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In The Club

In The Club – Sept 26

Sup, book nerds! Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read. Today I’ve got book club suggestions for parents and young readers, lots more Latinx writer amazingness and I’ve even managed to work strippers into the conversation. I tried to tell you that book club was poppin, yo!

Let’s commence.


This newsletter is sponsored by The Motherhood Affidavits: A Memoir by Laura Jean Baker.

a copy of the book arranged on top of a knitted blanket next to some purple and white flowersWith the birth of her first child, professor Laura Jean Baker finds herself electrified by oxytocin, the first effective antidote to her lifelong depression. Soon her “oxy” cravings, and her family, grows—to the dismay of her husband, a freelance public defender. Baker is in an impossible bind: The drive that sustains her endangers her family. With a wrenching ending that compels us to ask whether Baker has fallen from maternal grace, her ruthless self-interrogation makes this memoir her personal affidavit.


In Prose of Parenthood – “I would look at him and feel a love so sharp, it seemed my flesh lay open. I made a list of all the things I would do for him. Scald off my skin. Tear out my eyes. Walk my feet to bones, if only he would be happy and well.” Those are some of the most beautiful words from one of my favorite books this year (Madeline Miller’s Circe), just a few of many other profound literary quotes about parenting compiled here.

  • Book Club Bonus: Squeezing in time to read a book may be easier for some than others, but I think a book club for parents – new parents, adoptive parents, parents with teens, parents dealing with loss, etc – could be an awesome act of self care. Pick a work (nonfiction or fiction, your choice), set a realistic goal for completion (because hello… #parentlife), then get together to share your thoughts on the book and your parenting journey in general. Book group meets parenting support group.

Latinx LitFic – This Hispanic Heritage Month, consider reading the work of lesser-known Latinx authors. A whole new crop of talented writers is emerging all over Latin America! Start with these three recent Latin American novels for fans of literary fiction.

  • Book Club Bonus: Kind of a no-brainer for you here: read lesser-known authors. You’ve probably (hopefully??) heard of Latinx heavyweights like Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Isabel Allende, as you should! But make space in your book club for the next wave of great authors and spread. the. word.

Girl Talk, Tech Talk – Over at Wired.com, Room to Read CEO Geetha Murali put together a list of books to get girls excited about tech. I’d argue these books are great for women of all ages, not just younger reader by any means.

  • Book Club Bonus: I see book clubs for grown folks all the time but don’t hear as much about book clubs for younger men and women. Whether structured as a parent/guardian + child book club or a meetup just for young minds, I’m into it; anything to get young readers excited about reading, learning, thinking critically, or even a potential career.

Love in this Club – I may well have already used this Usher song reference before. I am not sorry. More importantly, did you know our When In Romance podcast has a book club of its very own?? Their first pick is Butterfly Swords by Jeannie Lin and will be discussed during their October 8th episode. Nab the book and listen in; their last episode is titled “Look How We Accidentally Recommended All the Strippers” so… you’re welcome.  

  • Book Club Bonus: Trisha and Jess did indeed talk about strippers; I mean have you seen that Zoey Castille cover for Stripped? *cue Magic Mike soundtrack*. They also talked about romance writers taking the time to make consent sexy, which I am emphatically here for. The next time you incorporate a romance read into book club, pay close attention to the sexy times and discuss how consent is or is not made plain in the writing.
  • Related: A lovely piece on why women read romance novels, for those days when “Mind your business, assh*ole!” is perhaps too ragey a response to that question. #thingsivesaid

Lift Every (Own) Voice – You all know how I feel about own voices writing, right? Then you won’t be surprised to read that I have lots of muppet arms for Tirzah’s latest 3 on a YA Theme post: #OWNVOICES YA Novels Starring Latinx Teens.

  • Book Club Bonus: Once again, y’all: young people’s book club. We need diverse books! Give them to the youth.
  • Related: Are any teachers out there using a book club format for required reading? Whether inside of the classroom or after school, I’m curious if some students would feel more comfortable, compelled, invested, etc. in reading if they could discuss the books with a small group of their peers.

See the Spectrum – September 23rd was Bi Visibility Day and Danika Ellis has a great list of books for you featuring bisexual women. These reads are obvi great any ol’ time of year, as is the importance of people all across the sexuality spectrum being seen year round.

  • Book Club Bonus: Take the time to read books with bisexual characters and then discuss how they either nail or fail in their depiction. Break down how society differs in its handling of bisexuality in men vs women – this should give you plenty to discuss. Spoiler: heteronormativity is stupid.

Thanks for hanging with me today! If you want to be friendly on the innanets, you can find me on both el Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com if you have any feedback or just to say hola.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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

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In The Club

In The Club – Sept 19

Happy Alleged Autumn, bookworms! Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read. I’ve got more Hispanic Heritage Month fun for you today along with tears for Michelle Obama, banned book love, and more. I’m also asking one of you to help me out with a teensy tiny several-hour literary + culinary favor. Somebody’s got to be down, right? Anyone? Beuller?

*crickets*

Fine then, on to the book stuff!


This newsletter is sponsored by Epic Reads.

an illustration of three flowers with intertwined rootsCottonwood Hollow, Kansas, is a strange place. For the past century, every girl has been born with a special talent, like the ability to Fix any object, Heal any wound, or Find what is missing.

To best friends Rome, Lux, and Mercy, their abilities often feel more like a curse. Rome may be able to Fix anything she touches, but that won’t help her mom pay rent. Lux’s ability to attract any man with a smile has always meant danger. And although Mercy can make Enough of whatever is needed, even that won’t help when her friendship with Rome and Lux is tested.


Don Quixote Droppin’ Knowledge – Rioter Romeo Rosales opens this list of five works by Hispanic authors with a gem from Don Quixote: “ He who reads a lot and walks a lot, knows a lot and sees a lot.” Here’s to reading and walking and knowing and seeing as much as you can during Hispanic Heritage Month.

  • Book Club Bonus: Here’s the deal with subjects of specific awareness days/weeks/years: you shouldn’t partake exclusively during one particular time of year, but it’s totally cool to use that moment to kick-start good habits. Hispanic Heritage Month is a great time for your book club to get hip to the word magic of these and countless other Latinx authors. Just keep that same energy flowing all year round.
  • Related: I have been dying to try quail in a rose petal sauce ever since reading Like Water for Chocolate as a teen. If any of you out there is bold enough to attempt the recipe, holler at your girl. Here’s hoping I have a less, err, visceral reaction to your culinary masterpiece than Gertrudis.

New in November – The one reader to rule them all Liberty Hardy has put together a list of hot November releases to put on hold at your local library now. Whether la libreria is your jam or you’re pre-ordering for purchase, get these hot reads on your radar with the quickness.

  • Book Club Bonus: Believe your eye holes: Michelle Obama’s book Becoming is coming at last. When the time comes, let the hot, stinging tears of longing remembrance stream down your face as your group discusses her greatness! From her humble roots in South Side, Chicago to her time at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave, unpack how particularly stunning her personal successes and professional accolades are in light of the unique challenges faced by black women in America.

Stitch It, Stitch It Good – The indie bookstore where I work is right next to a cute yarn shop and a few of our regulars are just as avid knitters as they are readers. That got me thinking about how knitting and reading might go hand in hand, which reminded me of these cross stitch patterns for book lovers. I don’t know a %$#*ing thing about knitting but would embarrass myself with an attempt just to make myself a sweet wall hanging or bookmark.

  • Book Club Bonus: For those of you with the knitting knack, why not make your knitting circle a book club too? The ladies and gents of your group could select an audiobook and knit away while you listen, then gather again to stitch while you talk about the book when you’re done. You could stretch the book over as many sessions as you like and revel in your multi-tasky brilliance. Also, I’m totes available if you need help naming your combination book/knitting group. Stitch & Bitchin’ Bookworms? Needles in a Book Stack? And your book selection could be your ‘knit pick!” Who’s with me??

Mind the Gap – On last week’s episode of Get Booked, a listener wrote in looking for books for her mother, who she’d recently discovered to have “some cringeworthy misconceptions” about the Civil War, slavery, and its long-lasting effects. I was pleasantly surprised to hear that her mother specifically asked for books to educate herself, which I thought was freakin’ rad. You can listen to the episode here, and subscribe while you’re at it!

  • Book Club Bonus: Book club is a perfect space for acknowledging the gaps in our progressive ideologies; odds are each of us has at one point also clung to a cringey misconception in our journey towards wokeness. We move forward by examining our ignorance and battling it with knowledge. So do the work: have a frank discussion with your group members about what subjects you could all stand to learn more about and pick a book around that topic. 

The Banned and The Beautiful – September 23 kicks off Banned Books Week! The theme this year is Banning Books Silences Stories and I would legit purchase that t-shirt if someone made one. In the meantime, I’ll just be over here prancing around in my banned books socks and drinking from my banned books mug.

  • Book Club Bonus: In honor of Banned Books Week, take this sweet quiz that will tell you which banned book to read next. I took it and got Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood which is exactly what I’m in the mood for! Don’t be selfish though: take your quiz as a group so everyone gets a say in the selection.
  • Related: Novel level Book Riot Insiders: don’t forget that September’s deal is 30% off your order in case you want to nab some of those banned book goods! Not a member yet? Click here to start your FREE two week trial.

Adios for now! If you want to be friendly on the innanets, you can find me on el Twitter or the gram @buenosdiazsd. You can always shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com if you have any feedback or just to say hola. 

Forever bad & bookish,
Vanessa

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

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In The Club

Books for Your Book Club When Your Book Club Loves The Golden Girls

Hola, libro lovers! Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met and well-read. I’ve got so much good stuff to talk about today: Latinx poets, golden girls, Anthony Bourdain… *these are a few of my favorite things….

Let’s get it.


Sponsored by Buried Beneath the Baobab Tree by Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani

Based on interviews with women who were kidnapped by Boko Haram, this poignant novel tells the timely story of one girl’s harrowing fight for survival.

A new pair of shoes, a university degree, a husband—these are the things that one girl dreams of in a Nigerian village. But her dreams turn to nightmares when her village is attacked by Boko Haram in the middle of the night. She is taken with other girls and women into the forest and forced to follow her captors’ radical beliefs.

Still, the girl defends her existence. As impossible as escape may seem, her life and future are hers to fight for.


Have you completed our Fall Reader Survey yet? It takes all of five minutes and helps us learn a little more about fabulous readers like you. Plus you’ll be entered to win a $100 gift card to the Book Riot store! Get it crackin’.

Latinx Word Magicians – Remember last week when I promised to spread some Latinx love in honor of Hispanic Heritage Month? Well boom shaka laka, here it is! One of our Rioters put together this incredible list of Latinx poets weaving some serious word brujeria. I’m obsessed with Analicia Sotelo “Ariadne Discusses Theseus in Relation to the Minotaur” from Virgin. It’s a retelling of the Ariadne/Theseus/Minotaur myth in which Ariadne sort of works out that this Theseus dude may be a bit of a doucheus. No, reader: I don’t know how I have any friends.

  • Book Club Bonus: Today in Vanessa’s Confession Corner, I’ll admit I spent a lot of my young reading life feeling like I didn’t “get” poetry. As an adult, I’ve stopped trying to force a specific connection with the “important” works and have adopted an “I like what I like” approach instead. Do the same with your book club; if Emily Dickinson and Lord Byron aren’t speaking to you, switch things up with a more current collection. Find a contemporary poet whose work is of the moment or rooted in contemporary issues.
  • Related: This list of 100 must-read Latin American titles

The Anatomy of a School Shooting – You’ll probably give me some side-eye for recommending YA books about school shootings for your shiny happy book club. I get it – they’re not exactly warm & fuzzy stories. They are however essential reading about a moment in history that requires careful examination, reading that may help instill empathy in young readers.

  • Book Club Bonus: A few years ago, I tore (and cried) through David Cullen’s Columbine. It was a surreal and disturbing experience to both relive and newly discover the nitty gritty details of the first major school shooting in my memory. Challenge yourself to push through books on the topic, whether fiction or non-fiction, even if it makes you uncomfortable. Have a deep and meaningful conversation at book club and/or with the young reader in your life about the shootings, about gun control, about your many, many feelings. Do it for empathy, for knowledge, for hope that these deadly shootings will someday be a much, much less frequent occurrence.

Don’t Write Off the Golden Girls – Fun fact: The Golden Girls is my favorite show ever. It showed me that my life won’t suddenly cease to have meaning when I’m applying for my AARP card and auditioning for the Shady Pines talent show. If you’re still reading this and haven’t yet written me off, well… thank you for being a friend. Now check out this list of books with strong female characters over 50, because women of all ages deserve to be and feel seen.

  • Book Club Bonus: Whether you’re reading one of these suggested reads or another of your choice, pay attention to the way the women are treated in the book. How does sexism or ageism factor in? Are they depicted as whole and capable or as tragically past their prime? Examine the work with a critical eye; it is after all one thing to include underrepresented characters and another thing entirely to do it well.

The Tony (Bourdain) Awards – I miss him. You miss him. We all miss him. Anthony Bourdain has been gone three months now and his loss still stings. It’s therefore bittersweet to learn that Uncle Tony was just awarded six posthumous Emmys for Parts Unknown. Even in death, his excellence reigns supreme.

  • Book Club Bonus: If you haven’t already, now is a great time to discover or re-read one of Bourdain’s books, like the classic Kitchen Confidential. Do like my friends and I are doing and make recipes from Bourdain’s Appetites on the night of your book chat; read, eat, and drink in Uncle Tony’s name and discuss the components of his legacy.

Persist! Round Tres – Last but certainly not least: we’re baaaaack! Our feminist book club, Persist, is back for a third round and you should totally join. Make our book club your book club. We can all club together.


Thanks for hanging with me today! If you want to be friendly on the innanets, you can find me on el Twitter or the gram @buenosdiazsd. Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com if you have any feedback or just to say hola.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends!
Vanessa

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In The Club

Bookish Holidays for Your Book Club to Celebrate

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

It’s September! Fall is almost here… kinda? I live in San Diego so it might just be 90 degrees through Halloween. *shrug emoji* Guess I should put these boots and scarves away.


Sponsored by Epic Reads

Growing up in a conservative African American family in Texas, Taja struggles with her family expectations, a changing body, and a handsome new boyfriend as she tries to discover her own identity. Lyrical and literary, Tamani’s debut is a strikingly honest and genuine exploration of family, religion, sexuality, and how we define self-worth. Now available in paperback, Calling My Name is a must-read for fans of Jacqueline Woodson.


More importantly, it’s that time of year when book releases start to rain down from the sky at a pace almost too dizzying to keep up with. But we wouldn’t be true bookworms if we didn’t try, would we? So let’s get started!

Book Riot wants to hear from you! Click here to take our super-fast Fall Reader Survey and be entered to win a $100 gift card to the Book Riot store!

Holiday! Celebrate! – Did you know that September is National Library Card Sign Up Month and Be Kind to Writers and Editors Month? Huzzah! Wondering what other bookish holidays exist throughout the month and year? Check out this sweet calendar of bookish holidays to maximize your celebratory fun.

  • Book Club Bonus: Plan your book club around one of these festive days/weeks/months. Some of them are perhaps too wide/general for book club, but some would make for awesome inspiration. Read a comic for National Comic Book Day on the 25th of this month, or read a mystery in October for one of my faves: Mystery Series week.

Alternative Prizes – The New Academy has announced the alternative Nobel Prize in Literature shortlist for 2018! Four finalists were chosen from the original list of 47 authors and the winner will be announced on October 12th.

  • Book Club Bonus: Pick a work by of the four shortlisted authors for your book club. While any of the four authors’ works would certainly spark some healthy book chat on their own, discuss the works within the framework of #metoo. These writers were after all selected by an organization whose very existence was necessitated when allegations of sexual misconduct brought about the collapse of a major literary institution. I’d love to hear some deep book club chat on Murakami’s Men Without Women, for example. Discuss!

A Few Coins for Jane Austen – A first edition of Pride and Prejudice is going up for auction and I totally want it!

Me: What was that? It’s almost $24,000? Cool cool cool. I’ll get right on that.
Narrator: She did not get right on that.

  • Book Club Bonus: Consider a classics remix for book club. Take a classic that you love and look for a modern retelling. If you have the time, maybe read both the original and the remix, or just the remix – you do you, boo. There are so many good ones to choose from! I would love to get my girlfriends together to compare and contrast Jane Eyre vs. Jane Steele – what we loved, what we hated, what was oddly distorted or creatively updated.

Book Club Gets Lit – Oooh snap. Guess what? I’ve got a second giveaway for you! Ten lucky Book Riot Readers will peach won a copy of our bookish conversation game, Lit Chat. Enter here to win!

  • Book Club Bonus: A round of Lit Chat is the perfect book club meeting activity! You’re all book lovers, obvi. Use this as in ice breaker if it’s your first time meeting, or just add a fun little interlude to your book discussion with this bookish conversation starter.

Book Recs Written in the Stars – We’ve all been there: you’ve searched your soul, your book club and your TBR for what to read next and you can’t just decide on a title. Did you ever think to let your astrological sign do the picking for you? Maybe it’s time you do! I’m loving the Scorpio pick and can’t wait to get into it!


That’s all for today, book people. Stay tuned for recs for Hispanic Heritage month in next week’s newsletter – I can’t wait to spread the Latina bookworm love!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends.
Vanessa

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In The Club

In the Club – Aug 29

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

Summer is just about over, pero like….how?? It feels like it was all of twelve days long. I’m not quite ready to give up the longer days, the warm nights, reading in the sunshine with a cold drink in hand. Let’s soak it all up while we still can, shall we? Let’s talk club things and end-of-summer reads!


This newsletter is sponsored by Sold On a Monday by Kristina McMorris.

2 CHILDREN FOR SALE

The scrawled sign, peddling young siblings on a farmhouse porch, captures the desperation sweeping the country in 1931. It’s an era of breadlines, bank runs, and impossible choices.

For struggling reporter Ellis Reed, the gut-wrenching scene evokes memories of his family’s dark past. He snaps a photograph of the children, not meant for publication. But when it leads to his big break, the consequences are more devastating than he ever imagined.

Inspired by an actual newspaper photograph that stunned the nation, Sold on a Monday explores the tale within the frame and behind the lens.


Alright folks, this is your last chance to win 16 of the books mentioned on Recommended! You know & love the podcast, so whatcha waiting for? Enter here before August 31st.

August is for Romance – I somehow missed that August is Romance Awareness Month! One of our Rioters put together a round-up of new romance books that I had to give a quick nod to. There are but two days left in the month, so you could try and give Liberty a run for her money and finish these books by then (haahahaha, look at me making a funny). Or you could just accept that you don’t technically need a special month to read & enjoy romance. You’re welcome.

  • Book Club Bonus: First, a fun tip: get weird! Gather your book club tribe, find the romance section of your favorite bookstore and make your next selection *purely* off the basis of the cover’s steaminess OR the title’s creativity. On a more thoughtful note, read outside of your comfort zone. I’m a romance novice myself but have noticed that I lean towards the Regency variety; if you’re in my same boat, go for a contemporary version for your club pick. Already into contemporary? Throw it back and get historical with thy steam.

Badass Chicks & Comic Strips – I’ve got all of the muppet arms, fist pumps and mariachi music for this list of comics by women dropping this fall. Jessica Jones, Catwoman and Shuri, y’all. Do I really need to say anything more?

  • Book Club Bonus: Problem! I have never known anyone who’s read a comic or graphic novel in their book club! While I super hope I’m in the minority here, my spidey senses are telling me that not enough book clubs do this. So next time, pick a comic! And would you look at that: a link to tons of related content. Boop!  

Book by Book, State by State – You probably don’t have to think too hard to name books set in places like LA, New York, or Chicago, but what about cities in the rest of our giant land mass? Enter this awesome list of books set in every last one of our 50 states.

  • Book Club Bonus: Listen. I will rarely pass up an opportunity to work more travel into my life and I’m about to try to work it into yours too! How fun would it be to take book club on the road??? If you and your friends already have a trip planned, read a book set in your destination in the weeks/months leading up to the trip and then chat about it once you’re there. If road tripping is your thing, map out the length of your drive and pick an audiobook that lines up with your drive time.
  • Related: This round up of end-of summer audiobooks for any last-minute travels.
  • Related, Part Dos: Whaaaaat? A giveaway of end-of-summer audiobooks!

THUG Life – A new trailer for The Hate U Give dropped last week! I love everything about this project thus far and cannot wait to see it!

  • Book Club Bonus: The Hate U Give has been challenged a couple of times in the last year; it was banned by a school district in Katy, TX and ruffled the feathers of some South Carolina police officers when the title popped up on a local high school’s reading list. With the the film release looming nearer and nearer, yes: definitely read the book and take a movie field trip with your book club besties. But also, consider contacting local schools to donate copies of books like The Hate U Give to classrooms in need, maybe even donating your copy when you’re done with it. Screw the haters and the hate they give.

When You Literally Can’t Even – There are books that you think you’ll enjoy and then just loathe, or mildly dislike, or ones that you just sort of feel meh about and that never quite hook you. Ever wondered which books are most popular on the DNF (Did Not Finish) list? Us too. Here’s a list of the most commonly DNFed titles according to Goodreads.

  • Book Club Bonus: In case you need a reminder: you don’t have to finish a book you don’t like! There are soooo many books out there and not enough time to read them (nope, sure doesn’t give me any anxiety, none at all AAAAAH) and life is too short to get bogged down in one that just isn’t working for you. Be a good book clubber and let your pals know if you just don’t feel like continuing as a courtesy. You can still participate in the chat portion, or you might even find that the other club folk feel the same way!

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. Hasta luego!
Vanessa

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

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In The Club

In The Club – Aug 22

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

No lie: this week’s newsletter was almost “Read books and discuss them ok thank you that is all for now bye” because I have a week-old nephew and he occupies, like, 92% of my brain space. But I got it together long enough to bring you some tips on philanthropy, science fiction baddies, phallic soap and more. Shall we?


a very colorful illustration of an elephant wearing a patterned blanket over its back, bangles on its feet, and holding a flower in its trunkSponsored by Amy B. Scher, author of This is How I Save My Life (Simon & Schuster).

Sometimes, you only find everything when you are willing to try anything …

The true story of a fiery young woman’s heartwarming and hilarious journey that takes her from near-death in California to a trip around the world in search of a cure for late-stage Lyme disease. Along the way, she discovers a world of cultural mayhem, radical medical treatment, an unexpected romance, and, most importantly, a piece of her life she never even knew she was missing. Praised by Vikas Swarup, New York Times bestselling author of Slumdog Millionaire, as “an inspiring story that will change the way you look at life.”


There’s still time to win 16 of the phenomenal books featured on the Recommended podcast!  Enter here to win by August 31. Hurry!

WTF Do I Read? Sometimes you just need a quick and easy way to figure out your next book club read. Here’s a quiz that’ll take the guesswork out for you. Boom.

Read Well & Do Good – The past year’s slew of natural disasters and humanitarian crises have forced me to more thoughtfully consider the concept of philanthropy. If you too are thinking more about it – what it means, what it does, and when it’s truly effective – check out these five books on the subject.

  • Book Club Bonus: Read up then meet up to discuss what you find the most eye-opening, both the good and the bad. As a group, research and select one cause or project that effectively embodies the essence of good philanthropy. Find a way to contribute or participate as a group – it doesn’t have to be a huge gesture, just whatever is within your means. Be a club of good readers and do gooders.

Star-Studded Book Clubs – Did you know that Oprah’s Book Club ran as a segment of her talk show for the first time in 1996? Skrrrr. Nineteen ninety-QUE?! *buys eye cream* But this segment isn’t about me feeling old as dirt; it’s about the rise of the celebrity book club and how everyone from Reese Witherspoon to Jimmy Fallon has gotten in on the club action.

  • Book Club Bonus: It seems to me that folks are either really into the idea of a celebrity book club or are totally turned off by it. If the massive popularity of the Oprah and Reese varieties isn’t your bag, there are other options: Emma Watson’s Our Shared Shelf; Florence Welch’s Between Two Books; Andrew Luck’s eponymous book club.
  • Related: Persist, Book Riot’s own IG book club, will be returning in September!

Cooking & Killing – You’re listening to Read or Dead, yes? Book Riot’s bi-weekly mystery/thriller podcast? On last week’s episode, Katie and Rincey talked about culinary cozy mysteries and their research was pretty hilarious (spoiler: crack is, like, so shocking!). I usually take my cozies classically British but these food-related mysteries are a freaking riot.

So… who’s going to invite me to their cozy cooking club?

Literotica. Get Into It. – Jess Pryde, editor of our Kissing Books newsletter and co-host of the When in Romance podcast) put together this big, beautiful, diverse list of must-read erotic fiction to spice up your reading life.   

  • Book Club Bonus: I don’t have to tell you to read romance, right? Great. Now: are you reading diversely? Make a concerted effort to read romance by authors of color and/or queer romance. As for your book club meeting… I mean, the world is your oyster here. Pajama party? Passion party? Dick soap for everyone! This is a judgement free zone.

Hugo Hat Trick – The 2018 Hugo Awards were given out over the weekend and if you’re vewy, vewy qwiet, you’ll hear my TBR going to aaaabsolute crap. While all of the winners (so many women, yay!) are fabulous, let us bow down to the incomparable N.K. Jemisin. She took home the award for best novel for the third time in a row, y’all. Third!

  • Book Club Bonus: If you’ve been slacking at life (like me, sssh!) and have yet to read the Broken Earth trilogy, now would be the perfect time to dive into this Hugo Award-winning series. Watch Jemisin’s acceptance speech from Sunday’s awards here and use it as a starting point for your chat. There’s lots to unpack, like “what it takes to live, let alone thrive, in a world that seems determined to break you.”

Also: read like Obama. Might I suggest playing “Baby Come Back” in the background?


Thank you for clubbing with me! If you want to be friendly on the innanets, you can find me on el Twitter or on the gram at @buenosdiazsd. Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com if you have any feedback or just to say hola (and invite me to your cozy cook-off: don’t think I forgot).

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. Hasta luego!
Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club – Aug 15

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

This feels like the right time to confess that every time I type the words “in the club,” I most definitely start rapping my very own remix of what was once a college party anthem:

You can find me in the club… of books so there’s no snubs
Look buddy I got the blurbs if you’re into bookish plugs
I’m into reading ARCs from the big and the indie pubs…

What’s that? I’m a loser? Right. Let’s get back to bookish things.


This newsletter is sponsored by Amazon Deals.

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Don’t forget to enter to win 16 of the awesome books featured on the Recommended podcast!  Enter here to win by August 31.

Library Love… Lots and Lots of Love: According to a survey by the Institute of Museum and Library Services, people visited public libraries more than a billion times in 2015. Yes folks: billion, as in 1,000,000,000 reasons why that Stupid McStupidface suggestion that Amazon should replace public libraries can go suck it.

  • Book Club Bonus: If you’re lucky enough to live somewhere with multiple libraries within a reasonable distance, plan a library tour as a fun field trip (I totes did this on my own one day and had a total nerd blast). Explore each library’s reading/study rooms, outdoor spaces, and maybe find a good spot to hold your next meeting. If you come across a Friends of the Library book sale, maybe make a game of hunting for your next club read there.
  • Related: If you should so happen to find any live snakes at your local library… eek. Thoughts and prayers.

Love Wins, Bitches! And Bookstores Too. In a feel-good update to a story of shitty people being shitty, over 500 booklovers showed up in a display of solidarity to support Bookmarks Bookshop, a socialist bookstore in London that was recently attacked by a group of crazies. 

  • Book Club Bonus: If you usually (or just occasionally) buy your book club reads and want to do a little good with your purchase, consider getting your books from your favorite progressive, socially conscious indie (or discover a new one!). The store may already have a book club of their own going that your group can tack onto. The indie where I work offers a month-long discount on our current book club pick and will even offer a small discount to book clubs who want to place a bulk order for picks of their own.

Space Force: Nah. Astronomy: Yes! So that Space Force thing can pound sand. You know what doesn’t suck though? Science. If you too are on the side of science and looking to learn more about astronomy, I salute you. Get into some space science with this list of books on the subject for beginners. Also, I hope 45 steps barefoot on tiny LEGOs.

  • Book Club Bonus: Gather your book club for an evening of stargazing! Discuss the most interesting facts you came across in your reading, or maybe draw up a quiz of fun astronomical facts, myths, etc. to test your club’s knowledge. Then stare up at the sky (an adult beverage might be nice here, just saying) and try to pinpoint a few constellations. Kudos if you have access to a telescope invitemepleasepleaseplease.

Rock Your Bookshelf: Justin Timberlake took to Instagram last week to announce the upcoming release of his book Hindsight: & All the Things I Can’t See in Front of Me. It’s a collection of pictures and stories from his life and I won’t lie: I’m into it. This Señorita is ready to bring SexyBack and you can Cry Me a River if you’ve got a problem I’M SORRY I CAN’T HELP MYSELF.

  • Book Club Bonus: There are so many fantastic memoirs, biographies and autobiographies by and about music and musicians, so why not go for a music-themed book club? Pick a musician or musical genre that piques your interest and use related music as the soundtrack for your club meeting. I think it would be super interesting to listen with a new understanding of the music’s origin and historical context.
  • Related: This list of fiction and non-fiction books about music will get you started.

So You Never Got Your Hogwarts Letter. I feel you, fam. It still stings. But how cool would it be to take a college course that uses Harry Potter to teach its curriculum? I’d take that consolation prize.

  • Book Club Bonus: I heart the idea of crafting a curriculum around a book. Have everyone in your book group come to your club prepared to discuss what creative course they’d teach around the plot of your club pick.

That’s it for today, clubgoers. If you want to be friendly on the innanets, you can find me on el Twitter @buenosdiazsd or on the gram @buenosdiazsd. Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com if you have any feedback or just to say hola.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. Till next time!

Vanessa

Categories
In The Club

In the Club Aug 8

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

First things first — I’m not Jenn! My name is Vanessa and I will be taking over this here newsletter. I’ve been writing for Book Riot for just shy of a year and am super jazzed to be the new bouncer of this club. Get it? Because clubs have bouncers. No? I’m sorry, I’ll stop.

My goal is to help you all be your most bad & bookish selves with inspiration for all of your book club endeavors. Get ready for awful book puns and a pretty solid chance that I’ll lapse into Spanish from time to time. You’ve been warned: prepárense.

Let’s get to it!


We’re giving away 16 of the books featured on Recommended! Click here, or on the image below to enter:


It’s Giveaway Time! How’d you like to be the proud owner of 16 awesome books featured on the Recommended podcast? Enter here to win by August 31.

Also — if you’re not listening to Recommended yet, porque??? Get your life together and give it a listen.

Hunt for Hidden Gems: Big, buzzy books are awesome, but I love discovering reads that have flown under the radar. This list of the best books you’ve never heard of is precisely that sort of awesomeness. It’s book treasure!

  • Book Club Bonus: Make your next book club pick a read none or few of your club goers have heard of. Start with our list, or pick the brain of your local librarian or bookseller. Yours truly is one of the latter and I love matching customers up with the books they aren’t looking for.
  • Related: This Twitter thread by Rebecca Makkai is another amaze-balls reading list of titles that haven’t gotten their due.

Are You There, Film Gods? In news that made me slow-clap unabashedly in the middle of a coffee shop, Judy Blume’s Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret might be adapted for the big screen. Anyone else crying nerd tears like me right now?

  • Book Club Bonus: Go for throwback book club theme and pick a favorite childhood read. Chat about the ways the book was formative for you as a young reader, or even how it’s contents may now be problematic. (Spoiler: many of our faves are).

Adaptation Nation: Dios mio! The adaptation news train has been a-rollin’ steady all year and this week is no different. The Kiss Quotient, Parable of the Sower and Shrill are just some of the titles to be picked up recently. We’ve got especially emphatic Muppet arms for one adaptation in particular: The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street by BR contributor Karina Yan Glaser will be adapted by Amy Poehler!

  • Book Club Bonus: Pick a book with an upcoming adaptation and have each group member make a list of their dream cast. My BFFs and I once did this for The Girl on the Train and it was so much fun to see how differently, and sometimes similarly, we envisioned each of the characters.

10 Minutes with Andy Weir: One of our Rioters recently got the chance to interview Andy Weir at Comic Con!

  • Book Club Bonus: Reading about Weir’s different approaches to writing The Martian versus Artemis got me thinking that it would be fun to start a compare-and-contrast book club. Pick a few titles from an author’s repertoire and split them up between your book clubbers, then get together to chat about common themes, dissimilarities, growth and progression, etc.

Sweet, Sweet Fantasy Baby: Why yes, I am unnaturally obsessed with that Mariah Carey jam. But I digress! If you’ve been looking for some more inclusivity in your fantasy reading, this list of 50 must-read LGBT fantasies spans everything from epic/high fantasy to urban fantasy and everything in between.

  • Book Club Bonus: What favorite fantasy reads would you love to see reimagined with an LGBT romance? Have everyone come up with at least one book they would remix and why.

A Little Shelf Care: In today’s No Shit, Sherlock revelation, Barnes & Noble says sales of books related to anxiety are up significantly compared to a year ago. *makes “duh” face in Spanish*

  • Book Club Bonus: Introduce a self-care theme into your next book group gathering: light some candles, slap on a face mask and pamper thyselves whilst you talk about books and feelings. If books specifically about anxiety aren’t your bag, indulge in some escapist fiction. Oh, and bring wine. Or whiskey. Or both! Live your best life.
  • Related: this Tweet:


Thanks for hanging with me today! If you want to be friendly on the innanets, you can find me on el Twitter @buenosdiazsd or on the gram @buenosdiazsd. Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com if you have any feedback or just to say hola.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. Till next time!

Vanessa

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