Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships May 19

Happy Friday, my fellow fans of skiffy and fanty! Let’s get to it.

The Locus Award finalists, like the Arthur C Clarke shortlist, include Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead. This is interesting because the Locus Awards are selected via an open poll to readers, rather than by a panel of judges based on publisher submissions (although there is a “recommended” list provided by editors and reviewers). It had not occurred to me before I saw the Clarke list that anyone would consider it science fiction of the same kind as, say, Death’s End. But perhaps I am in the minority? In the meantime, the First Novel category has much beloveds Ninefox Gambit, Everfair, and Roses and Rot, and I now need to read every other debut nominated as well.

Andy Weir’s next book will be about a heist on the Moon and everyone is really freaking excited about it. Which I get — the words “heist” and “Moon” are an excellent combination.

Some food for serious thought: who gets to be a geek? The essay Dragons Are For White Kids With Money looks at the inclusion issues that continue in geekdom on the fan side, and is well worth the read.

Back to the adaptations corner:
The Left Hand of Darkness is getting an adaptation and I have many concerns, which Margaret articulates very well! How will they cast it? Le Guin has said she used “he/his/him” pronouns at the time of the novel’s publishing because that was the accepted default, but my fear is that Hollywood will take this literally. Le Guin is a consulting producer, so I will be over here crossing my fingers and toes and hoping she doesn’t let them.
– I don’t know if Scalzi’s Collapsing Empire will ever get to the big screen but I want it so badly, thanks to this fancast. (His odds are probably very good, considering this newsletter has to have an adaptations corner!)
– You already know this if you clicked the Andy Weir link above but Artemis has also already been optioned.

Not an adaptation per se: we finally have a trailer for Star Trek: Discovery! And it is gooooooooood. I have been skeptical about this show for a variety of reasons, but I’m taking off my skeptic’s hat and starting to get excited.

Last but most certainly not least, a dinosaur got named after a Ghostbusters character and that is just the best news ever.

And now, let us discuss bioengineering and music magic.

Borne by Jeff VanderMeer

Borne by Jeff VanderMeerYou’ve likely seen reviews all over the place for Borne, and for good reason. VanderMeer has been working in sci-fi for many years but broke through in a big way with the Southern Reach trilogy (which maybe we’ll talk about another time; you’ve all read them though, right? Right?!). So Borne couldn’t help but be a big deal. For me and I’m sure many others, the question was: could it measure up to Area X? The answer is a resounding yes.

The book follows Rachel, a young woman and former refugee making a life by scavenging in the ruins of a city (in my head, Los Angeles) ruled by a giant bioengineered flying bear named Mord. No, really. And the plot kicks off when she finds a creature of indeterminate origin — is it vegetable? animal? mineral?? — stuck to Mord’s fur, takes it home, and names it Borne, where it proceeds to grow into sentience. No, really! Rachel’s increasingly maternal relationship with Borne creates problems with her partner and lover Wick, while other forces in the city threaten their tenuous existence. Also featured: talking foxes, many skeletons, mutant children, the nefarious Company. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg, but I don’t want to spoil the ending for you.

If you’ve read VanderMeer, none of this will particularly surprise you; his imagination is decidedly weird, and his plots don’t always bother to make sense. This is part of their power — I cannot tell you how many text, DM, and in-person exchanges I’ve had debating what actually happened in one of his books. The internal logic is always sound, the characters are compelling and often feel deeply familiar, and his ability to twist and reshape reality is frequently jaw-dropping. And in Borne, it’s his characters — specifically Rachel and Borne — that resonated the most for me. Their relationship, which is also the engine for the plot, shifts all other relationships as well as the very structure of their world, and I would have happily read another hundred pages of it.

If you’re already a fan, you want this on your shelf. If you’ve never read him this is a great entry point (although by no means an “easy” read); Borne will introduce you to the pyrotechnics VanderMeer is capable of, and I guarantee you’ll never look at a bear the same way.

 

Signal to Noise by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Signal to Noise by Silvia Moreno-GarciaIf you took The Craft and set it in 1980s Mexico City, you’d have something very like Signal to Noise. Half of you are already on your way to the Buy button; let me convince the rest of you!

Mercedes “Meche” Vega, a teenager in Mexico City in 1988, lives for her vinyl collection and the occasional mixtape. She’s not pretty, she’s not popular, she doesn’t like books, school is a drag, and her parents are always fighting. She’s sullen and judgmental, and I loved her. Then there are her friends Sebastian and Daniela. Sebastian is bookish and awkward; Daniela is a good-hearted pushover who suffers from lupus. They’re brought together more for their social status rather than any shared interests, but they also get each other. And when Meche discovers that she can make strange, magical things happen with the right song, they form a coven and set about making their lives better. Fast forward to 2009, and Meche has returned home to help bury her father. She hasn’t talked to Sebastian or Daniela since 1989, and the book alternates between the book’s past and present as we find out why.

Moreno-Garcia has nailed her characters here. Meche’s thorny edges and flashes of anger, Sebastian’s impatience with his situation, Daniela’s hesitant journey towards confidence, and the ways that they both hurt and heal each other are all perfectly captured. It’s also hard to fault the internal logic of the magic; who hasn’t had a full-body-and-brain experience with the right song at the right time? While they’re very different books on the surface, Signal to Noise reminded me of another favorite, Emma Bull’s War For the Oaks, in terms of my reaction. I needed those songs in my ears, and I needed to know what happens next.


This newsletter is sponsored by The Noble Servant by Melanie Dickerson.

Noble Servant by Melanie DickersonNew York Times bestselling author Melanie Dickerson returns with The Noble Servant, a retelling of the fairytale classic, The Goose Girl. In this medieval tale, Lady Magdalen is on her way to join the Duke of Wolfberg in marriage when her maidservant betrays her, takes her identity, and sends her down to the lowliest household position—tending the geese. But while out in the field, Magdalen encounters a mysterious shepherd who reveals that not all is as it seems in the castle, and it is up to them—the lowest of the low—to regain all that is lost.

Categories
In The Club

In The Club May 17

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

It’s hard to believe summer is almost here, when book club attendance is at its spottiest. Some folks finally have time to read the books, while others are off traveling. Regardless, summer is always my favorite time to recommend books, because more folks have just enough additional time to spend some of it reading.


This newsletter is sponsored by Every Other Wednesday by Susan Kietzman.

Every Other WednesdayFor years, Ellie, Alice, and Joan enjoyed a casual friendship while volunteering at their children’s Connecticut high school. Now, with those children grown and gone to college, a local tragedy brings the three into contact again. But what begins as a catch-up lunch soon moves beyond small talk to the struggles of this next stage of life.
Over the course of an eventful year, Ellie, Alice, and Joan will meet every other Wednesday to talk, plan—and find the freedom, and the courage, to redefine themselves.


Gone through a couple dud picks? Never fear: Amanda has recommendations that are sure to fire up your next discussion. Side note: I always love it when a few people in the group hate the book at hand, because then there’s something to argue about. Discussions are never so boring as when everyone says “It was good!” and then you all sit there staring for another 30 minutes. Of course, I also have to acknowledge that it’s less fun for the people who spent hours reading a book they hated…

Enough fiction already! A book club trend we’ve seen at Get Booked: folks looking for business book recommendations. I’m delighted to direct you to Trisha’s post about women and work for some great options.

Maybe you just need more people? Tracy recommends ways to find bookish people IRL (one of which is a book club). I particularly liked the last tip; it’s so easy to believe you know exactly what a bookish person “looks” like, but there are stealth book nerds out there!

What’s hot right now? I held onto this link so that some of them would actually be out for your group to read. Courtesy of The Millions, here are some of the most anticipated reads of 2017.

New York! New York! New York is on fire! (Y’all I am so sorry, I literally could not resist.) But it’s true, people do love to destroy the Big Apple in fiction.

And now for this week’s Read Harder Challenge recommendations! Here are round-ups of themed lists for a couple tasks, plus a shout-out each to a personal favorite.

For: Read a book set in Central or South America, written by a Central or South American author.

Near to the Wild HeartNear To the Wild Heart by Clarice Lispector doesn’t look like it would provoke much discussion, but it’s a book that provokes strong reactions across the spectrum. It’s Lispector’s first novel, is deeply contemplative and frank, and has a very stream-of-consciousness style.
100 Must-Read Latin American Books
Latin American Lit (In Translation) list
Latin American authors you should be reading on Quartz
22 Female Latin American Authors

 

For: read a book published by a micropress.
Guillotine 2 by Bojan Louis“Troubleshooting Silence in Arizona” by Bojan Louis, from Guillotine Press is a timely, beautifully written, and hand-stitched essay that I adore!
Time To Talk About Micropresses
Task 21’s Discussion Board on Goodreads
– Here’s a list of comics micropresses!

 

 

More Resources: 
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

Categories
Insiders

Behind The Scenes: Bunnies and Community Management

HELLO Book Riot Insiders!

Welcome to a look behind the scenes with me, Kelly Jensen, associate editor and community manager. I believe I might have the most non-traditional schedule of all of Book Riot, so buckle up!

Above is a shot of my desk. Enjoy feminism, great puns, and what might be the only image of a Book Riot editor who writes down scheduling information on paper.

My week is a little different than the rest of staff, since I cover (part of) the weekend. My own week begins on Tuesdays and it ends on Saturdays, with hours that are split through the day. I tend to get started working super early — 6:30 or 7 AM Central time — and run till 10 or 11, depending on how much I need to get done or how into a project I have fallen. There are periods through the month when I have meetings at 12:30 my time, and I’ll often just work from the morning until the meeting ends.

What are those morning tasks, you ask? A few things! First, I’m the person behind our Tumblr, our Pinterest, and our Goodreads accounts. This means my mornings are all about scheduling posts and pieces of posts up there, as well as putting out any fires that have started. This doesn’t happen a whole lot, though periodically, there are questions that need my attention in the Goodreads Read Harder boards.

Since my schedule is nontraditional, here’s a fun little Insider secret: our Tumblr and Pinterest posts are rarely, if ever, posted the same day as they are on site or on Twitter and Facebook. They tend to be a day or two behind. It’s both because it makes sense to do it that way schedule-wise so I don’t miss sharing Monday posts, but it’s also selfish — I want to read what was posted on my days off that I may have missed.

Scheduling doesn’t take all morning, but sometimes, it can take a good chunk of time. When I do finish that, I have a few less-glamorous tasks behind the scenes. Those include doing some tracking of sponsored posts and also my least favorite thing in the world: reading my email. Most of it is junk, and I hate having to clean it out. It’s like when you know that your life would be easier if you took out the trash bag when it’s full and yet you think it’ll be somehow easier if you just push the trash down further in the bag and keep piling things on top.

Spoiler alert: that doesn’t make it easier. Also, it’s kind of gross.

Other morning tasks for me include writing and plotting out what I’m going to write and taking care of the associated research/contacts with it. I try to allow one or two mornings a week where I give myself plenty of time to brainstorm and write things like my weekly “What’s Up in YA?” newsletter (which really doesn’t take long to write but can sometimes take a bit of time to research or pull together with interviews) and my weekly “3 On A YA Theme” column. I’ve also added a biweekly(ish) post that rounds up sweet bookish goods on a topic — see this one on typewriter fetish or this one on bookish goods for cat lovers. Sometimes I have other writing projects underway that I’ll either do the research for or sit down and write. My goal is trying to have my regular pieces for each week, plus one or two other posts, so there’s always many things going on and I kind of let my mindset dictate which gets my attention that day.

One day of the week, though, is totally different for me, and that’s Fridays. Since I cover weekend work, Friday mornings are when I schedule posts for the weekend, as well as set up the social media posts for Twitter and Facebook for Saturday. I do a little bit of that for Book Riot Comics, as well — back in the day when our little operation was smaller, I used to do all of the weekend scheduling for both Book Riot and Panels…and before that, Book Riot and Food Riot (RIP). That time opening up has given me more writing time and more time to work on other projects.

Then it’s lunch time, and when lunch time rolls around, I am usually out of the office. At least the virtual Book Riot office. By lunch, I’m frequently working on my own projects, my own writing, my own editing. Sometimes I even get the chance to read during this time. Everything I do in the afternoon is my time, since I’m not “on the clock,” and usually, my free hours end after I come home from yoga in the early evening.

Once in awhile — once a week at most, and usually far less — I like to do some work on paper. I’ll go to a local coffee spot that I’ve become obsessed with, where I bring nothing but pen and paper with me and write or plan. The amount of work I can get done in an hour there is pure magic, which is why I don’t like to do it too often. I want it there for when I really need to get things done. (It’s part coffee shop and part greenhouse and in the literal middle of nowhere and therefore, it is the best).

My evening work is different than my morning work in that the pace is different. It’s slower, for one thing, and more, it’s much heavier on the community management aspect. I’m the person keeping an eye on social media, responding to comments, moderating where necessary, and also, I’m pretty much entirely available to contributors for questions, brainstorming, or other needs. I keep this time pretty open and fluid so I can take on anything that pops up the moment that it does, but when it’s quiet, I use the time to also take necessary photos for social media, do some more work with Pinterest or Tumblr, ignore my inbox, or write.

(Above: a photo I took for one of our Book Date posts — there’s a really great arboretum near my house that I tend to get a lot of my outdoor pictures at).

Here’s why you’re here reading this Insiders piece, though. It’s not really a secret that I am an at-home zookeeper in my spare time. I’ve got three cats and, as of last summer, a bunny. This is in addition to whatever is currently taking up residence in the back yard — we’re the only fenced yard in the neighborhood and we’re lazy about cutting the grass (…here’s a life theme), so we often have stray cats, bunnies, frogs, and other sundry creatures habitating back there. This life chose me, and I’ve come to accept it means that I have a consistently messy house. My long furred cat is why we’ve had no fewer than five broken water fountains, a broken refrigerator, and regularly pull heaps of gray stuff out of the bathtub drain. The combination of bunny and cats is why so many of my books have little nibbles on them and why I have to be careful when taking photos of those books to only put the animals in those pictures when I know it’s the last one I need to take.

And I always have to mute my work-related calls on my end because every time I have one, there seems to be Kitty Indy 500 going on up and down the halls, complete with unbelievably loud shrieking and screaming.

That all laid out, here are animals pictures. Some are just animals! Some are animals and books! Enjoy & thanks for being part of Club Insiders.

Stage one of getting a bunny to take a photo with books involves chewing…

Stage two involves a bunny flailing because he was told no.

Stage three is giving up and remembering he’s an animal, not a prop, and will not always want to listen to me.

If you look closely, you’ll see the baby bunny occupying the backyard. This picture is from inside my office and she’s looking up at me and a kitty who is mewing at her. (I named this bunny Clover, if you’re wondering).

Here’s a bunny in a cat mask.

A mid-morning hangout session happening in my office. They’re discussing world economics and the lack of freely available food in the house. I suspect they’re also plotting book destruction.

We do have a shelf cat, too. She loves this set of shelves that my husband built for me. It keeps her away from the bunny, which is a bonus (though she likes the bunny).

This is the couch where I usually am reading, but as you can see, it’s being occupied by animals.

A happy animal in the sun. You’re welcome!

And one last shot of the bunny, who I’m raising to be a comic-loving feminist.


This month’s Book Riot Store deal is tote-ally awesome! (Sorry not sorry). Get 25% off the Book Riot Totes collection, including a limited number of Book Riot Logo totes available only to Insiders.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships May 12

It’s time for a very speculative Friday, y’all! I am writing this from your past, and you are reading this in my future. Welcome back.

Who’s ready for a new Nick Harkaway novel??? (Answer: Me, I am, right here.) He answered 20 questions for the Times Literary Supplement and there’s a section in it about Gnomon, which is coming to the UK in October and the US in January (sob).

The adaptations roll on:
Wired feels some kind of way about The Dark Tower trailer and if that one’s on your list, this piece is worth a read.
– Game of Thrones is getting FOUR spin-offs (and here I just want one measly Jacqueline Carey adaptation).
– The Black Company series by Glen Cook has been optioned by Eliza Dushku’s production company (#TeamFaith). Guess I need to read these now!

“If we do not imagine the future, how can we invent (or prevent) it?” The healthcare industry in the UK wants your science-fictional ideas, and I love everything about this contest.

What do we think about the new design for the World Fantasy Awards? Does anyone else feel like that tree wants to talk to them, and not in a friendly way? Creepiness aside, this seems like a solid choice, both in terms of symbolism and in terms of picking something that is currently inclusive and can stay inclusive in meaning.

It’s Friday, we all deserve a beer! Alex has some pairings for you — speculative fiction and beer pairings, naturally.

For this week’s reviews, let’s have some astrophysics and some necromancy!

Astrophysics for People In a Hurry by Neil DeGrasse Tyson

cover of Astrophysics for People in a Hurry by Neil DeGrasse TysonIf you are like me and often skim through the sciencier parts of science fiction, this book is for you! If you cannot get enough of NDT’s dad jokes, this book is also for you. If you are already an astrophysicist and/or a science-nerd, you probably know everything in it already.

Tyson is, as we know, great at breaking complex theory into digestible nuggets. And as the title suggests, that’s the goal here: to bring astrophysics to readers who otherwise don’t have time for it. (Hi Neil, it’s like you know me!) While I read this just to feel a little bit smarter — which I 100% did, upon finishing — I also found that it complimented the harder sci-fi reading I’ve done. Faster than light travel, dark matter, the origins of moons, exoplanets: these things all make sense now in ways they didn’t before, and I was deeply entertained by Tyson’s bons mots sprinkled throughout the actual explanations. In addition to being funny and informative it is less than 300 pages, and has an absolutely gorgeous cover.

So, to sum up: if you or someone you know has forgotten everything you learned in college physics (assuming you took it) and would like a powerhouse scientist and pop culture figure to explain it to you, look no further than Astrophysics For People In a Hurry.

The Bone Witch by Rin Chupeco

The Bone Witch by Rin ChupecoBefore we talk about anything else, I have to warn you that this book is extremely Book 1 of a Series. The ending actually made me yell “WHAT!?!” to an empty room, and we’re going to have to wait till March of 2018 for the next installment. So if you’re not prepared to sequel-wait, put this towards the bottom of your TBR list — but definitely still put it there, if you’re a fan of necromancy, world-building, and/or female characters who refuse to play by the rules.

The Bone Witch follows Tea, who is born with the power to raise the dead and channel Dark magic. She doesn’t find this out until she accidentally resurrects her dead older brother at his funeral, of course. Awkward! In Tea’s world, “bone witches” or Dark asha are known and training is available, but they’re also looked on with suspicion and fear. The story alternates between the discovery of her powers in her early teens and subsequent training, and her at 17, on a beach and making some very dark choices indeed. This was my favorite part of the book — I love a complicated heroine, and when the heroine in question might burn down the world you have my full attention.

If I had to point to a flaw, it would be the lack of any plot resolution; no threads are tied up, and we’re left with far more questions than answers. But that’s part of what makes the story so urgent, and keeps the pages turning. It’s an origin story, an immersion into a beautifully-rendered and complex Asian-inspired new world, and a meditation on power: who can wield it, and what happens when it wields the user. For an excellent dive into that last in Bone Witch, see this piece on Tor.com (especially all the Buffy fans in the audience).

Magic and ritual, darkness and light, politics and passion: The Bone Witch has these all in spades. Consider me very ready for whatever comes next.


This newsletter is sponsored by Carry On by Rainbow Rowell.

cover of Carry On by Rainbow Rowell A #1 New York Times bestseller.

Simon Snow is the worst Chosen One who’s ever been chosen.

His mentor’s avoiding him, his girlfriend dumped him, and there’s a monster running around wearing Simon’s face. Baz, his roommate and nemesis, would be having a field day with all this, if he were here—it’s their last year at the Watford School of Magicks, and he hasn’t shown up.

Carry On is a ghost story, a love story, and a mystery. It has as much kissing and talking as you’d expect from a Rainbow Rowell story—but far more monsters.

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Insiders

Listen Harder: Read Harder Podcast RSS Available!

For all the folks who’ve been wanting to add the Read Harder podcast to their favorite app: we got you. As of today, when you visit the podcast’s page on Insiders, you’ll see a new Subscribe option! You can grab the RSS feed there and use it to add the show to your podcatcher.

Screengrab of the Read Harder podcast page showing the new Subscribe button

A couple Qs & As:

Q: Why can’t I see the episodes and subscribe option?
A: It will only show up if you’re logged in!

Q: What apps does this work with?
A: Tried and tested: iTunes, iPhone Podcasts, Pocket Casts, Overcast, Podcast Addict, BeyondPod, Downcast. It should also work with any app that allows you to add a podcast manually via RSS.

Q: I still can’t find the Read Harder podcast by searching!
A: Since it’s a private podcast, we’re not submitting it to search results for any podcast platforms. As long as your app allows you to add a podcast by feed, you should still be good to go! Related: we know how awesome the show is, but this address is private and not meant to be shared publicly or with anyone subscribed below Novel level on Insiders.

Q: You didn’t answer my question!
A: Drop us an email and we’ll help figure out what’s up.

 

Happy listening!

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords & Spaceships May 5

Happy Friday, y’all!

Let’s start off with a bang: The Arthur C. Clarke Award shortlist has been announced! The big surprise on here is Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead, which is sweeping the awards circuit — and for good reason. It’s an incredibly powerful book, as well as an alternate history of the Civil War that posits underground steam locomotives. Once you think about it as alternate history, you can see how it made the list, but I’d bet most folks weren’t expecting to see it pop up here. I’m also a huge fan of A Closed and Common Orbit and Ninefox Gambit. If I had to vote, it would be for Ninefox — I haven’t read a space opera that intricately built and plotted in a very long time and I’m dying to see it get some critical recognition, but there are no bad picks here.

How many different retellings of The Beauty and the Beast can you think of? I maxed out at five, but Amanda put together a list of literally 100 (!!).

This guy is building a wearable puppet version of K-2SO for Halloween. Apparently you just need a 3D printer, a bunch of PVC and sculpt-able foam, oh, and some killer construction skillz. And I thought my collapsible lightsaber was cool… (I still think it’s cool.)

For those who like hearing their stories: Tor is launching a new imprint called Tor Labs “emphasizing experimental approaches to genre publishing, beginning with original dramatic podcasts.” Which basically means we’re getting new story podcasts, starting with Steal the Stars which includes UFO-related hijinks.

Tak is a boardgame you could actually play, even if you don’t live in Patrick Rothfuss’s books. (Which possibly everyone on this list would prefer, perhaps?) More astonishing to me is that the Kickstarter collected over $1 million before it closed. A million dollars! That is some serious Kingkiller Chronicles love.

And finally, because I am writing this on May 4th, I require you all to read some Star Wars puns.

For this issue’s reviews, I am delighted to present to you: Zombies, two ways.

Zone One by Colson Whitehead

While there are blood and guts aplenty, Zone One is more about the bureaucracy of the apocalypse than its monsters. Think of it as the literary baby of The Office and The Walking Dead. The main character, nicknamed Mark Spitz in an extended running joke, is part of the clean-up crew sweeping through lower Manhattan, trying to clear out zombies one building at a time. In this horrible future there are two kinds of zombies: skels, which will tackle, bite, and turn you if given half a chance; and stragglers, which return to one location and just … stand there. Creepy, sure, but not so hard to dispose of — in theory.

Our narrator, nicknamed Mark Spitz in an impressively long-running joke arc, has survived both the normal world and the apocalypse by being perfectly mediocre. When you’re the ultimate average, gliding through life looks a lot easier apparently! We get his own backstory of flight and survival, along with those of his crew; we also get the marketing ploys of the new provincial government, the vagaries of logistics for body-bags and ammunition, the promotionally-driven allowances for looting, the daily annoyances of “sweeper” duty, and the daydreams of times gone by. Mark Spitz was, among other brief careers, a social media manager, and one of the most-quoted passages of the book (at least in my circle) comes from his anecdotes about that job.

The narrative jumps back and forth in time from one chapter — often one page — to the next, lending to the surreal tone of the narrative. Whitehead deploys that surrealism to both hilarious and devastating effect. And just when you think you know the story, that’s when things get really interesting.

Hadriana in All My Dreams by René Depestre

hadrianaIf Gabriel Garcia Marquez were to write a zombie novel, it wouldn’t be this but you’d be in roughly the same ballpark. René Depestre’s amazing Hadriana in All My Dreams, originally published in 1988 and now reissued by Akashic Books, is a riotous, magical, raucous look at Vodou culture as well as an ode to Jacmel, Haiti.

Set in his own hometown, Jacmel, it follows the wedding-day zombification of a beautiful young French-Creole girl named Hadriana. About to wed her Haitian fiancé, she collapses immediately after giving her vows. But Hadriana is not dead — instead, she’s been drugged and transformed into a zombie by a man with nefarious purposes. The first half of the book is told by Patrick, her childhood friend and unrequited lover, and gives us a local’s view of the folklore, religion, spirituality, and racial politics that blend and clash in Jacmel.

This novel is both sensual and sexual; from succubus butterflies to Hadriana’s Carnival-influenced funeral to the enslavement of women via zombification, bodies are central to both the narrative and plot. Depestre is unabashed in his celebration of sexuality and unflinching in chronicling the ways it is abused. Refreshingly — and importantly to this reader — he also chronicles women’s agency in ways I was not expecting to see. This is a fever-dream of a book, a look into the origins and folklore of zombies, and a local’s-eye view of Haiti in the early 1900s, and it will change the way you think about zombies.


This newsletter is sponsored by 5 Worlds Book 1: The Sand Warrior.

The 5 Worlds are on the brink of extinction unless five ancient and mysterious beacons are lit. When war erupts, three unlikely heroes will discover there’s more to themselves than meets the eye. The clumsiest student at the Sand Dancer Academy, Oona Lee is a fighter with a big destiny. A boy from the poorest slums, An Tzu has a surprising gift and a knack for getting out of sticky situations. Star athlete Jax Amboy is beloved by an entire galaxy, but has no real friends. Can these three kids discover their talents in time to save the 5 Worlds?

Categories
In The Club

In The Club May 3

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


This newsletter is sponsored by The Widow of Wall Street by Randy Susan Meyers.

The Widow of Wall Street cover A provocative new novel by bestselling author Randy Susan Meyers about the seemingly blind love of a wife for her husband as he conquers Wall Street, and her extraordinary, perhaps foolish, loyalty during his precipitous fall.

When Phoebe learns her husband’s triumph and vast reach rests on an elaborate Ponzi scheme her world unravels. Her children refuse to see her if she remains at their father’s side, but abandoning him feels cruel and impossible.

From penthouse to prison, Randy Susan Meyers’s latest novel exposes a woman struggling to survive and then redefine her life as her world crumbles.


Books for your mama: Bustle breaks down how to put together a successful mother-daughter book club. We get questions about this so regularly on Get Booked, I felt like there might already be some of you trying this and many more interested. And section 5, on choosing your books, has some great methods that would work with any kind of book club — I had never heard the 5-3-1 Method before, but I dig it.

OMG, so awkward. Sharifah talks about awkward book club moments, whether it’s you or the person sitting across from you, and she had me cracking up with this video. Be prepared for some realtalk!

Want to get more calendrical with your group’s choices? Here are 50 fictional literary dates to tie into, courtesy of Lithub.

Get out the popcorn: Casey has five great lesbian movies based on books for your consideration. Whether you’re doing a page-to-screen book club or just need some good books to discuss, she’s got you covered.

Every villain is the hero of their own story. And to prove it, the B&N blog has five (debatably delightful) disturbing narrators for you.

And now for this week’s Read Harder Challenge recommendations! Here are round-ups of themed lists for a couple tasks, plus a shout-out each to a personal favorite.

For: read an LGBTQ romance novel (courtesy of Sarah MacLean)

For Real by Alexis HallFor Real by Alexis Hall, which is an incredibly sweet and incredibly dirty romance that made me cry and/or blush depending on the page. Talking points include May/December romances, BDSM, and how we recover when we get lost.
5 Authors To Get You Started in M/M Romance
Romance beyond gay and lesbian
A (Semi) Comprehensive Guide to LGBTQ+ Romance
Lesbian Romance Novels

For: read a book published between 1900 and 1950.

We by Yevgeny ZamyatinWe by Yevgeny Zamyatin, which came before 1984 and starts with the premise that happiness is more important than freedom. It’s a classic.
– Books That Shaped America: 1900 to 1950
Best Children’s Books: 1900 to 1950
Popular 1900s to 1950s books on Goodreads

 

 

More Resources: 
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords & Spaceships Apr 28

Happy Friday, Padawans and paladins!

A bunch of exciting announcements have come out of Star Wars Celebration, but the one that produced actuals screams of glee from me is that Ken Liu is writing a Skywalker novel [insert confetti space-canon here]! If you haven’t been keeping track, he’s the author of The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories and The Dandelion Dynasty series, and I cannot wait to see what directions he takes our favorite space-cinnamon-roll Luke in. I should add that the only Star Wars novel I’ve read in the past decade was Bloodline (which was great, for the record); I am now officially cherry-picking their new offerings.

Does your TBR need some exploding? Liberty wrote a list of 100 must-read SFF debuts that should keep you busy for at least the next decade or so. Like she notes, it is so hard to believe that some of these were an author’s very first published book!

Do redshirts actually die more often on Star Trek? Well, it depends on how you do the math apparently. I do love it when people crunch fictional data — see also, this piece on braid-tugging and skirt-smoothing in the Wheel of Time.

This is a monster year for adaptations, what with The Handmaid’s Tale and American Gods both coming to screens, The Wheel of Time finally moving forward, and a bunch of others I’ve already lost track of. And we can add to the pile: China Mieville’s The City & The City is coming to TV.

Friday whimsy: Harry Potter books with cocktail pairings. Both for the drink recipes and the pairing notes (lolsob).

And now, for some recommendations!

Ascension by Jacqueline Koyanagi

Ascension by Jacqueline KoyanagiI wish I could remember who recommended this book to me; I’m sure I didn’t find it on my own. It’s been a long-term favorite of mine ever since I picked it up, and a Swiss army knife of a recommendation because it hits so many notes so well. It’s also one of my favorite books because it illustrates beautifully how one can write a “political” book — in that the main character is queer woman of color who has a chronic illness, and those identities are heavily politicized — that is 100% space opera adventure, for all those folks who “just want a good story.”

Alana Quick is a sky surgeon, meaning she fixes spaceship engines and is damn good at it. But she and her aunt, who run their own business, are barely keeping their business afloat. So when a cargo vessel swings by looking for her sister Nova, it’s the opportunity she’s been waiting for. She stows away on the ship, hoping to find herself a permanent spot as ship’s mechanic, and then finds out that she’s put herself in the middle of a tangles web of shifting alliances and dangerous missions, all surrounding her sister’s special abilities.

Action! Adventure! Romance! People who are not as they seem! Strange beings! Strange powers! Explosions! Space! Truly, this book is a delight. Here’s me crossing my fingers that we eventually get another book of Alana’s adventures, because I need more! Side note: Koyanagi contributed a task to this year’s Read Harder Challenge.

 

Kalpa Imperial by Angélica Gorodischer, translated by Ursula K. Le Guin

Kalpa Imperial by Angelica GorodischerIf you’re looking for speculative fiction in translation, classic fantasy, and/or South American authors, Angélica Gorodischer is the answer to all of the above. The book is translated by Le Guin (!!) and follows the rise and fall of an empire over many narrators, each with their own distinct style and story to tell.

Gorodischer manages a few amazing feats in this book. In a series of vignettes with incredibly disparate narrators, often with no clear connections between them, she manages to give shape and depth to a nameless empire. Her timeline is enormously long, but the chapters each feel personal and compelling. And while it lies firmly in the realms of fable, folklore, and fantasy, Kalpa Imperial nonetheless feels contemporary and familiar.

I had the happy experience of reading this in close proximity to both Sofia Samatar and NK Jemisin, both of whom have written beautifully about the ebb and flow of empire. Pair those three with the stories in Galactic Empire, and you’ve got a beautifully multi-faceted look at genre fiction’s obsession with the various manifestations of political structures. Of course, you might just also want a story beautifully told — and this is that, above all else.


This newsletter is sponsored by Elves, written by Jean-Luc Istin and illustrated by Kyko Duarte.

Elves Vol 1 coverVolume One of the critically-acclaimed and original dark fantasy saga Elves comes to US audiences for the first time this May.

The Blue Elves in a small port town have all been massacred. Lanawyn, a Blue Elf, and Turin, her human ally, set out to discover who is responsible. The trail they uncover together leads back to a warlike clan of humans who hate Elves.

Meanwhile, the Sylvan Elves have hidden themselves away from the world, jealously preserving their independence. Eysine, the City-State of the East, has always observed respect for the ancient pact between Elf and Man. But when a powerful army of Orks besiege the kingdom, Eysine must remind the Elves of the treaty that linked their two peoples.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships Apr 21

Happy Friday, from the other end of a long series of tubes!

Before we dive into all the genre-specific goodness, I am delighted to announce that we’ve got a new subscription program called Book Riot Insiders! You can track new releases, listen to our dedicated Read Harder podcast, get a look at behind-the-scenes ops, and more, starting at $3/month. Check out the Insiders site for full details and to sign up!

Calling all Expanse fans: if you’re craving books with female characters like Naomi, Chrisjen, and Bobbie, we’ve got a reading list for you.

I’ve had this bookmarked forever and only finally just got to it: what is a utopia and how do we write about it? Ada Palmer, Malka Older, and Robert Charles Wilson had a very interesting conversation about this on Tor. It dovetails nicely with my musings post-Feminist Utopia Project, in case anyone is looking for another book (not strictly speculative) to add to their stack.

Soylent Green is (hopefully not) people! This piece on foods of the future is better than cannibalism, but I’m not sure how much better in certain cases. I hear you on the protein content of bugs, for example, but getting over the squick factor is gonna take some doing. (My theory is that Fear Factor ruined bugs for Americans of a certain age, even if you add ice cream.) However, sign me up for 3D printed food STAT!

More short stories for those pressed for time! This list of magical short story collections has two personal favorites on it — Kelly Link and Helen Oyeyemi, bestill my reader heart. These will certainly liven up your commute (and possibly make you miss a stop or two, fair warning).

Your Friday whimsy: I laughed so hard at Bad Lip Reading: Star Wars that I cried.

Readers, I fell hard for the below books, and I think you will too.

Spare & Found Parts, Sarah Maria Griffin

cover of Spare and Found Parts by Sarah Maria GriffinI didn’t know I wanted a YA revamp of Frankenstein until I read this book, which is fantastic. Nell Crane is young, awkward, and bad at people — not excluding her more bouyant best friend, Ruby, or the boy she cannot shake, Oliver. What she’s good at? Machines. She’s learned at the side of her father, an acclaimed inventor, and she’s plotting a project that will take her out of his shadow and earn her a reputation in her own right: a robot companion.

The problem with this plan is that Nell lives in a future in which machines are suspect, and computer technology has been outlawed. A plague in the past has decimated the population, society is still rebuilding, and coding is strictly taboo. In her search to realize her vision and build herself a friend who might just understand her, Nell finds herself in places in her community she had no idea existed.

Nell’s loneliness and personal struggles are heartbreaking, and there’s a reveal about her family history that actually made me gasp out loud. Griffin feeds in just enough whimsy, humor, and world-building to keep the story moving while still allowing for the story’s solid emotional weight. I devoured this book in a day, and cannot recommend enough that you take it to the park with you on the next sunny day.

Mama Day by Gloria Naylor

cover of Mama Day by Gloria NaylorI have been meaning to pick up Mama Day since Nisi Shawl recommended it in her Book Riot Live interview. The day I got it from the library was a good day; the day I finished it was even better. If you like magical realism; if you like generational stories; if you like Southern fiction; if you like stories in which the setting is a major character; if you like amazing writing — then grab a copy and buckle up.

Narrated in three distinct voices — two second-person, one third person, and somehow this works beautifully?! —  the novel follows Ophelia “Cocoa” Day, who has moved away from her hometown of Willow Springs to make it in New York City. She’s on the look-out for a job and a date, and meets engineer George Andrews during an interview. She doesn’t ultimately end up working for him; instead, she marries him and brings him home to Willow Springs to meet her great-aunt Miranda (the titular Mama Day) and grandmother Abigail. And then, everything goes off the rails. And no, I won’t be more specific, because spoilers.

It’s a simple plot on the surface, but to this girl-meets-boy set-up Gloria Naylor adds the history of the South and Emancipation, folk remedies and old powers, family secrets, touches of The Tempest, and a deep understanding of the twisted places love can take us. The second to last chapter of this book wrecked me — it’s a five-Kleenex read for sure. On top of all that Naylor has a gorgeously vivid writing style and is a master of structure. This book has earned a spot on my favorites shelf.


This newsletter is sponsored by Elves, written by Jean-Luc Istin and illustrated by Kyko Duarte.

Elves Vol 1 coverVolume One of the critically-acclaimed and original dark fantasy saga Elves comes to US audiences for the first time this May.

The Blue Elves in a small port town have all been massacred. Lanawyn, a Blue Elf, and Turin, her human ally, set out to discover who is responsible. The trail they uncover together leads back to a warlike clan of humans who hate Elves.

Meanwhile, the Sylvan Elves have hidden themselves away from the world, jealously preserving their independence. Eysine, the City-State of the East, has always observed respect for the ancient pact between Elf and Man. But when a powerful army of Orks besiege the kingdom, Eysine must remind the Elves of the treaty that linked their two peoples.

Categories
In The Club

In the Club Apr 19

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


BR Insiders Image SquareThis newsletter is sponsored by Book Riot Insiders.

Level up your reading life with Book Riot Insiders! We’ve got exclusive content and goodness for subscribers, including a new releases calendar, an Insiders-only forum, a Read Harder podcast, special store deals, and more. Join us!

 


Does your book club need more chill? Bustle has some suggestions on keeping it fun and easy-going. These are all good (and pretty basic). I particularly love the reminder to occasionally pick books by local authors, which increases the chance of getting to meet them, especially if you’re not in a high-profile city that gets a lot of touring authors!

No one can pick a book like a librarian. Early Word tallied librarians’ 2016 favorites back in December, which means there’s a good chance most of these are now available in paperback! I’m a little surprised to see that Dark Matter beat out Homegoing and Underground Railroad (which has now added the Pulitzer to its impressive list of awards), but I can’t deny that it’s a solid reading choice.

Let’s talk about adaptations. Bustle mentioned them as ways to add fun to your book group, and I’ve always wanted (but never had the time) to be part of a Page to Screen-style book club. And what with everyone re-reading Handmaid’s Tale, Atwood teasing a possible sequel, and the TV show premiering soon, that seems like a no-brainer for one (maybe two?) meeting’s worth of discussion. Show of hands? Anyone planning a group watch, or discussion after?

Let’s get transnational! I’ll be honest, that’s a word I’ve never said before. But this list of reads from personal favorite author Mohsin Hamid (whose books are all excellent book club fodder, may I say) perfectly encapsulates the concept, and gives some great reading suggestions.

To serve or not to serve: that is the question. Since not every book group can (or should) be boozy, how about some literary-themed mocktail recipes? This list absolutely made my week, both for range of books used for themes and for drink options, and I will definitely be making some Pan-Galactic Gargle Blasters this summer.

And now for this week’s Read Harder Challenge recommendations! Here are round-ups of themed lists for a couple tasks, plus a shout-out each to a personal favorite.

For: read a travel memoir.

cover of Last Chance to SeeLast Chance to See by Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine, in which Douglas Adams goes around the world looking at endangered animals in the early ’90s. Yep, that Douglas Adams, so the book is both poignant and hilarious.
20 Inspiring Female Travel Memoirs
30 travel memoirs specifically for Read Harder!
Five Great Travel Memoirs from NPR

For: read a collection of short stories by a woman.

cover of Tender by Sofia SamatarTender by Sofia Samatar, which is an incredible collection of fantasy short stories that I just cannot stop talking about. Samatar has huge range, and each story has great hooks for discussion.
100 Must Read Short Story Collections
15 Contemporary Short Story Collections by Women from Bustle
10 Short Story Collections by Women from Bust
13 Horror Short Story Collections by Women
5 Short Story Collections by Women of Color from Writer’s Bone

 

More Resources: 
– Our Book Group In A Box guide
– List your group on the Book Group Resources page