead structuring their lives around careers. So much so that when they reach their mid-30s, Laura has her tubes tied. But then Alina does a 180 and announces her decision to have a child. This, understandably, rattles their friendship, but what starts off as shaky ground turns into sympathy for a damning diagnosis for Alina’s unborn child. As Alina contends with what may happen to her baby, Laura begins to see motherhood in a new light, courtesy of her widowed neighbor’s young son.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

More To Read

August 2023 Horoscopes and Book Recommendations

8 Award-Winning Literary Fiction Books You’ve Never Heard Of

Libraries Are Under Attack Because They Are Anti-Fascist

The Bestselling Books of the Week, According to All the Lists


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 talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
Bookish Goods

Bookish Good of the Week: August 6, 2023

Cozy warm aesthetic bookmark

Cozy Warm Aesthetic Bookmark by BookmarksBySoleiaV

This seller has such unique and intricately designed bookmarks that we had to share! This one has all the makings of a cozy day spent reading, and you can choose whether you’d like coffee or tea (with a tea bag!) as the beverage. $18

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What's Up in YA

The New (Queer) Horror Girlies: YA Book Talk, August 7, 2023

Hi YA Readers,

Erica here, sliding into your emails to talk YA with you while Kelly’s out.

Since I started working for Book Riot, my reading habits have changed, which makes sense. In addition to just reading more, I’ve started dabbling more in genres that I hadn’t been reading much of before. One of these genres is horror (though if you consider it more a mood than a genre, I’m right there with you).

I’m sure I’m not the only horror convert — it’s really having a moment. One cool thing I’ve noticed from all the great new horror coming out is how these books write women and young girls. So today, in the books I have for you, queer women of color are the Final Girls, gothic horror fittingly shows the cost of colonialism, and girls are the (avenging) monsters.

Before we get to that, make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index! It’s what I use to assemble new release lists and it will keep you ahead of the library holds list. IYKYK.

Bookish Goods

Japanese Food Bookmarks 

Japanese Food Bookmarks by ydxart

These adorable bookmarks are inspired by Japanese food and are double-sided. $3

New Releases

cover of The Dark Place by Britney S. Lewis

The Dark Place by Britney S. Lewis

The Dark Place has the kind of genre-blending we stan. Seventeen-year-old Hylee Williams is stuck in the past. Quite literally. She has these moments where she disappears into a more sinister world that keeps replaying the night her older brother went missing. Though it’s been years, she thinks her brother is still alive, and that her disappearances are somehow linked to finding out what really happened. As her disappearing spells increase, she finds comfort in a boy she just met, but who she feels she’s known — and maybe even loved — for a while.

cover of Unnecessary Drama by Nina Kenwood

Unnecessary Drama by Nina Kenwood

A little force proximity + enemies-to-lovers never hurt anyone, and in this romcom, 18-year-old Brooke has to contend with both. As the strict rule follower that she is, she’s more than ready to follow her student housing’s rule of “no unnecessary drama” when she starts college. Thing is, her archnemesis, Jesse, turns out to be one of her new roommates. The same Jesse who she had her first kiss with in high school…

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

You're Not Supposed to Die Tonight cover

You’re Not Supposed to Die Tonight by Kalynn Bayron

Bayron has such a talent for taking familiar narratives and reworking them in a way that is simultaneously thought-provoking and natural. In You’re Not Supposed to Die Tonight, 17-year-old Charity Curtis has the summer job any horror lover would want: playing the Final Girl in a full-contact horror game. At Camp Mirror Lake, she and her co-workers act out scenes from the beloved slasher movie Curse of Camp Mirror Lake, trying to make the experience feel as real as possible for guests. But then things get a little too real when her co-workers start disappearing. Now Charity and her girlfriend Bezi are trying to get to the bottom of the murders happening around them while becoming the Final Girls of their own story. Fans of horror will appreciate Bayron’s subversive take on many of the tropes of the genre, including how race and gender have traditionally been portrayed.

cover of She is a Haunting by Trang Thanh Tran

She is a Haunting by Trang Thanh Tran

Gothic horror, family dynamics, and the horrors of colonialism all merge in this YA novel. When Jade Nguyen arrives in Vietnam, she realizes she’ll have to continue pretending to fit in. But as she tries to be the straight enough, Vietnamese enough daughter to her estranged father, she also starts noticing odd things about the French colonial house he’s restoring. And the five weeks she has to survive in the house may be too full of bug body parts, ghost brides, and paralysis for her to keep her sanity.

cover of Squad by Maggie Tokuda-Hall and Lisa Sterle, featuring cartoon of four young people standing in front of a full moon

Squad by Maggie Tokuda-Hall and Lisa Sterle

The art style of this graphic novel kind of reminds me of Archie comics but with an ’80s Barbie color scheme. I really dig it, in other words. Becca is the lesbian and Asian main character who gets caught up with the popular girls in high school…who also happen to be werewolves who fight back against predatory boys.

Thanks for hanging out!

Kelly’s back next week, but if you’d like to say “hi,” find me on the Hey YA podcast, the In Reading Color newsletter, and the In the Club newsletter.

Until next time!

— Erica

Categories
In The Club

Must-Read August Book Club Books

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

It’s the first of the month already! In the words of Lil Jon, “WHAT?!” For real, the time just keeps flying by…I will admit that I kind of like new months, though, because it means new books, new horoscopes, and just new possibilities.

In keeping with the recent tradition I’ve started, below I’ve got some new books out this month that I think will be perfect for book clubbing.

Let’s get to them!

Before we do, make sure to check out Book Riot’s New Release Index! It’s what I use to assemble new release lists and it will keep you ahead of the library holds list. IYKYK.

Nibbles and Sips

watermelon slices

Watermelon Fries by @Feelgoodfoodie

I have never heard of watermelon fries, but I’m so intrigued! It’s essentially just watermelon cut into fry-like shapes, and @Feelgoodfoodie made a delicious-sounding dip to go with them.

All you need is: a watermelon, crinkle cutter (if you want to be extra cute), and yogurt, honey, and strawberries for the dip. Cut up the watermelon and blend the dip ingredients together and there you have it.

What Vibe Is Your Book Club Going For?

cover of Family Lore by Elizabeth Acevedo; wicker chair with a red cushion and flowers growing up one side

Family Lore by Elizabeth Acevedo — Women-Centered Family Saga with a Lil Magic

Bestselling and award-winning author Elizabeth Acevedo makes her adult debut with Family Lore. In it, the women of a Dominican American family prepare for a living wake. Flor Marte can see when other people will die, and so it worries her sisters when she requests a living wake for herself. But whether she will die soon or not she keeps to herself — and she’s not the only secret keeper. From a secret attraction to an old lover recently released from prison — the Marte women’s rich, complex, and magical lives are brilliantly brought to life here.

cover of The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride

The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride — Small Town Secrets and a Community Coming Together

A dead body is discovered in a small town of Black, Jewish, and other European immigrants in Pennsylvania in 1972. To fully understand what happened, McBride takes us all the way back to 1925, when Moshe and Chona ran both the only integrated dance hall as well as the Heaven & Earth Grocery Store in the Chicken Hill community. It’s the Moshes who help their friend Nate, the leader of the Black community, when he needs to hide his deaf nephew to stop him from becoming institutionalized. But then racists interfere and something terrible happens. But the community comes together to protect its own. (Aug. 8)

vampires of el norte book cover

Vampires of El Norte by Isabel Cañas— Some Familiar Horror Tropes, But in a Historical and New-to-You Setting (+ Healer Magic)

I really loved Cañas’ The Hacienda and am super excited for this one. It’s the 1840s, and Mexico has long been threatened by invaders from the north. But there’s another kind of monster that threatens the country’s borders. And when Nena and Néstor were young, it was one of these monsters that attacked Nena and caused Néstor to flee. He’s been fleeing ever since, and doing his best f-boi impression to drown out the guilt of having abandoned his best friend. The two are united, though, when Néstor is part of a militia to fight off the Americans, and Nena is that militia’s curandera, or healer. She (understandably) feels some type of way about how he bolted nine years ago, but the real threat soon takes precedence over any long-held grudges. (Aug. 15)

cover of Happiness Falls by Angie Kim

Happiness Falls by Angie Kim — A Nuanced Look at Neurodivergence and Family Dynamics + Mystery

This is part whodunit, missing persons case, meditation on race, philosophical exploration, and more. And it’s delightfully twisty on top of all that. The patriarch of the Parksons goes missing, and it’s only Eugene — one of the Parksons’ kids who has a rare condition that prevents him from speaking — who saw what happened. We follow the investigation, yes, but we also see how the family relearns how to communicate with each other and how they define what it means to be happy. (Aug. 29)

Join Rebecca & Jeff in the First Edition podcast to consider the 10 finalists for the “It Book” of August and pick a winner.

Suggestion Section

Cookbook Showdown: The Best Pound Cake Recipes, Tested

Riot Roundup: The Best Books We Read April-June 2023

Which Barbie Are You Based on Your Book Picks?

Adult Versions of Beloved Childhood Fantasy Novels


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 talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
Bookish Goods

Bookish Good of the Week: July 30, 2023

Forever Reading Ghost Sticker

Forever Reading Ghost Sticker by stuckonstickerss

October isn’t the only time for cute, spooky things! This precious sticker comes with a few customization options. $6+

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In The Club

Books That Are Beachy Keen

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

Y’all. I’ve finally been hit with the need to read “beach reads.” I’ve been hearing the term since forever and have always felt rather ambivalent about it (I say that because I know some people prefer to go in the opposite direction). But this summer, with the heat on 10,000 and my attention in the negatives, I’m seeking out beachy book goodness. So today, I’ve got a few books that you can read to take your mind off the heat (while you cozy up under that AC).

With that said, let’s get to the books! But first, make sure to check out Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition, where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Nibbles and Sips

white rice topped with smelt roe

Tobiko with rice by @CafeMaddy

This is a simple dish/technique if you like tobiko/fish roe. You just need the fish roe, steamed rice, butter, fried egg, rice seasoning (like furikake), sesame oil, soy sauce, scallions, and a little bit of sesame seeds.

Now for the books!


cover of Jana Goes Wild

Jana Goes Wild by Farah Heron

In this second chance romance, Jana is set to attend a destination wedding in Tanzania and ready for the reset it’s sure to provide. But then she finds out her ex, and child’s father, Anil will also be there, and suddenly her plans are ruined. Even though he’s a good father, she can’t forgive him for what he did years ago. To distract herself and show that she’s not sweating him, she comes up with a list to get her juices flowing. She’ll perform karaoke, do dance routines for strangers, and generally let her guard down. But that makes her more susceptible to her still-lingering attraction to Anil.

cover The Way of the Househusband

The Way of the House Husband by Kousuke Oono

Main character Tatsu provides a good portion of this manga’s comic relief as a former member of the yakuza who now spends his days as a loving househusband to his wife Miku. Turns out you can take the husband out of the yakuza, but you can’t take the yakuza out of the husband. Tatsu’s natural aesthetic and demeanor are just a little too gangster-adjacent and still reflect his time as the much-feared “Immortal Dragon.” And, his facial expressions still make people sweat. They’re also just a little out of place in the clearance section of the grocery store. Tatsu brings a hilarious intensity to the most mundane and everyday househusband chores, and it’s fun to watch him interact with his neighbors.

Get you a man who can do both! “—Miku, probably

paperback cover of That Time I Got Drunk and Saved a Demon by Kimberly Lemming

That Time I Got Drunk and Saved a Demon by Kimberly Lemming

Tell me you wouldn’t read this cover in a bookstore or at a library and have to pick it up. And the title is pretty spot on. Cinnamon is drunk when she saves the shifter demon Fallon, and after he follows her home and tells her of the evil goddess that has reduced demons to zombie-like states, she accompanies him to free his people. She helps him free some other things, too, if you know what I mean. This is a fun, funny, steamy monster romance with a Black female lead (in other words, you should read it ASAP). Bonus points for Cinnamon’s siblings being named Chili and Cumin, and for the fact that the paperback cover is fuego.

manslaughter park book cover

Manslaughter Park by Tirzah Price

This queer YA retelling of Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park is the last entry to Price’s Jane Austen Murder Mystery series. Fanny is living at her uncle Sir Thomas Bertram’s estate, where she suffers at the hands of her mean relatives. Then her uncle dies. Now, against the advice of her crush Edmund, aspiring artist Fanny is trying to get to the bottom of what really happened to her uncle and will uncover blackmail, art fraud, and more.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trial today.

More To Read

10 of the Best Historical Science Fiction Books

Enchantment & Intrigue: Magical Cozy Mysteries to Enliven Your Bookshelf

20 Horror Books for People Who Don’t Like Horror

Can You Match the Romance Novel to Its Opening Lines?


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 talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
Bookish Goods

Bookish Good of the Week: July 23, 2023

Books and Coffee Reading Can Glass

Books and Coffee Reading Can Glass by WildSoulsBoutiquee

The heat has been hitting a lot of us, and this cute can glass can help keep us hydrated. $18+

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In The Club

Disability Pride Month in the Club!

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed.

It’s Disability Pride Month!

The fight for disability justice is ongoing a there is a lot that needs to change so that everyone truly has equality. Today I’m highlighting books that center people with disabilities or the fight for justice for all, and have a great mix of nonfiction and fiction, as well as a poetry collection.

With that said, let’s get to the books! But first make sure to check out Book Riot’s newest podcast, First Edition, where BookRiot.com co-founder Jeff O’Neal explores the wide bookish world. Subscribe to hear them and stay to hear Book Riot’s editors pick the “it” book of the month.

Nibbles and Sips

oreo dessert

No Bake Chewy Oreo Bars by @spicednice

This is one of those sweet treats that I think you’ll love, but also be good with just one serving. It seems pretty rich. Also, it’s basically just fresh Rice Krispie treats, but with crushed Oreos instead of cereal. Here’s a video to follow along with.

You’ll need:

– a big pack of Oreos

– a pack of mini marshmallows

– 4 ounces of unsalted butter

As with Rice Krispie treats, melt the butter at a medium-low temperature, add the marshmallows and stir until they’re melted as well. Add the melted marshmallows to a tray that you’ve already added nonstick spray + crushed Oreos to. Mix together and spread across the tray/pan evenly, then let it sit in the fridge for 30 minutes and cut into squares.

Now for the books!


Since I recommended Head Above Water: Reflections on Illness by Shahd Alshammari, which came out just yesterday, in a recent newsletter send, I’ll just give a reminder here to pick it up.

a graphic of the cover of Sipping Dom Pérignon Through a Straw: Reimagining Success as a Disabled Achiever by Eddie Ndopu

Sipping Dom Pérignon Through a Straw: Reimagining Success as a Disabled Achiever by Eddie Ndopu (August 1)

The official blurb for this book mentions how Ndopu, a global humanitarian with muscular atrophy, wrote this memoir with “one good finger.” And it’s with that one good finger that he excelled in school when told he wouldn’t make it past age 5, became a highly requested speaker on disability justice in his teens, and got accepted to Oxford University. But it’s also been a struggle — Ndopu speaks on how, while he has the opportunity to do things like sip on bubbly with the world’s leaders, he’s also had to fight that much harder for his success because of the ableist world we live in. Case in point, Ndopu has struggled to get accommodations from Oxford, with all their money and resources. Which is just shameful, honestly.

a graphic of the cover of The Future Is Disabled: Prophecies, Love Notes and Mourning Songs by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

The Future Is Disabled: Prophecies, Love Notes and Mourning Songs by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

Piepzna-Samarasinha writes about how living through COVID has been as a disabled, queer femme-presenting person. The fact that the world was made for nondisabled people was made even more clear since the onset of the pandemic, but in this book, they imagine a world where the majority of people are disabled. They posit that disability justice and disability culture is vital to overcoming things like fascism, the environmental crisis, and other issues. They also talk about the care crisis, and how disabled people have supported each other, and how they can continue to.

the cover of Just By Looking at Him

Just by Looking at Him by Ryan O’Connell

O’Connell actually stars in Queer As Folk and Special, and has a few things in common with the main character of Just by Looking At Him, Elliott, who is a TV writer, gay, and has cerebral palsy. Elliott is super-duper going through it, though. Behind his seemingly Instagram-perfect life, he’s struggling with alcohol addiction, being unfaithful to his boyfriend, and issues with internalized ableism. There are quite a few laughs to be had as he tries to get his ish together.

A graphic of the cover of The Perseverance by Raymond Antrobus

The Perseverance by Raymond Antrobus

CW: nasty ableist language

When I mentioned this poetry collection in this newsletter a while back, I mentioned Ted Hughes, and I feel like I should again. Antrobus features a Ted Hughes poem titled “Deaf School” where he crosses out each line. Why? Because Hughes wrote things like “the deaf children were monkey nimble” and how they had “faces of little animals.” Antrobus actually won the 2018 Ted Hughes award (the irony) for poetry with this collection, in which he explores his identity as a d/Deaf person, a British Jamaican, and society’s failings where d/Deaf children are concerned.

Side note, but when I tried to look up the poem by Ted Hughes (Sylvia Plath’s husband for those unawares), I could only find stuff having to do with Antrobus, which was…interesting. The original poem is so gross to me, I can’t imagine how Hughes has a poetry award in his name, but here we are.

Delighting velocireaders since 2017, Book Riot’s New Release Index will keep you in the know about all the latest books. Start your 14-day free trial today.

Suggestion Section

A conversation with Korean American authors

Must-Read Historical Fiction Set in Mexico

Book Riot’s The Best Books of 2023 (So Far)

Barack and Michelle Obama Thank Librarians for Protecting the Freedom to Read


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 talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
Bookish Goods

Bookish Good of the Week: July 16, 2023

Disability Ally Sticker

Disability Pride and Ally Stickers by HappyHailsArt

July is Disability Pride Month, and these stickers will be great additions to your kindle or other e-reader! $3.50+