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Today In Books

Nobody Gets Married: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by The Art of Losing by Lizzy Mason and Soho Press.


Nobody Gets Married

Give me all of the fairytale retellings with a modern, progressive twist, especially if they’re written by Rebecca Solnit. Cinderella Liberator is a retelling of the fairy tale classic where “nobody gets married, nobody becomes a princess, the prince needs liberation too.” It’s out on May 7th and I want, want, want.

Better Late than Never in our Happily Ever Afters

The Romance Writers of America (RWA) may finally be getting with the program: they’ve posted a job opening for an Outside Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion Consultant. Here’s hoping the next 20 years of RITA awards won’t be marred by such abysmal BIPOC representation.

Nnedi Okorafor, Doer of All the Things

Need Okorafor has been slaying us for years with books like the Binti trilogy and Akata Witch. We now know that in addition to developing Octavia Butler’s Wild Seed with Viola Davis, Okorafor is also creating her own TV company. The name? Africanfuturism Productions, Inc. Keep killing’ it, Nnedi.

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Audiobooks

The Good, The Bad, and The Meh of Narration

Hola Audiophiles!

As with this week’s In the Club newsletter, this edition of Audiobooks comes to you from a sleep-deprived, dewy-skinned person who looks a lot like me, sitting in a hotel patio in some serious Miami humidity trying to crank out some revisions before she hops on a cruise to Cuba.

This humidity is no joke, y’all! I’ll suffer the sheen of sweat for the glow it gives my skin but this hair…. it is multiplying by the second. Who cares though! It’s vacation time. I’ve got my audiobooks locked and loaded and am ready for some serious R&R. 

But first… let’s audio.


Sponsored by Oasis Audio and The Ravenwood Saga by Morgan L. Busse.

Lady Selene is heir to the House of Ravenwood and the secret family gift of dreamwalking—the ability to enter a person’s mind and manipulate their greatest fears or desires. Soon Selene discovers her family’s dark secret: The Ravenwood women are using their gift for hire to plot assassinations. Selene is torn between upholding her family’s legacy or seeking the true reason behind her family’s gift. Her dilemma comes to a head when she is tasked with assassinating the one man who can bring peace to the nations, but who will also bring about the downfall of her own house.


Latest Listens

I did end up finishing Nocturna by Maya Motayne, narrated by Kyla Garcia, a Latinx-inspired fantasy trilogy that comes out in May. It’s about a prince grieving the loss of the brother who was taken from him in a failed coup and who should have been the heir to the throne. The prince isn’t convinced that his brother is dead so much as kidnapped and goes to some sketchy lengths to get him back, unleashing an ancient, deadly power in the process that he must now do all he can to destroy. He’s accompanied by the mysterious face-shifting thief he meets at a high-stakes card game, who accompanies him reluctantly but ends up being an invaluable partner in this quest.

Overall, I loved the story! It was great to spend some time in a magical word where the spells are commands spoken in Spanish and where characters use the descriptor maldito quite profusely. I can’t wait to see where else the story goes in the next two books.

I do however wonder if maybe I’m running into an issue that I’ve long suspected might be a problem for me in listening to fiction on audio: I don’t think I’m as emotionally impacted when I do audio vs print! This might come down to narration; thinking back to On the Come Up by Angie Thomas, narrator Bahni Turpin really does the thing. She had me tearing up a few times with her passionate rendition of Bri. Kyla Garcia does perfectly fine job with Nocturna but I don’t think I really felt some of those scenes in my chest like I might have if I’d been reading it in print. Does anyone else have this issue?? Discuss.

Listens on Deck

Nothing new to add here since I’m about to get on a boat. Here’s a recap on the books I hope to tackle this trip:

  • Save Me the Plums by Ruth Reichl: when food writer goddess Ruth Reichl writes a food memoir, you read that sh*t. Narrated by Ruth on audio… check please!
  • The Editor by Stephen Rowley, narrated by Michael Urie – a struggling writer in 90s NYC gets his big break with the help of some lady named Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

From the Internets, Etc

Audiofile Magazine has a piece up on their blog on poets and audiobooks. It features discussion of work my Maria Popova, Richard Blanco, and Leonard Cohen. So rad.

Over at the Riot

Speaking of the power of a good narrator… Rioter Heather Bottoms wrote a great piece on some of her favorite audiobook narrators. She has a background in theater so you know she appreciates a good voice actor.

Over at the Book Riot YouTube channel, I share some vacation reading tips that clearly involve audiobooks because duh.


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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In The Club

A Zombie Threat Might Not Be Imminent, but…

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

Hola, friends! I am wrapping this newsletter on the patio of a hotel in Miami en route to Cuba, trying really hard to see the layer of dew on my skin as a “natural glow” and not just the sheen of sweat that 80% humidity will give a person. Same difference, I guess?? I’m working on about three hours sleep and I’m not sure how I’m standing, but with a little cafe con leche, a good book, and plenty of sea, sand & sunshine in my future, I’m one happy girl.

Before I shut this laptop for a week, let’s talk survival skills, craft nights, some bookish getting-to-know-you things and more. To the club!


This newsletter is sponsored by Lawn Boy by Jonathan Evison, now in paperback from Algonquin Books.

a man in overalls standing on a ladder, trimming a giant green hedgeNow in paperback, acclaimed author Jonathan Evison’s Lawn Boy introduces us to recently fired landscaper Mike Muñoz as he tries and tries again to find the prosperity that is his American birthright. Mike battles with class and cultural discrimination, as well as his own self-confidence, as he learns to stand up for his future. “In Lawn Boy, at once a vibrant coming-of-age novel and a sharp social commentary on class, Evison offers a painfully honest portrait of one young man’s struggle to overcome the hand he’s been dealt in life and reach for his dreams. It’s a journey you won’t want to miss, with an ending you won’t forget.” ─Kristin Hannah


Question for the Club

Don’t forget: you have until Monday, April 22nd to send your responses to the current QFTC. Remember to send your replies to vanessa@riotnewmedia.com!

In case you forgot the question:

Book Club Craft Corner

Trader Joe’s already gets a substantial portion of my paycheck; where else can I get well-priced cheese, non-boring salads, and a pretty tasty canned rosé?!? Well they’ve apparently given us all yet another reason to hand over our monies: bookish greetings cards!

Book Club Bonus: This Trader Joe’s post has me thinking it might be fun to do a book club + craft night. Gather round for book chat, have a bit and a sip, then bust out the paints and colored pencils to make bookish greeting cards of your own. If greeting cards aren’t your bag, you could also make bookmarks. Go with the crafting flow and have a little something to take home after book club.

We Didn’t Start the Fire…Those Book Club Kids Did

Hillcrest High School in Country Club Hills, Illinois has this book club thing figured out. To get students hype for reading Kat Falls’ Inhuman, librarian Lisa Walsh has her students learning survival skills that might come in handy if they found themselves in a dystopian zombiepocalypse like the one in the book. They’re out here learning everything from how to tell a poisonous plant from one with healing properties to how to start a fire. How cool is that??

Book Club Bonus: Let’s learn from these brilliant librarians and teens and have our own Survivor: Book Club Edition! I for one am sorely lacking in a lot of those basic survival skills and could stand to learn them. A zombie threat might not be imminent, but a girl could go camping one day, you know?! You don’t have to go with apocalypse survival skills though; apply the same idea to whatever theme you select. Learn to bake, learn to cook, learn to change a tire or the oil in a car… use your book pick as inspiration and see where it takes you.

Playing Favorites

I know I’m a bookseller, but I have to confess: I feel like a babbling mess whenever I go to pitch a book that doesn’t fit neatly in one category! In the latest episode of Recommended, Elizabeth McCracken and our very own Rincey Abraham each recommend a favorite read that’s a little hard to categorize. They are thankfully both much smoother at it than your girl.  

Book Club Bonus: Speaking of favorites and reading recs, I love getting to know a person by reading a book that they recommend. While I think most of us try to find selections that no one in book group has read before, but how about deliberately going back to our faves?  Take turns reading your club members’ most beloved reads and see what fun (or maybe dark & twisty, who knows!) things you find out about each other. Mea culpa in advance if you find out your book buddies are some weirdos. Whoops….

Suggestion Section


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, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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Today In Books Uncategorized

Is this a Veronica Mars Trailer or an Eye Cream Ad?: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by our $100 Amazon gift card giveaway! Enter here.


Is this a Veronica Mars Trailer or an Eye Cream Ad?

People of the Marshmalloverse, prepare thyselves: we have a premiere date for the Veronica Mars reboot! Hulu will premiere the eight episode series revival on July 26th and has gifted us with a teaser. I’m so pumped after watching that trailer, and super tryna get the deets on that Kristen Bell skincare routine. Has she aged at all??!?

No I’ll Blow YOUR House down, Mr. Wolf

A school in Barcelona has nixed some 200 classic children’s books from its library, citing toxicity in their portrayal of gender roles as the reason for the pull. I’ll be the first to admit feeling seven kinds of ick when I think about the awful messages in faves like Sleeping Beauty. Nothing says consent like an unconscious makeout sesh! This feels like a huge step in the right direction.

A Book A Day Equals 300K

You already know that reading aloud to the kiddos is a good thing; there’s the bonding, the entertainment, the early introduction to literacy for their tiny spongey brains. Well here are some actual numbers for you on the benefits: it turns out a kindergartener who is read one book a day knows almost 300,000 more words than one whose parents don’t read to them. That’s a lot of words!

Categories
Audiobooks

A Slightly Delusional Reading Plan

Hola Audiophiles!

The time has finally come! My Cuba trip is but days away and your girl really, really needs to pack. Books are of course one of my favorite parts about traveling, so today I’ll be sharing some of my vacation listens. I also go on for a little while about my latest listen, hope you’ll indulge me and my bookish feelings!

Let’s audio.


Sponsored by Dreamscape Media, LLC and Laura Pohl’s The Last 8

Where’s the best place to go when aliens invade Earth? Area 51, of course. Clover Martinez has always been a survivor, which is the only reason she isn’t among the dead when aliens invade and destroy her planet. After discovering a group of ragtag survivors with tons of secrets, she needs to figure out who she can actually trust. This #ownvoices story features LGBT representation and some intense plot twists perfect for fans of Stranger Things and The 5th Wave. Don’t miss your chance to listen to one of the biggest releases of 2019.


Before we get to audio love, I have to rave about our new podcast Kidlit These Days! Hosted by kidlit connoisseurs Karina Yan Glaser and Matthew Winner, the show pairs the best of children’s literature with what’s going on in the world today. 

Latest Listens

queenieI recently finished Queenie by Candice Carty-Williams and I have lots of feelings! Queenie is a Jamaican British twenty-something Londoner who like so many of us at that age is a whole, entire, girl-please-get-it-together mess. She’s going through a breakup, she’s super broke, and she’s so distraught that she’s messing up at the job that she really can’t afford to lose. Reeling from the breakup and some unprocessed trauma, Queenie goes into self destruct mode until forced to confront what she’s doing and who she’s doing it for.

I almost DNFed the book in my rage over Queenie’s terrible choices and abysmal sense of self-worth, but putting the book down before Queenie could examine her pain would have been a mistake. The book touches on a lot of important topics: identity politics, the silent toxicity of untreated trauma, how mental illness and therapy are viewed in communities of color, racism as a series of tiny, maddening micro-aggressions, the fetishization of black women… I could go on. Not enough women of color get to unpack these issues in books and more space should be made for them to do so.

There are a couple of plot elements that didn’t sit super well with me. Queenie’s employer basically tells her to tone it down with all the BLM talk and in the end it’s sort of just… fine? The ex-boyfriend Tom and his family’s casual racism are mentioned and obviously terrible but not as aggressively condemned as I’d hoped (can we say gaslighting??). Still I’m glad I pushed through and allowed Queenie the same flawed coming-of-age journey most often afforded to white characters. And y’all… the book is so funny!

Listens on Deck

I board a plane on Saturday night and spend one day in Miami before heading to Cuba. I intend to eat and drink all the things, soak up the sights, and try really hard not to burn off a layer of skin. Shout out to my genetics for really screwing me on the melanin. ‘Preciate that, thanks.

As for reading, there are two cross-country flights in my future and some pool/beachside lounge time; while that makes for some solid reading time, I’m doing a thing I always do where I get real delusional about how many books to pack/download. Come on, Diaz: it’s a one week trip, not a month long reading marathon. That being said, here’s a quick and dirty sampling of my super ambitious listening plan! I won’t even list the print books I’m packing. Sssssh, it’s all fine.

  • Nocturna by Maya Motayne, narrated by Kyla Garcia – This is the first book in a Latinx-inspired fantasy trilogy: a prince accidentally unleashes an ancient, deadly power and must destroy it with the help of a face-shifting thief before it destroys the earth.
  • Save Me the Plums by Ruth Reichl: when food writer goddess Ruth Reichl writes a food memoir, you read that sh*t. Narrated by Ruth on audio… check please!
  • The Editor by Stephen Rowley, narrated by Michael Urie – a struggling writer in 90s NYC gets his big break with the help of some lady named Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis

From the Internets, Etc

George RR Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire audiobooks are now available in Spanish! I’ve been calling the series Juego de Tronos for awhile now, looks like I’m ahead of the curve. Listen to a sample here.

Here’s some food for thought: can audiobooks be the great equalizer for students with learning differences?

Thanks to the increasing popularity of audiobooks (wut wut!), the Indies Choice Awards added an Audiobook of the Year category last year. A spotlight on the finalists is up now at the Libro.fm blog.

Over at the Riot

Rioter Rachel recently brought us this sweet list of YA books to add to your spring TBR. Seeing my BFF-in-my-head Elizabeth Acevedo’s book With the Fire on High on this list made me curious to see if she’d be narrating the audiobooks like she usually does. She does indeed (listeners rejoice!) and also shares some behind-the-scenes footage of the process here. P.S.  who knew about those green apples??  


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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In The Club

Baked at Book Club: In The Club 4/10

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

It’s finally time, friends… I’m off to Cuba! I’ll be on a plane to Miami at the end of the week with Havana as my final destination. I’ve been blasting so much salsa music and reading books set in Cuba to get in the mood. Is it weird that I’m also way excited for all that reading time on the plane?!

Before I depart, let’s talk organization, cooking with cannabis, and more. To the club!


This newsletter is sponsored by Henry Holt , publisher of Trust Exercise by Susan Choi. Available now wherever books are sold.

The new novel by Pulitzer Prize finalist Susan Choi, Trust Exercise. A story about the enduring aftermath of the events of adolescence, and about the complexities of consent and coercion among teenagers and adults. Through a narrative twist, Trust Exercise raises questions about the reliability of memory and the accuracy of the stories we tell, and considers the consequences of our memories and our stories across time. One of the most anticipated new books of the year.


Question for the Club

Last week I asked at what age you all first partook in book club. While a few of you clubbed
as early on as middle school (let’s raise a glass for some seriously awesome teachers!), most folks were in their late twenties or early thirties the first time they joined. Looks like there is a lot of room for getting younger folks engaged in book club!

The next question is one I’m going to leave open for a couple of weeks, in part because this girl is at long last headed to Cuba! So take your time answering, you have until Monday, April 22nd. Remember to send your replies to vanessa@riotnewmedia.com!

Book Club: Fix My Life

Spring always does a couple of things to me: it first makes me reach for the Claritin and then sorta guilts me into doing a big spring clean. Whether you’re in the seasonal cleaning cycle or just really love to tidy up for fun, check out these 11 books on organization.

Book Club Bonus – I’m entirely too proud of myself for this next suggestion: can we use book club to KonMari somebody’s home?! Pick a person in book group with an organization project they’ve been putting off or just someone with a home in need of a little love. Read one or more organization books for book club, then use what you’ve learned to tackle that space in a group effort. Barney clean-up song optional.

Baked at Book Club

As the green stuff is legalized in more and more states, the demand for cannabis cookbooks is higher than ever AND I SWEAR I DIDN’T PLAN THAT TERRIBLE PUN! There’s something for everyone on this list of pot-themed cookbooks, no matter where your own cheffin’ skills may be.

Book Club Bonus – You may have baked for book club, but have you baked for book club? It feels like book club may just be the safe space to do it. I for one have been wanting to read up on cooking with cannabis as a means to help my abuela with pain management. Mastering this skill is one I’d love to do in the company of friends, if only to witness the most lit test kitchen ever.

Kidlit Connoisseurship

Don’t forget to check out our latest podcast Kidlit These Days! Hosts Karina Yan Glaser and Matthew Winner are your kidlit connoisseurs, pairing the best of children’s literature with what’s going on in the world today. The second episode is up now and it’s all about historical artifacts. Hooray!

Suggestion Section


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, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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Today In Books

Dead Bodies and Tiny Mortals: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by our $100 Amazon gift card giveaway! Enter here.


Dead Bodies and Tiny Mortals

Best-selling author and mortician Caitlin Doughty has a new book coming and its title is brilliantWill My Cat Eat My Eyeballs? Big Questions from Tiny Mortals About Death. She answer real questions from kids on death, dying, and dead bodies. Can Grandma have a Viking funeral? Tiny inquiring minds want to know.

Candy Canes Are Cancelled

The trailer for NOS4A2 has dropped and no I could NOT bring myself to watch it in full screen mode. The adaptation of Joe Hill’s haunting work of horror looks all kinds of creepy and wonderful. But yeah, no, never touching a candy cane again.

One Door Closes but City Hall Opens

Drag Queen Story Hour has had a lot of people in their feelings, driving many libraries to pull sponsorship and cancel the programs altogether. When this very thing happened to Atlanta drag queen Terra Cotta Sugarbaker, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms invited her to read to children at city hall instead. Don’t know what I love more here: the story itself or this positively delightful drag name.

 

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Audiobooks

Somebody Page Thursday Next: Audiobooks

Hola Audiophiles!

Happy Thursday and welcome to April! The first quarter of the month is officially behind us and spring is finally…springing! It was almost 80 degrees in San Diego this weekend and I had to remind myself that this is what I’d been asking for after the chilliest winter we’ve seen in a really long time. I just wasn’t prepared to sweat through my top while sampling nut milks at the Farmers Market!! I know, I know: I shouldn’t complain.

Enough of that: let’s get to the rest of those new books I promised you last week. These are all releases in the second half of the month. Let’s audio!


Sponsored by the audiobook edition of The Girl He Used to Know by Tracey Garvis Graves.

Jonathan and Annika first meet at chess club in college, where Jonathan loses his first game of chess, and his heart, Annika. Brilliant but shy, Annika prefers to be alone. But Jonathan accepts that about her, admiring Annika, quirks and all. Their relationship that follows is tumultuous, but strong, until an unforeseen tragedy forces them apart. A decade later, fate brings them back together… She’s a librarian and he’s a divorced Wall Street whiz seeking a fresh start. Their feelings are instantly rekindled, but until they confront the fears and anxieties that drove them apart, their second chance will end before it truly begins.


Before we begin, have you tuned into our new podcast Kidlit These Days yet? It’s hosted by author and BR contributor Karina Glaser and children’s librarian Matthew Winner, your kidlit connoisseurs, pairing the best of children’s literature with what’s going on in the world today. Give it a listen! 

New Releases (publisher’s descriptions in quotes)

miracle creekMiracle Creek by Angie Kim, narrated by Jennifer Lim (April 16)

Young and Pak Yoo live in rural Virginia where they offer a super experimental medical treatment: they heal patients of assorted medical maladies and conditions with healing “dives” in a special pressurized oxygen chamber. Sh*t hits the fan when the magic healing machine mysteriously explodes and kills two people; secrets come to light and nefarious motives are uncovered as a dramatic murder trials ensues. This exciting debut draws from the author’s own experience as a Korean immigrant and trial lawyer. She is also the mother of a real-life “submarine” patient; get ready for this one.

Normal People by Sally Rooney, narrated by Aoife McMahon (April 16)

Connell and Marianne are two teens from a rural town who are opposites in just about every way. They’re undeniably drawn to each other in spite of differences in class and personality, circling around each other, growing apart and coming together time again from high school through adulthood. “This heartbreaking narrative that delves into the potency of first loves and how people can change over time” is already killing me softly. Sounds like one of those maddeningly addicting love stories that makes me yell things at my audiobook app like, “JUST KISS ALREADY!”

The Murmur of Bees by Sofia Segovia, translated by Simon Bruini, narrated by Xe Sands and Angelo di Loreto (April 16)

It’s 1918: the Mexican Revolution is in its eighth year and the influenza epidemic is ravaging the world’s population. A baby boy is found abandoned under a bridge, scaring most of the locals in a small Mexican town with his disfigurements and the swarm of bees that follows him around. He doesn’t scare Francisco and Beatriz Morales, landowners who take him in and raise him like he was their own. They soon learn that their adopted son possesses a rare and unnatural ability, one that he will use to keep his family safe: he can see the future when he closes his eyes. “The Murmur of Bees captures both the fate of a country in flux and the destiny of one family that has put their love, faith, and future in the unbelievable.” Yay for fantastic Mexican authors in translation!

Hope for the Best by Jodi Taylor, narrated by Zara Ramm (April 23)

How am I just finding out about the Chronicles of St Mary’s series when it’s 10 books in?! Any series that “follows a group of tea-soaked disaster magnets as they hurtle their way around History” rings all my Jasper Ffordian bells. Historian Dr. Madeleine “Max” Maxwell works for St. Mary’s Institute of Historical Research, using time travel to investigate major historical events and right past wrongs in present day. In this 10th series installment, Max and the St. Mary’s team find themselves in the 16th century, tasked with unraveling the chaos that’s placed the wrong Tudor queen on the throne.

Will somebody page Thursday Next!? I think she and Max could make beautiful music together.

The Tiger at Midnight by Swati Teerdhala, narrated by Sneha Mathan (April 23)

I have many fist pumps for fantasy being set in non-European countries! Inspired by Indian history and Hindu mythology, The Tiger at Midnight is the first in a trilogy that imagines an alternate ancient India. Esha and Kunal are a rebel assassin and reluctant soldier whose paths cross one fateful night. In the midst of chaos in their war-ravaged land, the two must decide where their loyalties lie and navigate the ultimate inconvenience: an undeniable but forbidden love. Stupid love, always getting in the way.

What My Mother and I Don’t Talk About: Fifteen Writers Break the Silence by Michelle Filgate, narrated by various (April 30)

Over a decade ago, Michele Filgate sat down to write an essay on her stepfather’s abuse. It took a long time for her to realize what she really needed to write about: the abuse’s effect on her relationship with her mother. She did finally share the essay and it sort of blew up, garnering the attention of women like Rebecca Solnit and Anne Lamont. The experience gave Filgate the inspiration for this anthology, a collection of essays from fifteen writers exploring the profound impact of our relationships–the good kind, the bad kind, and everything in between–with our mothers.

The stellar list of contributors includes Leslie Jamison, Melissa Febos, Alexander Chee, Kiese Laymon, Carmen Maria Machado and more. Waaaaaant…..

A Prince on Paper by Alyssa Cole, narrated by Karen Chilton (April 30)

*whispers in shame* I’ve never read Alyssa Cole before. I’m new to romance, I have catching up to do in the queen of inclusive historical romance’s repertoire!! This latest in the The Reluctant Royals series transports readers to Thesolo: Nya Jerami is home from New York for a wedding and winds up in bed with a celebrity prince (don’t you just hate when that happens?). That prince is Johan van Braustein, “the redheaded step-prince of Liechtienbourg,” whose antics and tomfoolery are all a ploy to distract the paparazzi and protect his brother, the heir to the throne. A fake engagement should do the trick, throwing Nya and Johan into a whirlwind fake-romance that might just be the real deal.

Cape May by Chip Cheek, narrated by George Newburn (April 30)

It’s September 1957 and Georgia native newlyweds Henry and Effie arrive in Cape May, New Jersey for their honeymoon. They find the place deserted and a bit of bust, so they decide they’ll just head home when a beguiling and mysterious set of strangers entices them to stay. Clara is a glamorous socialite, Max is a richity rich playboy, and Alma is Max’s aloof half-sister; together they rope Henry and Effie into a whirlwind of… well, gin, sexy times, and nude abandoned-town shenanigans that results in a loss of innocence and betrayal. This thrilling debut “explores the social and sexual mores of 1950s America through the eyes of a newly married couple from the genteel South corrupted by sophisticated New England urbanites.”

From the Internets

The interwebs were low on audiobooks news this week, but I did come across this very important, very serious, not-at-all-a-prank announcement: Audible is launching Audible for Fish! Headphones sold separately.  

Over at the Riot

Hey, you’re new here, right? Welcome to Audiophilia! If it’s your first time, don’t be scared. Here’s some advice for your new audio journey.  

The latest Riot Roundup is live now, our quarterly collective book-gush where we Rioters share the best books we’ve read. I rant for a solid paragraph on my love of Helen Oyeyemi’s Gingerbread which you may recall I did on audio. So good! There are a couple of other suggestions here for fantastic audiobooks–check it out!


That’s all I got today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with audiobook feedback & questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the In The Club newsletter, peep the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too! 

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

Gather Round the Snapchat: In The Club

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

It’s April! That means it’s Cuba month for me and I’m starting to get giddy about it! In the meantime, this week I’ll share a rodent-insect romance, muse on memoirs, drop new podcast news on the people, and more, all while wondering whether I am indeed a cusp millennial or solidly in that generational classification.

To the club!


Sponsored by A People’s History of Heaven by Mathangi Subramanian from Algonquin Books.

a people's history of heavenThe eagerly anticipated A People’s History of Heaven by Mathangi Subramanian centers on a circle of friends in a Bangalore slum known as Heaven. Together they wage war on the bulldozers that would bury their homes and the city that does not care. A politically driven graffiti artist. A transgender Christian convert. A blind girl who loves to dance. A queer daughter of a hijabi union leader. “This is a book to give your little sister, your mother, your best friend, yourself, so together you can celebrate the strength of women and girls, the tenacity it takes to survive in a world that would rather have you disappear.” ─Nylon


Question for the Club

Last week I asked whether your book club actively chooses books written by women and what percentage of your reading fits the bill.

  • Several responses came from members of book clubs made up entirely of women who specifically read books written by women. For them it was a yes and 100%!
  • The majority of responders said that while they don’t actively choose books written by women, 70% or more of their selection end up being by women. Not bad!

Most of you are reading tons of books by women and that is something to celebrate! If this question were instead about authors of color or reads by LGBTQIA writers: would our reading rank as highly on the inclusivity scale? (For some of you, it already does!) I challenge you all to track your reading more mindfully and see what gaps there might be in your habits. I personally find this a really fun endeavor: I love me a reading challenge!

On to the next one! As always, send your responses to vanessa@riotnewmedia.com.

Kidlit These Days

Cue the airhorns, folks: we have a new podcast! Hosted by New York Times bestselling author Karina Yan Glaser and children’s librarian and host of The Children’s Book Podcast Matthew Winner, Kidlit These Days will pair the best of children’s literature with what’s going on in the world today. Get into it!

Book Club Bonus: The show’s inaugural episode touched on an incident that absolutely incensed me last fall involving Idaho elementary school teachers and some racist costume choices (I just CANNOT). The conversation focused on the importance of inclusive children’s literature to combat a grossly misinformed and increasingly pervasive narrative surrounding Latinx immigrants. The books that Karina and Matt suggest are all ones that I’d love to see in a book club for children. Parents and guardians: gather your littles during playdates for story time and incorporate these beautiful reads to broaden their young perspectives.

Related: Planting Stories: The Life of Librarian and Storyteller Pura Belpré  taught me about a Puerto Rican folktale involving a mouse and a cockroach who are in love and I’m still not over it! Illustrator Paola Escobar managed to make one of the creatures that freaks me out most in this world cute! The whole scene in the book is just *chef’s kiss.* Seriously – read it if only to learn about mousekroach romance of Perez and Martinez.

Maybe Try a Memoir

If you’re mostly a fiction reader, you might find yourself a little hesitant to make the leap to nonfiction. Fear not! Here’s a list of fascinating memoirs to get you started; some of these stories are so wild, you’ll forget they aren’t made up.

Book Club Bonus: Many moons ago, I was one of those people who only primarily read fiction because I classed non-fic as one giant snooze fest (I know, I know! I was young and naive but have grown). If your book club has avoided non-fiction for fear of pacing and narrative issues, a page-turner memoir is a great place to start. If your club members are anything like me, they might just have one of those “Holy shitake mushrooms, truth really is stranger than fiction!” moments and seek out more nonfiction post haste.

Related: A couple of quick recs from me: I cosign Educated by Tara Westover on the memoir front. Once you’re ready for more, try Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann, Bad Blood by John Carreyrou, or The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot. At the bookstore, I call these my “what in the actual f*#%?” books, of which there are many, many more.

Millennials Ruin Everything

Lately whenever a news story comes out of Florida, I read it with one eye closed hoping it’s not hot trash (no shade to all my progressive Floridians!). I was rewarded today when I learned of a cool Florida-based book club led by two young librarians at the Mandel Public Library. The club’s name? Millennials Ruin Book Club.

Book Club Bonus:  I’ve pitched an idea similar to the structure of Millennials Ruin Book Club where everyone reads a different book and then takes turn sharing their read with the group. This may take a little away from the shared experience, but I appreciate how this looser format takes the pressure off for those with busier schedules. Do any other libraries (or other groups) out there do this sort of thing? It would be kind of cool to just have the option of showing up and talking about whatever the heck I just happened to have read.

Related: I have recently embraced the title of Elder Millennial after watching Iliza Schlesinger’s hilarious comedy special of the same name. Seriously, she took me down when she hunched over and croaked, “Gather round the Snapchat, children. I’ll tell you the tale of… the landline!”  Dead. 

Suggestion Section


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, get it on the Read Harder podcast, and watch me booktube every Friday too.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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