Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 09/02

Hola Audiophiles! Welcome back to Audiolandia. I have been looking forward to a lot of today’s new releases for some time now so let’s get straight to it! Like I said before: this fall is going to be quite the ride.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – week of September 1st

When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole, read by Susan Dalian, Jay Aaseng (mystery/thriller) – My Riot buddy Jamie Canavés has given this book an absolutely glowing review and says it’s best to go into it knowing as little as possible. So I’ll say just give you this: a young woman in Brooklyn is doing her best to keep (get?) her life and neighborhood in order. When she begins to research the neighborhood’s history, strange things start happening… Props to Alyssa Cole for killing the romance game and now hitting us with this magnificent work of suspense!

Narrator Note: Susan Dalian is the voice of Haku in the first season of Naruto, as well as Storm in Wolverine and the X-Men and Marvel vs. Capcom 3: Fate of Two Worlds. Jay Aeseng is a writer/actor/producer who you may know from the Twin Peaks TV series.

transcendent kingdomTranscendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi, read by Bahni Turpin (fiction) – This book sounds like it is going to slap me in the face and I will take that slap with a smile. Gifty is a sixth-year PhD candidate in neuroscience at Stanford studying depression and addiction. After an ankle injury leaves her athlete brother hooked on Oxy and he dies of a heroin overdose, Gifty turns to science to understand the depth of her family’s loss. But she also finds herself hungering for her childhood faith and the evangelical church in which she was raised, where the promise of salvation is tempting, but elusive.

Narrator Note: I’m not even going to say anything about Bahni Turpin anymore. Just going to drop her name and the mic.

Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas, read by Avi Roque (YA fantasy) – I love this book! Aiden Thomas is a delightful queer trans Latinx human and this is their debut paranormal queer romantic YA fantasy (it’s adjective day!). It’s about a trans boy who wants more than anything for his traditional Latinx family to accept his true gender. To prove that he’s a brujo, he performs a death day ritual with the help of his badass BFF to find the ghost of his murdered cousin and set it free. Pero…the ghost he summons a) isn’t his cousin and b) kind of refuses to leave, and c) is also kind of dreamy? This book is full of Latinx references and non-italicized Spanish and is inspired by lots of different Dia de los Muertos rituals. Mi corazon is just fit to burst!

Narrator Note: Avi Roque is an actor whose most recent work includes the show Chicago Med. They are also queer, trans, and Latinx which I really appreciate as a choice for this book. I love the humor, the drama, and the tenderness they lend to the words from what I’ve sampled so far.

cover image of Wayward Witch by Zoraida Cordova Wayward Witch by Zoraida Cordova, read by Almarie Guerra (YA fantasy) – 🎶Although we’ve come *snap* to the eeeeend ooooh the road… I am both very ready and wholly unprepared to read this last installment of the Brooklyn Brujas series by my fave Zoraida Córdova. This part mythical/part urban fantasy series has followed the three Mortiz sisters as they come into their powers and battle magic in both the real world and worlds beyond. Wayward Witch is told from Rose’s perspective and kicks off with a huge revelation on her Deathday ceremony, which leads to an adventure in the Caribbean Sea. Apparently today’s newsletter is dedicated to witchy Latinx death day stuff and I am very okay with that.

Narrator Note: Almarie Guerra did a fantastic job with Five Midnights by Ann Dávila Cardinal and is such a great choice to voice the youngest Mortiz sister! Her body of work includes Valerie Valdes’ Chilling EffectThe Education of Margot Sanchez by Lilliam Rivera, and Wendy Heard’s The Kill Club.

Latest Listens

Heyyyyy it’s more (sorta) witchy Latinx death stuff! I wrapped up my listen of Tehlor Kay Mejia’s Paola Santiago and the River of Tears, a middle grade fantasy adventure inspired by the legend of La Llorona. Before I tell you about the book, let me tell you a little more about The Weeping (or Crying or Wailing) Woman.

I’m fairly positive that La Llorona began as a Mexican folk tale, though I’m sure she’s been an equal opportunist in terrifying children of numerous Latin American backgrounds. The legend varies a little, but the general idea is that long ago before La Llorona was La Llorona, she was a woman who married a rich man and had a couple of kids. The husband was rarely home and on the rare occasion in which he was, the guy ignore his wife and focused all his attention on the kids. Sh*t really hit the fan when Not-Yet-La Llorona caught her man with another woman, and that is when it’s said she drowned her children in a jealous rage. In some versions of the story, she also drowned herself and was then turned away from the pearly gates, banished to purgatory on Earth to spend her days in search of her lost children. It’s said she continues to lurk near bodies of water in her funereal gown waiting to attack or  kidnap children. Might this story terrify a kid who lives in mother&@%^# coastal San Diego? Me. That kid was me, and the answer is yes.

Back to the book! Paola Santiago and the River of Tears is part of the Rick Riordan Presents line and the titular character is a science and space-obsessed 12-year-old. Pao and her two best friends, Emma and Dante, know they must abide by one rule: stay away from the river. It’s all they’ve heard since a schoolmate of theirs drowned in the Gila a year ago, and Pao resents her mom’s insistence that La Llorona is to blame.

In spite of all the risk and warnings, Pao organizes a meet-up to test out her new telescope in a stargazing spot by the river. But Emma never shows and remains missing the next day, and Pao begins to wonder if her mom was maybe, possibly a little bit right. She and Dante will have to brave a world of unnatural mist, monsters of lore, and relentless spirits controlled by a terrifying unknown force. Could that force be… nah, it couldn’t. Or can it? Maybe. You’ll see.

Between the use of a magical chancla and the presence of chupacabras, I again wish I could hop in the spaceship and gift this literary treat to my younger self. What fun to see the mythologies I grew up with brought to such magical and adventurous light! It takes a careful hand to take a pretty dark and terrifying story like that of La Llorona and calibrate the creepy down to a level that works for a middle grade audience. Tehlor Kay Mejia is that very hand and I’m glad this generation of kids will get to devour her work.

Narration gets five stars from Frankie Corzo for well-paced, suspenseful narration and for getting the voices of twelve year olds just right.

From the Internets

Check out Libro.fm’s Independent Bookstore Day wrap-up, including video submissions just dripping in indie bookstore love.

at AudioFile: 5 New Enemies-to-Lovers Romances on Audio – This is quickly becoming one of my favorite tropes!

Over at the Riot

7 Literary Authors Who Read Their Own Audiobooks– Ta-Nehisi Coates’s voice has stayed with me all these years, what a performance.

Traversing World of Warcraft Armed with Audiobooks


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 9/2

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. This week I’m back in Portland again after spending another several weeks in Southern California. Many of you wrote in to basically say, “Vanessa, it is not that hot in Portland. Relax!” I know I’m pale, but I promise I’m not just a delicate flower who can’t take even the slightest exposure to sun: I was in San Diego and it was near 100 almost the entire time.

Inspired by that same es-muy-hot-so-me-no-cooky mentality, we’re making ceviche this week! As for our book club theme, we’re taking a look at rural stereotypes, i.e. all that we get wrong about rural America.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips – Mexican Ceviche

Ceviche means different things in different parts of Latin America, and even within Mexico varies from region to region. This is the style I grew up eating in a border city, a version typical in Mexico’s northern states and coastal towns. Make a big o’l batch for book club up to a day ahead and enjoy! This recipe serves about 4.

  • 1.5 lbs of uncooked shrimp (peeled, deveined, chopped into smallish chunks)
  • 1 large roma tomato (firm is best), chopped
  • 1 large cucumber, peeled and chopped (remove the seeds first)
  • 1/2 red onion, finely chopped
  • About a handful of cilantro, finely chopped
  • Serrano peppers, diced (start with one, add more based on heat preference)
  • A pinch of crushed pequin peppers (may substitute red pepper flakes)
  • 1 teaspoon of Maggi sauce (may substitute soy sauce)
  • 1/4 cup of Clamato (optional)
  • salt, pepper, Mexican oregano to taste

Add some salt and pepper to the chopped shrimp and combine with the lime juice in a large bowl. Cover and allow the acid to “cook” the shrimp in the fridge for at least 15 minutes (I usually do an hour). Once that’s done, drain but reserve the lime juice. Combine all the remaining ingredients, season to taste, and add back some of the lime juice for that extra citrusy punch (eyeball this part, the mixture should be wet but not drowning). Serve with sliced avocado, tostadas or chips, and hot sauce of choice! Some folks like their tostadas with mayo on them, do do that if you like. I’ll just over here throwing up in my mouth.

What We Get Wrong, Really Really Wrong

This theme of books set in or about rural America is one taken straight from the 2020 Read Harder Challenge. Tirzah and I discussed this specific task in the last episode of the Read Harder challenge, and it felt important to talk about what we get wrong about rural America given, well, life in 2020 and way before that. None of these books claim that all rural stereotypes are completely off base, but they do ask us as readers to give up some of the laziness of relying solely on them. They challenge us instead to hear the important messages that the stereotyped are trying to tell us.

the third rainbow girlThe Third Rainbow Girl by Emma Copley Eisenberg – True crime isn’t generally my bag these days; so much of it wreaks of a morbid obsession with the murder and mutilation of women’s bodies and I just cannot. In spite of that aversion, I was drawn to this book by Amanda Nelson’s review of it on Instagram in which she starts off by describing why she would normally NOT have picked up the book and still ended up loving it. The story at its core is of the murder of two young white women in the 80s who were hitchhiking their way to Appalachia for a yearly counterculture nature meetup, but it’s the analysis of the aftermath that sets this book apart. Emma Copley Eisenberg dives into the stereotypes about Appalachia that led to many false assumptions in the wake of the crime, without ignoring the violent misogyny often prevalent in this region or her own liberal do-gooderness.

Book Club Bonus: First, get deep into that rural stereotype thing because whew. Secondly, the author asks, and attempts to answer, a very uncomfortable question that I encourage you to think about too: how can we ever reckon with violence against women if we also insist on a voyeuristic obsession with it?

Blacktop Wasteland by S.A. Cosby – This thriller is super popular with the Book Riot crew right now! Beauregard, aka Bug, is a family man doing his best to provide for his wife and kids. But life hasn’t dealt him a particularly fortuitous hand: his garage is struggling, he’s unable to make ends meet, and now his elderly mother is facing eviction from her nursing home. In a bid for some fast cash, he steps back into a familiar role as a getaway driver, a job he left a long time ago. He goes into it with that good ol’ “just one more job!” mentality we’ve heard before, pero… three guesses as to how that turns out.

Book Club Bonus: This is one of the books Tirzah covered on Read Harder and she had amazing things to say about its portrayal of rural life. As she put it, rural tropes and stereotypes do exist here, but they’re paired alongside narratives on race, class, and family that fly in the face of the very limited view so often painted of rural America in literature and media. Discuss which of these stereotypes you brought with you to the reading and what you had to learn to let go of as you progressed.

cover image of What You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia by Elizabeth CatteWhat You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia by Elizabeth Catte – I’ll be brief: don’t read Hillbilly Elegy, read this instead. I’ve heard this advice from so many people born and raised in this region, and the more I’ve gotten to know about the author of that other book, the more I see why. The more official synopsis: this book is “a frank assessment of America’s recent fascination with the people and problems of the region. The book analyzes trends in contemporary writing on Appalachia, presents a brief history of Appalachia with an eye toward unpacking Appalachian stereotypes, and provides examples of writing, art, and policy created by Appalachians as opposed to for Appalachians.”

Book Club Bonus: The “by” versus “for” thing really got me thinking and I hope it will do the same for you. How many times have you seen a thing done “for” a group of people and have it be just so, so bad: uninformed, lazy, even harmful in how much it gets wrong?

Suggestion Section

New month, new book club picks from Good Morning America, PBS, Jenna Bush Hager, Reese, Oprah, and Vox.

Celeb Book Club: What the Stars Are Reading Right Now – Before you get all, “I’m a Serious a Reader and don’t care what celebrities are reading,” the list isn’t all the usual suspects. Also, I kind of appreciate a dude coming out and being like, “Yeah, I’m reading Twilight. So?”


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 08/27

Hola Audiophiles! How goes it on this fine (hahahah, “fine”) Thursday? Let’s get right to the audiobook thing before thinking too hard about anything else makes my blood pressure spike.

Let’s audio.


New Releases – week of August 25  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

Darius the Great Deserves Better by Adib Khorram, read by Michael Levi Harris (contemporary YA fiction) – This is the sequel to Darius the Great is Not Okay. Darius is back home in the U.S., playing soccer, dating his very first boyfriend, and maintaining a long distance friendship with Sohrab. Then things sort of fall apart: his new internship at a tea shop doesn’t go according to plan, Sohrab sort of ghosts him, and both of Darius’ grandmothers are in town. Darius has to decide whether to accept that this is just how life goes, or if he perhaps deserves better,

Narrator Note: Michael Levi Harris is back! If you enjoyed his reading of Darius the Great Is Not Okay, you’re back in good hands for the sequel.

Useless Vanessa Note: There’s such a thing as a tea shop internship??? Why wasn’t I informed?!

Winter Counts cover imageWinter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden, read by Darrell Dennis (mystery/thriller) – Virgil Wounded Horse lives on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota where he’s basically an enforcer; when the American legal system or the tribal council fail to being about justice, people come to him for help of a certain kind. “But when heroin makes its way into the reservation and finds Virgil’s own nephew, his vigilantism suddenly becomes personal.”

Narrator Note: You may recognize Darrell Dennis as one of the narrators of Tommy Orange’s There There.

Desperate Plea from Vanessa Note: Can we, maybe… call Rosebud? I need someone to enforce on 2020’s ass.

cover image of The Great Offshore Grounds by Vanessa VeselkaThe Great Offshore Grounds by Vanessa Veselka, read by Xe Sands (fiction) – It’s been years since half sisters Cheyenne and Livy have seen each other, but Cheyenne is back in Seattle and crashing on Livy’s couch after a failed marriage. Livy restores boats for a living and is beginning to resent Cheyenne for her free-loading ways when they get in the way of plans to fish off the coast of Alaska. The light at the end of the tunnel for everyone is the promise of financial security: on the day of their estranged father’s wedding, the sisters set out to claim their inheritance. Plot twist! Their father gives them not money, but a name, a name that leads to the unearthing of a wild family secret.

Narrator Note: Xe Sands has a lot of audiobooks under her belt, and I personally cosign her performance of Sarah Gailey’s Magic for Liars. Magic school! Noir! A hardened P.I. jealous of her magical sister! TEENAGERS! She does it all so well.

Latest Listens

I am about to dive into Tehlor Kay Mejia’s River of Tears, a middle grade fantasy adventure based on the Mexican legend of La Llorona (the crying woman, aka the source of many Mexican children’s nightmares). This latest book from the Rick Riordan Presents line is everything Little Vanessita would have wanted way back when! Adult Vanessa will read it gleefully on her behalf.

The Cutting Season by Attica Locke coverIn the meantime, let me dig into some backlist and recommend The Cutting Season by Attica Locke, read by Quincy Tyler Bernstine. Before I go any further, please be advised that this book takes place on a plantation in modern day and contains discussions of slavery and related violence. It’s been some time since I read it so I don’t recollect how detailed or graphic those scenes are; I can tell you that I am very sensitive to violence and sexual assault and was still able to enjoy the story.

The plot: Caren Gray is a young black single mother who manages Belle Vie, a massive antebellum plantation in Louisiana where the past and the present bleed into one another most creepily. Belle Vie has been turned into a ridiculous tourist attraction featuring full-dress re-enactments and fully restored slave quarters (why yes, now would be a good time to scream). Caren is caught up in her own issues—the challenges of raising a daughter on her own, questioning her life choices and career trajectory—when she discovers the body of a migrant worker on the plantation grounds. The search to find the killer unearths another mystery from the plantation’s past.

I was reminded just how much I love this book after talking about Bluebird, Bluebird on the latest episode of the Read Harder Podcast. Like Locke’s Highway 59 series, The Cutting Season is a riveting mystery paired with discussions of race in America as well as motherhood, the complicated legacy of the South, and human nature’s darkest proclivities. Quincy Tyler Bernstine, who was part of the ensemble cast of Jacqueline Woodson’s Red at the Bone, delivers a wonderful performance. Her voice is rich, warm, and a little bit breathy, all in perfect measure based on the intensity of the scene. Pick this one up if you’re in the mood for a thrilling read that examines this country’s ugly history of racial violence. Also, plantations: PORQUE?

From the Internets

Audible has unveiled a new subscription plan structure.

Libro.fm has released its list of Fall’s Most Anticipated Audiobooks (or as they call it, their TBLT—to be listened to, I presume?). It features titles by (deep breath) Walter Mosley, Lindy West, David Sedaris, Dolly Parton, Megan Rapinoe, Rebecca Roanhorse, Desus & Mero, Elena Ferrante and okay I’m out of breath now but there are so many more.

File this BuzzFeed piece under “relatable content:” Audiobooks Are — And I Can’t Stress This Enough — Saving My Sanity During COVID-19

Over at the Riot

I love when I find an entire audiobook series to really sink my teeth (ears?) into, don’t you? Here’s a list of juicy series to keep you busy for days.

On audiobooking while you sleep – I’m so curious to know how many people do this!


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 08/26

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. I’ve got some book club suggestions inspired by election season for you today plus some cold nibbles for these super hot (for some of us) days.

To the club!!

Nibbles and Sips

I know I’m a broken record but it is still SO hot, the kind of hot where cooking sounds like the last thing on earth I feel like doing. After buying a whole bunch of cold ready-made meals for a week, it finally occurred to me that I could easily prepare stuff like that at home. If you’re feeling the heat and don’t feel like turning that stove on when it’s your turn to host social distance book club, here are a few ideas.

A few things: I can’t even be bothered to cook my own chicken and have no shame in buying cooked rotisserie chickens. All simple salads are tossed in a quick dressing of red wine vinegar, avocado oil, salt, pepper, and oregano. I also like to put some of that Trader Joe’s Chili Onion Crunch on… everything, but especially the proteins.

  • Cubed chicken, simple salad, a scoop of hummus, sliced carrots and bell peppers, half an avocado
  • Hard boiled eggs, simple salad, grapes, cubed white cheddar, half an avocado
  • Cubed chicken, feta, cherry tomatoes, sliced cucumbers, a scoop of hummus, tzaziki sauce
  • Salami, ham roll-ups, provolone or mozzarella, crackers, pesto

What are your favorite cold meals and snack foods for sharing with book club friends?

Election Season!

With election season around the corner, I thought now would be a good time to discuss some books related to what’s at stake here. From the biography of a VP to YA fiction about finding your voice in the political landscape, all of these selections should stimulate a healthy conversation related to the election, voting, and policy.

cover image of These Truths We Told by Kamala Harris The Truths We Hold: An American Journey by Kamala Harris – In truth, Kamala was not my first choice for President nor for VP, but I am still happy to see her nominated. I’m also not dismissing valid critique of her prosecutorial record. All that being said, I find that a lot of people only tout the same three facts about Kamala when asked for their opinion of her politics, and those facts are often a regurgitation of whatever is circulating on Facebook and Twitter that day versus an informed opinion. While a biography is obviously a biased account and not the entire picture, I think it is a good start to hear her story in her own words.

Book Club Bonus: For book club, have everyone come prepared with some research and thoughts on her history, policy positions, and current platform.

cover image of Running by Natalia SylvesterRunning by Natalia Sylvester – Cuban American teen Mariana Ruiz has always rooted for her politician father, from back in the day in small, local elections to his run for the Senate. Everything changes when he decides to run for President: the scrutiny is Level 1000 invasive and Mariana learns some things about her dad that she doesn’t know how to process. She struggles to find her voice while viral videos and manufactured scandals threaten to undo her. What do you do when your dad stops being your hero, and how do you speak up when there is so much at stake? These are the difficult questions weighing heavy on Mari’s spirit.

Book Club Bonus: I picked this book because it feels very timely. Young people are politically engaged today in ways I frankly never was at their age and we don’t always give them proper credit for their passion, their conviction, and their activism. I hope reading this book will spark a discussion about young people’s civic engagement.

Heartland: A Memoir of Working Hard and Being Broke in the Richest Country on Earth by Sarah Smarsh – That subtitle really gets down to the meat and potatoes of this most maddening American paradox: we are the wealthiest nation in the world, but our income inequality is egregious and inexcusable. This memoir of working-class poverty in the U.S. demonstrates the tragic and maddening ways in which class shapes our country, “challenging the myths about people thought to be less because they earn less.”

Book Club Bonus: I won’t claim to be some great economist, but I have come to learn that a fractured understanding of economic policy, not to mention the insidious “immigrants took my job” narrative, are the impetus for the way a lot of people vote. These aren’t necessarily the central themes of this book, but they go hand in hand. If we’re looking for answers and solutions to the poverty level in the U.S., we need to vote for policies aimed at the real root of its cause. Discuss!

cover image of Fascism: A Warning by Madeleine Albright Fascism: A Warning by Madeline Albright – Madeleine Albright knows a thing or two about fascism; she escaped the Nazis with her family as a little girl. In this book, she discusses the rise of fascism in the 20th century by breaking down how leaders like Mussollini, Hitler, and yes, the Cheeto in Charge have all followed what really does sounds like a frightening fascist formula. If you’re like me, you might go into this thinking, “I already know this!” There’s something about seeing the facts lined up the way they are here though that really makes their similarities frighteningly clear.

Book Club Bonus: Do take some time to unpack how it isn’t just the big, overtly terrible abuses of power but also the small, incremental, and strategic moves that undermine democratic ideals. I think this is an essential conversation today for… ya know, reasons.

Suggestion Section

When it comes to talking to kids about racism and social justice, I can only imagine how hard it must be to know where to start. Enter the Speak Up Book Club.

If you’re keeping up with Tor.com’s Terry Pratchett Book Club, catch part II of the Equal Rites discussion

Crimson Wine Group and Book Club Girl, a social media and event platform of the William Morrow group, have partnered to create the Wine & Words virtual book club. You guessed it: wine + books!


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 08/20

Hola Audiophiles! Tis I, Vanessa, asking you to hold onto your butts in preparation for the new release bonanza headed our way next month. I’m going easy on you this week with four titles that caught my attention, just know that fall is coming and it’s coming in hot.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – week of August 18  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

Six Angry Girls by Adrienne Kisner, read by Khristine Hvam (contemporary YA fiction)- Raina and Millie are two down-on-their luck high school seniors dealing with breakups, crappy parents, and being dumped by their school clubs. When Raina finds new purpose in a pair of knitting needles and a politically active local yarn store, Raina inspires Millie to start a Mock Trial team of their own to rival the all-boy version that voted her out. They join forces to recruit four other angry girls and smash the patriarchy in the process.

Narrator Note: Khristine Hvam has a deep bench of audiobook credits that includes lots of Audible Originals and romance series. You may also recognize her from Lauren Beukes’s The Shining Girls and Dare Me by Megan Abbott.

The Less Dead by Denise Mina, read by Katie Leung (mystery/thriller) – When I say Dr. Margot Dunlop is going through it, I mean she’s going through it: she’s newly single, secretly pregnant, worried about her bestie’s dangerous relationship, and her adoptive mom just died. Too consumed with grief to begin emptying her mother’s house, she begins a search for her birth mother instead. She finds her aunt who has some bad news for Margot: her mother is dead and the killer is sending her threatening letters. Margot is debating whether to get involved or stay out of this mess when she receives a letter, too.

Narrator Note: Katie Leung reads the A Murder Most Unladylike Mystery series by Robin Stevens, the Penguin Classics recordings of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, and oh yeah… she played Cho Chang in the movie franchise based on those books by that author who shan’t be named. Nothing but love for you, Katie!

The Vanished Queen by Lisbeth Campbell read by Lisa Flanagan, Tristan Morris, and Vanessa Moyen (fantasy) – Queen Mirantha vanished long ago, and while her king claims she was assassinated by a neighboring king, everyone knows it was him did away with her. Reeling from the unjust execution of her father, Anza finds the queen’s diary. The words she finds therein inspire Anza to join a resistance group to overthrow the king.

Narrator Note: Lisa Flanagan reads Naomi Novik’s Spinning Silver and Juliet Grames’ The Seven or Eight Deaths of Stella Fortuna; Tristan Morris is part of the ensemble cast for Leigh Bardugo’s Six of Crows and most recently read both books in Emily Duncan’s Something Dark and Holy series.

cover image of Vicious Spirits by Kat ChoVicious Spirits by Kat Cho, read by Emily Woo Zeller (YA fantasy) – After the events of Wicked Fox, Somin just wants to help her friends pick up the pieces and heal, but Jihoon and Miyoung are both distant and grieving. Their not-so-favorite dokkaebi Junu is the only one who seems ready to move forward, and despite a rough start to their relationship, Somin and Junu can no longer fight their attraction to each other. Then they learn that the loss of Miyoung’s fox bead has caused a tear between the world of the living and the world of the dead. With ghosts flooding the streets of Seoul, the only way to repair the breach is to find the missing fox bead. That, or Miyoung will pay with her life.

Narrator Note: Have I mentioned how much I love Emily Woo Zeller? We all really love Emily Woo Zeller.

Latest Listens

I almost saved this week’s listen for another day because I feel like I’m All Romance All the Time in my reading lately. Looking back though, I think I’ve recommended a decent mix of reads. Maybe? What do you all want to see more of? More backlist listens? Different genres? Shoot me an email and lemme know!

As for today, lemme tell you about Farrah Rochon’s The Boyfriend Project. This is the first in a new series about three women who become instabesties after the live Tweeting of a terrible date leads them to an unfortunate discovery. Turns out they’ve all been catfished by a three-timing jerk face punk! In the wake of their newfound viral fame, Samiah, London, and Taylor bond over Moscow mules and make a no-dating pact: for the next six months, they’ll take a break from men and dating to focus on themselves.

For Samiah, that means finally developing the app she’s been working on for far too long. But of course the universe has an interesting sense of humor, because it decides this would be a good time to bring a sexy piece of man candy named Daniel Collins to Samiah’s office. She’s instantly attracted and it’s clear that he is too, but she just made this pact and doesn’t even really have time for love! Then again, maybe she does, although… is Daniel really as wonderful as he seems?

This romance rings a lot of my bells: an amazing portrayal of female friendship, women of color thriving in their occupations, deliberate requests for consent, and some wonderful steamy scenes. It also dives into the microaggressions Black women face in any workplace, but specifically their struggles in STEM. Samiah is confident in what she brings to the table but also knows damn well that she has to work twice as hard to be considered half as good. I love that she isn’t afraid to check Daniel when he doesn’t immediately recognize that his experience as a biracial man is not identical to hers, and that he gets it when she calls him out.

The audiobook is read by Je Nie Fleming and I’m going to need to spend more time with her very soon. All of the dialogue flowed so effortlessly, and the personality she breathed into Samiah, London, and Taylor’s parts was just the most chef’s kiss! The sections that feature those three felt so real, like I was listening in on an actual conversation between women I’d want to be friends with. They’re supportive, uplifting, funny, smart, and firmly rooted in their sense of self worth.

If you’re in the mood for a guaranteed HEA that explores workplace dynamics, the experience of being a Black woman in a male-dominated field, and that features a truly delightful friendship between empowered women, pick this one up.

From the Internets

Have you heard? Spotify wants a bigger piece of the audiobooks pie, and they’re hiring.

Free audiobooks for kids for Audible users

Over at the Riot

Work more audiobooks into your life by diving into crafts.

“It’s past time we transitioned from viewing audiobooks as a matter of luxury to a matter of accessibility.” Here’s an important reminder that audiobooks aren’t just a life hack.

I loooove this list of LGBTQ YA audiobooks to listen to in the second half of 2020. Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas made my little Mexican heart so full.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 08/19

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. How’s it going, amigxs? I’m over here sweating in places I won’t name and watching my skin explode in a phenomenon I now know as maskne, but we’re entering one of the most bountiful release seasons I’ve seen in awhile, and that is pretty exciting. Let’s talk about how we can support those authors with our book club endeavors, shall we?

To the club!!

Nibbles and Sips

It’s… so hot here on the West Coast. My brain is a little fried, so I’m taking a week off from my usual nibbles & sips programming and encouraging everyone to drink lots and lots of water.

Book Club Gets Virtually Eventful

On Monday, I came across this Buzzfeed roundup of virtual author events going on this week. I wrote down a few I’d love to get in on, then I got to thinking about how hard it has to be for authors promoting books, especially debuts, in the middle of a pandemic. It’s tough enough to get to the point of publication and even tougher to make a big splash on a good day! Add in the cancellation of most in-person events and you have quite the challenge on your hands.

So this week, I want to encourage you and your book club to pick a book coming out sometime in 2020, buy it if that’s within your means, then track down a virtual event for that book if possible. If you can get in on a preorder, you may even score some cool book swag with your purchase! This feeds two birds with one scone: you’ll be supporting the author both with your dollars and by ensuring the author isn’t alone on that Zoom call, and the “work” of organizing a book club meeting will practically be done for you.

First: some tips for finding virtual author events

  • Follow the author on social media, especially Instagram where so many of these kinds of announcements are made
  • Check your local indie’s calendar of virtual events
  • Look up literary festivals since many of these have now gone online

And now for some book recs! These are just a few suggestions I’m particularly excited about, but again: there are so. many. books. coming out this fall.

Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas – I marked and remarked this release in bright green highlighter on my calendar when its earlier release date was pushed from early summer to fall (thanks, Rona!). It’s a debut work of paranormal YA about a trans boy who wants more than anything for his super traditional Latinx family to accept his true gender. To prove that he’s a brujo, he performs a ritual with the help of his BFF to find the ghost of his murdered cousin and set it free. Problem: the ghost he summons kind of refuses to leave, and also he’s super dreamy. This book made mi corazon Mexicano just so, so full. (September 1)

Book Club Bonus: Aiden is very active on the socials and has started to announce all kinds of fun stuff! I’m already signed up for their virtual event through Powell’s next month where they’ll be in conversation with Adam Silvera. Yay! They will also be a part of the Latinx Kidlit Book Festival with this absolutely ridiculous lineup of authors: Lilliam Rivera, Zoraida Cordova, Mark Oshiro, Meg Medina, Tehlor Kay Mejia, Daniel Jose Older, Elizabeth Acevedo, Anna-Marie McLemore… my brain, it explodes!

When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole – Many of you already know and love Alyssa Cole as a romance writer, as you should! If you don’t know about her yet, take a lil detour here first, then pick up her mystery/thriller debut. Described as a mashup of Rear Window and Get Out, this is a thriller set in a Brooklyn neighborhood in which gentrification takes on a sinister new meaning… (September 1)

Book Club Bonus: Alyssa Cole hosts a regular romance event through Loyalty Bookstore! Date Night with Alyssa Cole is currently a digital series featuring a diverse group of Romance writers and takes place every other Friday at 6PM ET.

Never Look Back by Lilliam Rivera – This is a YA retelling of the Orpheus  and Eurydice myth by my beloved Lilliam Rivera, the author who won me all the way over in Dealing in Dreams when she named the girl gang Las Malcriadas. This reimagining is set in the Bronx and features Afro-Latinx characters, giving me major Pride vibes in the best possible way. (September 15)

Book Club Bonus: Catch Lilliam at the Latinx Kidlit Book Festival as mentioned above! You can also catch her next week at Lo’ Mas Lit Book Club (that name is everything!) with Elizabeth Acevedo, Natalia Sylvester, and Jenn de Leon in conversation with Angie Cruz. What I wouldn’t give to share a meal with this crew!

Suggestion Section

Reese Witherspoon announced her first ever YA book club pick. Congrats, Leah! Get that shine!

Tor.com’s Terry Pratchett Book Club discusses Equal Rights, Part i


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 08/13

Hola Audiophiles! I am pleased to report that I have finished Araminta Hall’s latest release and did not have to chuck this book at a wall, tempted as I was at the end. It’s a messy book in a great and infuriating way and I’m excited to talk about it!

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – August 13  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

By Force Alone by Lavie Tidhar, read by Ralph Lister – Take Arthurian legend, throw it in the blender, add some kerosene, and light a match, and you’ll maybe arrive at the wild subversiveness of Lavie Tidhar’s latest literary creation. No one, and I do mean no one, is likable in this version: the Knights of the Round Table are all out for themselves, Merlin is a butt face who feeds off conflict, and even the Lady of the Lake is a shady arms dealer. Yeah! You read that right! Woven into lot of violence and humor is a pretty searing critique of Brexit and that’s where this book hooked me. Make sure to read the afterword: it explains how and why Tidhar twisted this venerated story to point out the hypocrisy of nationalism.

Narrator Note: Ralph Lister most recently read Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell, I’ve heard lots of good things!

Veritas A Harvard Professor, a Con Man, and the Gospel of Jesus’s Wife, by Ariel Sabar, read by Robert Petkoff – Dr. Karen King was a venerated scholar and professor at Harvard’s Divinity School. She was THE deal in her field, which is why she made a big ol splash when she stood up at a conference near the Vatican to be all, “Okay so I have in my possession a fragment of papyrus in which Jesus refers to Mary Magdalene as his wife. Discuss!” The discovery was huge because it proved that Mary Magdalene wasn’t “just some prostitute” but Jesus’ literal life partner, shattering the idea of celibacy as a requirement for church leadership and condemning the exclusion of women in those roles. What follows next is a blend of supreme investigative journalism that reads like a detective novel as Ariel Sabar explores how Dr. King was duped against all odds and the scandal that ensued.

Narrator Note: If you loved the audiobook for Hollow Kingdom, then Robert Petkoff is your guy!

Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything by Raquel Vasquez Gilliland, read by Inés del Castillo – An adventure with elements of magical realism based in Mexican American cosmology with a sex-positive storyline told from a young woman’s perspective? Oh I’m all over that! It’s been three years since Sia Martinez’ mom was deported thanks to a racist sheriff in her tiny Arizona town. Her mom tried to cross the Sonoran on foot to reunite with her family and went missing along the way, and it’s presumed that she died on that harrowing journey. Sia grieves her mother daily but has a special tradition every new moon wherein she drives into the desert to light candles for her. Imagine her surprise when a giant spaceship crashes in front of her during one of these special rituals, and that spaceship is carrying none other than her very alive mother.  (TW sexual and racial trauma, racist language)

Narrator Note: Inés del Castillo is doing a ton of audio work right now, too. You may recognize her from A Taste of Sage by Yaffa S. Santos or Catherine House by Elisabeth Thomas.

Latest Listens

cover image of Imperfect Women by Araminta HallImperfect Women is a ride, yo. At the beginning of the book, we know that the uber wealthy and stunningly gorgeous Nancy has gone missing. It’s not long before she’s found dead, leaving behind a husband, a teenaged daughter and her two best friends: Mary, a wife and mother to three children, and Eleanor, who remains single and whose job at a charity routinely takes her all over the world.

Nancy’s death is very quickly determined to be the result of foul play but the identity of her killer is unclear. As the search for answers ensues and motives for killing Nancy surface left and right, Eleanor and Mary realize they may not have known their friend as well as they thought they did, nor do they really know each other or themselves.

I’ll start off by saying that this thriller is, for me at least, way more about the whydunnit than the whodunnit. I was still going back and forth about the killer until pretty much the end and though I did eventually guess it, the juiciest bits of the book are the ones that dive into the secret lives of women: how a well-polished appearance can obfuscate dark truths and unhappiness, the ways in which women are silenced and gaslit by the very people who are supposed to uplift them, how society claims to venerate motherhood and childrearing yet utterly fails to support women both in the home and in the workspace. It asks that really uncomfortable question: how well can you ever really know a person? Dive into this book and get ready to contemplate lots of moral grey area as you learn more and more unsavory bits about each of the characters’ imperfect lives.

Of course there’s the narration and I give that a thumbs up, too. Helen Keeley very deftly portrayed each character with distinction and tonal variety and just has one of those pleasant English accents my basic self loves so much.

From the Internets

POPSUGAR rounded up celebrity memoir audiobooks narrated by the authors themselves. Several titles are sort of predictable (but still fabulous): Born A Crime, Becoming, Kitchen Confidential (*takes a moment to sob*), but I hope more people will pick up personal faves like Steve Martin’s Born Standing Up and Gabourey Sidibe’s This Is Just My Face.

From The Guardian: why the rise of audiobooks is a story worth telling. (Say it with me now, Audiophiles: “Duh!”)

Libro.fm is killing it with these recent interviews: catch their convo with Silvia Moreno-Garcia and Stephen Graham Jones. Side note: these two wildly talented people have clearly conspired to prevent us from sleeping at night in 2020.

Over at the Riot

Bring on the drama! The family drama, that is.

What’s your audiobook speed? I have never ever been able to listen comfortably at anything above a 1.5 without feeling like I’m listening to Alvin and the Chipmunks (or las ardillitas if you grew up Mexican like me).

A little reinforcement of why audiobooks rock.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club 08/12

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. This week I’d like to remind everyone to get outside if you’re able and it’s safe to do so. Summer is starting to wind down (queue Lana del Rey’s “Summertime Sadness”), so I’m determined to absorb all the Vitamin D and get as much outside air in these lungs as I can. When my anxiety creeps back up or I’m overcome by the stuck-in-the-house blues, I feel almost instantly better after going for a walk or sitting in a park for as little as 30 minutes. So let this be a reminder to get outside if you too are feeling all the things. Bring your book club buddies and some nibbles, too.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I celebrated a friend’s birthday yesterday with a social distance picnic at one of our favorite parks. I packed a simple lunch of sandwiches, chips, and rosemary lemonade—it was perfect, if I do say so myself!

I know what you’re thinking: “Woman, I know how to make a sandwich.” Yes! But! To some a sandwich is just meat, cheese, bread—and sometimes that is all you need. But your flavor fairy bookmother is here to remind you to step up your between-the-bread game. Start with good bread, meats and cheeses: I got a hearty loaf from a local bakery, some ham and capicola, a little provolone, and a nice sharp cheddar. But don’t forget the spreads, sauces, and toppings! I brought a whole bunch of stuff for everyone to build their sando to their liking: lettuce, tomato, red onion, avocado, pepperoncinis, jalapeños, mayo, dijon mustard, and red wine vinaigrette. The possibilities are endless, just take a few extra minutes to pack them up.

Now for the beverage: there is nothing quite as satisfying as a nice, tart lemonade on a hot summer day. I tossed together the juice of about a dozen lemons, water to taste, a quick rosemary simple syrup for sweetness (sugar, water, rosemary, heat, pow!). And because I promised my friend some birthday bourbon, in the bourbon went.

No Theme. Just Books.

I couldn’t think of a theme to tie these books together, friends. I just think you should read them because they’re really great reads and have lots of discussion potential.

By Force Alone by Lavie Tidhar – This is an Arthurian retelling unlike any I have ever read. No one is particularly likable: the Knights of the Round Table are all sort of out for themselves, Merlin is a jerk who feeds off violence and conflict, even the Lady of the Lake is a shady arms dealer. I’m sorry.. what?! Out there as this premise sounds, stay with it; it’s a really smart (and violent and funny and the most subversive) critique of Brexit. Make sure to read the afterword, then discuss how Tidhar’s twisting of such a venerated story works to point out the hypocrisy of nationalism.

Disfigured: On Fairy Tales, Disability, and Making Space by Amanda Leduc – Oh my gatos, this own voices book on disability in fairy tales was a wake up call. You may think you know that the fairy tales of the West have major ableist tones, but reading this book really aims a floodlight at all that’s problematic. Able-bodied privilege has kept many of us from thinking critically about the implications of ableist messaging in these beloved stories, from those of the Brothers Grimm to Hans Christian Andersen to Disney. The villains are either disfigured in some way or disability is doled out as a punishment. The princesses and princes who find love aren’t ever disabled, or if they are, it’s after their hideous disfigurement has been shaken off. Discuss all the ways in which disabled representation frankly just sucks, and how so much of our society’s approach to disability focuses on curing it rather than making spaces (and not just physical ones) accessible for disabled people.

Take A Hint, Dani Brown by Talia Hibbert – I knew I wanted to include this book after a particular corner of the internet lost its ever loving mind over the song “WAP.” This newsletter isn’t the space for me to go on the stop-policing-women’s-pleasure-and-sit-down-if-you-never-had-a-problem-with-men-rapping-about-the-same-thing rant I have in my soul, so instead I’ll recommend a romance novel—and series, really—that portrays women (emphatically!) owning their sexuality. The titular character of Take A Hint, Dani Brown is a queer Black woman who openly likes to get hers, and her hottie love interest is a former pro rugby player coping with mental health struggles. It was so refreshing to see each of these characters exploring issues so often hush-hushed and shamed by society. It’s also just a super fun take on the fake relationship trope with some very steamy sexy time scenes. This is excellent on audio with narration by Ione Butler. Just.. maybe be careful if you’re listening to it loudly in your car and you’re at a stoplight next to a family in a Subaru, or else be prepared for shocked expressions when Dani starts going on about her throbbing lady parts… I’ve heard that can happen. Discuss!

Suggestion Section

Pick a title from this list of books to inspire confidence, especially if your book club members are feeling a little out of sorts these days. I go back to the Year of Yes a lot years after reading it, especially the part about saying yes to saying no.

Also up at the Riot right now: this roundup of books for a more inclusive approach to learning US history. I like to call this “WTF reading” because I dare you to read any one of these books and not mutter “what the f@%#?” to yourself at least once. When your club sits down to discuss it, take turns sharing how much of what you read was or was not taught to each of you in school, or what version of that history you got instead.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
Audiobooks

Audiobooks 08/06

Hola Audiophiles! I am fresh off a quarantine sojourn by the beach and feel so revived! The salty beach air, bonfires on the sand, and cocktails in the sunshine were just what I needed to shake off some of the pandemic blues. In other good news, this week brings lots of books I’m really excited to talk about, so let’s dive on in.

Ready? Let’s audio.


New Releases – August 4  (publisher descriptions in quotes)

Auntie Poldi and the Handsome Antonio by Mario Giordano, read by Matt Addis (mystery) – I’ve described the titular Auntie Poldi as Sophia Petrillo if she were Polish and way more drunk. If you don’t know, now you know: that is glowing praise indeed. This relatively cozy series follows Auntie Poldi, who’s chosen to spend her retirement in Sicily in search of sun, romance, and a steady supply of wine. She just keeps on finding crimes to go sticking her nose in though, and this latest installment brings her into contact with both the mafia and her lying cheat of an ex-husband.

Narrator Note: Matt Addis has narrated the other books in this series and is just so pleasant to listen to!

lobizonaLobizona by Romina Garber, read by Sol Madariaga (YA fantasy) – This is the first in a new series that I am 18 different kinds of excited about! It infuses folklore (werewolves!!) in an immigration story and that is how you hook me. Manuela is undocumented and running from her father’s Argentine crime-family, so she’s kept a low profile and confined herself to a small Miami apartment. When her surrogate grandmother is attacked and her mother arrested by ICE, Manu goes searching for answers about her past with a mysterious “Z” emblem as her only clue. The search takes her to a secret world straight out of Argentine folklore where brujas and werewolves exist, and down a path that reveals the terrifying truth of Manu’s heritage. It’s not just her residency, but her very existence that is illegal.

Narrator Note: Sol Madariaga is a trilingual actress originally from Argentina and that makes me SO happy. The Argentine Spanish accent is so unique and I love getting to hear it spoken authentically!

The Death of Vivek Oji by Akwaeke Emezi, read by Yetide Badaki anf Chukwudi Iwuji (fiction) – In a town in southeastern Nigeria, a mother discovers her son’s Vivek’s body wrapped in colorful fabric at her doorstep. Vivek is a bit of an enigma to his family, a spirit that’s both gentle and mysterious. He suffers occasional blackouts and moments of disconnection, a condition that exacerbates as he enters adulthood. Vivek’s closest friend is Osita, “the worldly, high-spirited cousin whose teasing confidence masks a guarded private life. As their relationship deepens—and Osita struggles to understand Vivek’s escalating crisis—the mystery gives way to a heart-stopping act of violence in a moment of exhilarating freedom.” This is the latest from the author of Pet, a book much loved around these parts.

Narrator Note: This duo! Chukwudi Iwuji has read both The Fishermen and An Orchestra of Minorities by Chigozie Obioma, and you may recognize Yetide Badaki from Nnedi Okorafor’s Akata Witch series.

cover image of Imperfect Women by Araminta HallImperfect Women by Araminta Hall, read by Helen Keeley (mystery/thriller) – I somehow missed that Araminta Hall had a new book coming this year! I am a huge fan of Our Kind of Cruelty, her polarizing thriller from a couple of years ago that I 100% hurled at the wall upon completion. In this latest book, rich and pretty Nancy Hennessy is murdered. She leaves behind her two best friends, a loving husband and a daughter… and a secret lover whose identity she takes to the grave. As the investigation into her death falls apart and her friends try to cope with their grief, they learn how little they knew about their friend…and each other…and themselves.

Narrator Note: This will be my first Helen Keeley performance, but I really enjoy everything I’ve heard in samples. She’s got quite a prolific catalog of titles that I believe were originally pubbed in the UK. If you like crisp English accents, you’ll probably enjoy her style.

Latest Listens

I’m in the middle of Amanda Leduc’s Disfigured: On Fairy Tales, Disability, and Making Space. Its just over 8 hours, but I’m taking a little longer with it to go back and re-listen to certain sections. It’s not exactly breaking news that the fairy tales popularized by Disney and other segments of Western culture have major ableist tones, but reading this book has really magnified my privilege as an able-bodied person. So much of what I’m learning seems sort of obvious, but the truth is that my privilege has kept me from thinking critically about the message and implications of ableist messaging in these stories.

Think about it: the baddies are almost always disfigured in some way, or disability is doled out as a punishment. The princesses and princes who find love aren’t ever disabled, or if they are, it’s after their hideous disfigurement has been miraculously healed. As an adult, I’ve spent a lot of time talking about representation and how I never saw myself in the fairy tales I loved so much. This book is a reminder that disabled people have been left out of the equation even more egregiously, or worse: they’ve often been made the bad guy.

I’m not done with this one yet, but I feel pretty confident recommending it. Amanda Leduc is disabled so the book is own voices, and she appears to have taken great care to use language and context that is sensitive to both the disabled community at large and her sources’ individual preferences. The narration by Amanda Barker is so natural and conversational in tone that I forgot it wasn’t the author herself doing the narrating!

From the Internets

at The Guardian: Now You’re Talking! The Best Audiobooks, Chosen by Writers

This roundup of new romance audiobooks from Audiofile reminds me that I really need to pick up some Nalini Singh.

The latest from Listen Together, Libro.fm’s audiobook club

Over at the Riot

It’s Women in Translation Month! Here are some excellent audiobooks that fit the bill.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with with all things audiobook or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – 8/5

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. It’s August (I know, I know, deep breaths) and that means it’s officially Women in Translation month! I have three thrilling reads for you to explore in book clubs that I promise you’ll have lots to say about.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I just finished the audiobook of Alexis Hall’s Boyfriend Material, a delightful fake relationship romance with a splash of enemies-to-lovers that I simply loved to pieces! The main character’s (hilarious) French rock star mom makes a special curry that sounds quite, err, “special” indeed! It put a curry craving in my head though, so I whipped up what I’m calling my Lazy Curry while listening. It’s a pressure cooker recipe and not very authentic (don’t at me!), but it’s quick and packed full of flavor.

Throw 1.5 pounds of chicken breast (or thighs if you prefer) into the Instant Pot, then dump in a can of coconut milk and the following seasonings and spices:

  • 1.5 teaspoons of salt
  • 3 teaspoons curry powder,*
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • ½ teaspoon ground ginger
  • Black pepper to taste (I use about 1/4 teaspoon)
  • Cayenne to taste

Cook on high pressure for five minutes; if desired, take the chicken out of the liquid and chop or shred, then add back to the pot and toss in some veggies of choice. I use half an onion, a red bell pepper, and a green bell pepper, all sliced into strips, then cook for one more minute to soften the veggies. Top with some chopped cilantro and boom! Quick and easy meal. Goes well with a heaping bowl of jasmine rice.

*Didya know curry powder isn’t an authentic Indian spice? Not even a little! Curry is a pre-made spice mix that includes “Indian” spices and it’s basically a thing British people made up. It is however tasty and comes in handy for stuff like this. I use this version here, more or less: adjust to your taste buds.

Get Lost in Translation

All of these books come to you from my TBR (and in one case my DNF file, but not because the book was bad). They’re all thrilling reads written—and in some cases also translated—by women. They each explore big themes like class, misogyny, homophobia, marital discord… I’m talking meaty, folks. Dive in and celebrate women in translation!

The Memory Police by Yōko Ogowa, translated from Japanese by Stephen Snyder – On an unnamed island off an unnamed coast, everyday objects disappear at random. Then the disappearances escalate in severity, and the draconian Memory Police are committed to ensuring that what’s lost stays that way. When a young novelist discovers that her editor may be the Memory Police’s latest target, she offers to hide him under the floorboards of her home. As despair closes in around them, the pair cling to her writing in a desperate attempt to preserve the past. This book won or was shortlisted for so many awards last year and comes highly recommended from several Rioters.

Hurricane Season by Fernanda Melchor, translated from Spanish by Sophie Hughes – Listen, this book is not for the faint of heart—I had to put it down because it just contains all the triggers, but want to spread the word about this rising star in Mexican lit. After the death of the town witch, the investigation that follows reveals some dark truths about the unreliable inhabitants of this small Mexican village. Fernanda Melchor does not look away from the ways this community has been ravaged by drug abuse, poverty, alcoholism, homophobia, and misogyny, but rather looks them straight in the face and calls them out by name. If you can handle dark, violent content, and I know many of you can, pick up this gut-punch of a book.

The Hole by Hye-Young Pyun, translated from Korean by Sora Kim-Russell – I added this psychological thriller to my TBR when I saw it on this list of Korean lit in translation for fans of the movie Parasite. A man named Oghi wakes up in the hospital after a violent car accident kills his wife and leaves him both paralyzed and disfigured. His mother-in-law assumes responsibility for his care and takes him home, then basically abandons him to go dig a giant hole in the yard where her daughter’s garden used to be. Then she digs another hole, and another, and yet another, providing no explanation other than that she’s finishing what her daughter started. Totally normal! Oghi becomes obsessed with finding a way to escape and is forced to grapple with some very uncomfortable truths about his troubled marriage—and the toll it took on his wife.

Suggestion Section

Because sometimes you really, really need this: an email template to break up with your book club.

Here are the latest book club picks from Oprah, Vox, and Good Morning America.

Pair your book club read with recipes based on genre!

These books well on their way to becoming feminist classics would make excellent book club selections. I see women of color, celebrations of female friendship, romance—not your mother’s feminist reading list.

Disclaimer: this one’s behind a paywall (unless you haven’t yet maxed out on your free NYT views like I have): a look at Black book clubs then and now.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa