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In The Club

In the Club 10/13

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. Hello, lovely people of the club! It’s still October and that means it’s still an excellent time to read about things that go bump in the night. Last week we did witches, this week we’re casting a wider net.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I (still) have apples to go through and had a craving for apple pie the other night, but could not muster the energy to make a full-blown pie. That’s when I remembered the glory that is a crumble! I peeled a couple of apples, tossed them in sugar, cinnamon, and flour, then topped them with a mixture of flour, butter, and white and brown sugar the consistency of wet sand. All it took was about 45 minutes in a 375 degree oven and boom! Deliciousness. Here’s a similar recipe with measurements & stuff.

Books

Carmilla by Joseph Sheridan le Fanu, edited by Carmen Maria Machado

A lot of people think of Dracula as the first vampire book, but Carmilla both predates Bram Stoker’s classic by decades and helped inspire it. Carmilla is a lesbian vampire who lurks in the shadows, waiting to prey on unsuspecting women. After a carriage accident, she meets Laura, a lonely woman in a remote mansion in a central European forest who soon learns her new companion is both a seductress and a monster. In the original text, le Fanu 100% writes Carmilla’s queerness as the source of her villainy, an unfortunately common occurrence in literature. In this 2019 version, Carmen Maria Machado reclaims this queer narrative by rewriting the story entirely while someone also remaining mostly faithful to the original work.

Book Club Bonus: This piece is a more in-depth exploration of Machado’s reclaiming of the lesbian vampire narrative and should serve as an excellent source for book club discussion.

frankenstein in baghdad by ahmed saadawi book cover

Frankenstein in Baghdad by Ahmed Saadawi, translated by Jonathan Wright

Imagine if the story you know as Frankenstein was set in US-occupied Baghdad and the titular scientist was an oddball scavenger, one who creates a corpse by stitching together the human body parts he collects. He’s not just playing Build-a-Corpse for fun; he’s doing it so the government will recognize the parts as people and allow the slain a proper burial. Then that corpse goes missing, a monster who though shot cannot be killed and needs human flesh to survive.

Book Club Bonus: In case you’re not picking up on this yet, this work of dark humor and horror is a scathing critique of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Unpack that!

Lobizona by Romina Garber

In this work of YA fantasy, Manuela is undocumented and running from her father’s Argentine crime-family, so she keeps a low profile and rarely leaves her small Miami apartment. When her surrogate grandmother is viciously attacked and her mother arrested by ICE, Manu goes searching for answers about her past. 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.

Book Club Bonus: Get ready for a “who’s the real monster here” discussion.

Suggestion Section

Bustle recently highlighted the new Alice Hoffman book, Magic Lessons. Why yes, I am bringing this up just to shove it in your faces again because it really is that good. So much to talk about in book club, as is often the case when unpacking the origins of the witch hunt.

As holiday season approaches with no end to this pandemic in sight (please let me be wrong, please let me be wrong), it’s going to take a concerted effort to stay connected. Whether you’ll be gathering with your small quaranteam book club or keeping in touch with loved once via virtual means, start making some fun holiday plans now! I know I for one am thinking of coordinating a holiday romance read + a Downton Abbey dinner date, but the possibilities are endless.

The L.A. Times book club will explore the work of Octavia Butler next. Her work is getting a “this speculative fiction feels a little too real” bump on the bestseller charts lately which is both incredibly awesome and extremely terrifying.

Read more books by Native writers. That’s all.


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 

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In The Club

In the Club 10/07

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. It’s our first newsletter of October and you know what that means: it’s bruja season. Today I’d like to recommend some newer witch books for book club! All of these are 2020 releases and approach their subject with fresh takes, books that examine the terrifying origins of witch hunts, gendered magic, witchcraft as feminism, and the power of sisterhood.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

This weekend I took a drive to a local farm for the opening weekend of their harvest festival and went hard in the paint on autumnal delights: pumpkins, apple cider, a hard loganberry cider, marionberry jam, pumpkin butter, caramel, apples, an actual caramel apple, and assorted produce. I have lots of cooking and baking plans for that haul, but first on the list: baked apples. Odds are you have most of these ingredients in your pantry, or at least a close enough substitute. Whip up a batch for book club and join me in the Fort of Fall Feelings.

Back on my Bruja-ja

The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

That haunting and gorgeous cover seems to be asking me how I’ve summoned the audacity to not have read this book yet. So I picked it up this week! Immanuelle is a young biracial woman living in Bethel, a rigid, puritanical society where her very existence is blasphemy. She does her best to keep her head down, but a mishap lures her into the forbidden woods. That’s where she finds a journal that once belonged to her dead mother that proves she once consorted with witches, leading Immanuelle on a path of grim discovery into the Church’s twisted history. Rioter Alex Acks described it as the sort of horror fiction that’s “feminist and wrathful and takes blood revenge for the way society is built on the lives and bodies of women.” I’m both triggered and sold.

The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow (October 13)

This upcoming witchy read comes to us from the author of The Ten Thousand Doors of January, one of my favorite reads of *checks what year it published because time has lost all meaning* 2019. It’s 1893 in New Salem and witchcraft is a thing of the past. But when the Eastwood sisters join a group of local suffragists, they find themselves tapping into the old ways to change the course of history. BRB, gonna go study some witchcraft.

Magic Lessons by Alice Hoffman

I’d ask you what you’re doing with your life if you’ve never read Practical Magic or The Rules of Magic, but really: how lucky are you?! Here we are in the witchiest month of the year and you have not one but three bewitching (hehe) books to curl up with. Out just this week, Magic Lessons is the prequel to Practical Magic and takes us back to Maria Owens’ origin story and the curse that haunts the Owens women. Yes, these books are about witches, but that gift is beautifully wrapped in fierce feminism, the unshakeable bonds of sisterhood, the deepest kind of love, and a healthy dose of fall vibes.

Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas

I keep talking about this book because it is one of the most unique witch books I’ve read in a long time, and because the hole it left in my heart has not yet been mended. Yadriel is 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 the sacred coming-of-age ritual wherein brujx come into their powers; with the help of his cousin/bestie, he plans to use those powers to find the ghost of his murdered cousin and set it free. Problem: the ghost he ends up summoning isn’t his cousin, refuses to leave, and also happens to be a Hottie McGuapo. This book is full of non-italicized Spanish and is inspired by lots of different Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) rituals. It shakes up the gendered magical powers narrative on so many levels, and that’s what I want you to discuss.

Suggestion Section

Jenna Bush-Hager has selected Rumaan Alam’s Leave the World Behind for her October book club pick. A huge congratulations to Rumaan Alam on being a National Book Awards finalist!

You don’t need a big ol’ group to start a book club- grab a buddy and make it a party of two.


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 

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In The Club

In the Club 08/30

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. September is over (weren’t we all just grooving to Earth, Wind, and Fire??) and once again I insist that time has ceased to have all meaning. October is my birthday month and I love witchy season, so I’m not too mad. I just need Portland to get with the autumnal program and go back to cooler temps so I may blissfully don my chunky knits.

Enough about me, let’s talk libros. To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

The second the weather began to cool* here in Portland, all my cooking reluctance magically vanished and I was DTC (down to cook). I immediately made one of my favorite labor-of-love recipes: Persian jeweled rice. It’s bursting with so many mouthwatering flavors—sweet caramelized onions, a melange of golden raisins, dried apricots and cherries, the delicious warmth of cinnamon, cardamom, and allspice—all nestled inside a bed of fragrant basmati rice soaked in saffron with a luscious buttery crust and topped with warm almonds and pistachios. WHEW. It’s so good. Here’s the recipe I use, and a similar one without the paywall that I haven’t tried. Enjoy!

*Me: “Yay fall!”
Fall: “Oh you thought you had me? Byeeeeee!”

Books

The innanets are overflowing with lists of Latinx lit for Hispanic Heritage Month! Por ejemplo:

There’s a lot of great lit on these lists, make sure to check them out! Below you’ll find a few from my own reading or TBR that I think your book clubs would have a good time discussing.

the book of lost saintsThe Book of Lost Saints by Daniel José Older – This is a multigenerational Cuban-American family story about a woman named Marisol, a woman who lived during the Cuban Revolution and disappeared without a trace. “Now, shaped by atrocities long-forgotten, her tenacious spirit visits her nephew, Ramón, in modern-day New Jersey.” This prompts Ramon to go looking for answers about his family’s painful history, just as Marisol intended. The journey brings with it romance, a murderous gangster, and a discovery of the lost saints who helped his aunt survive imprisonment.

The Book of Anna by Carmen, translated by Samantha Schnee – Real talk: I have tried to read Anna Karenina several times and failed, each time as a teenager so maybe now it would be different in my 30s? What I do know is that I am very interested in this book by Mexican writer Carmen Boullosa, a novel told from the perspective of Anna K’s son in the years after her tragic fate with the Russian Revolution on the horizon.

cover image of Loteria by Cina PelayoLoteria by Cynthia (Cina) Pelayo – It’s spooky season, so let’s do a little light horror, shall we? First, you should know that La Loteria is an iconic Mexican card game, a little like bingo but with images instead of numbers. As for this book, I read it earlier this year and it really got under my skin, but not so much with and graphic, gory, in-your-face horror. The terror here is more of the dark fairytale variety (expect monsters, ghosts, vampires, and werewolves) but the best part is the format: it’s a collection of 54 (very) short stories, one for each of the images in the Loteria deck.

Note: This appears to be out of print at the moment, so try your libraries and secondhand shops, or check Cina Pelayo’s website down the line for availability!

Tender is the Flesh by Agustina María Bazterrica, translated by Sarah Moses – Fasten your seatbelts, folks: we’re leaving Gentle Horrorville and headed straight for Dark and Twisty Town. Bazterrica book imagines a world where widespread animal disease has now made the consumption of human mean legal (gulp). Marcos runs a slaughterhouse for humans, though he’s trained not to think of his specimens as human and is barred from personal contact with them on pain of death. But when he’s gifted a live specimen of the finest quality, he’s drawn to her irresistibly, “tortured by what has been lost—and what might still be saved.” This isn’t horror so much as dystopian literary fiction but dios mio! This sounds twisted and skin-crawly AF.

Suggestion Section

GMA’s October book club pick is The Midnight Library by Matt Haig, a book I recently added to my TBR! Time-travel + a magical library that sits between life and death filled with all the lives you could have led = my kind of read.

at Salon: how Emily Dickinson, Octavia Butler, Joan Didion, Jericho Brown, and other authors helped one reader survive this quarantine.

Remember last week when I mentioned Carole Bell’s post on fat representation in romance and said this would be a great topic for book club? Well booya! Carole also wrote a follow-up post with very thoughtful and detailed recommendations of fat positive romance novels.

Apparently Jane Fonda is dropping in on virtual book clubs as she promotes her new book on environmental activism, What Can I Do? All the winners of the nationwide search have been selected, but Jane and Greenpeace have provided these book club discussion questions for all to unpack and enjoy.


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 aka La Pumpkin Spicy

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In The Club

In the Club 9/23

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. What. a. week. After so much heaviness, at least I was able to go outside this weekend. I’ve never been so thankful for rain as I was on Saturday morning! I treated myself to a pumpkin foods retrieval mission at Trader Joe’s and could practically hear people singing “It’s the most wonderful time of the year!” as they all greeted one another almost comically and loaded their carts with all the autumnal fare. Sunshine, pumpkin stuff, and air that’s safe to breathe will do that to people.

I say all that to say that a)the pumpkin brioche bread, maple butter, and pumpkin butternut bisque are all extremely delicious and worth the purchase, and b)whatever “silly” thing is bringing you joy right now, I wish you some more of that.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

You know I love fall. The second I pick up on even a hint of a cool breeze, your girl is busting out the hoodies and warm autumnal beverages. So today’s sip tip is the super simplest: te de canela! Cinnamon tea is a staple in many Mexican households, one I grew up with and love today both for its taste and how yummy it makes my apartment smell. Bath & Body who?? I have your fall smells right here.

The recipe: throw Ceylon cinnamon sticks in some water and boil (I use one stick per 8 oz of water). Once the water comes to a boil, turn off the heat and let it steep for 15 minutes, then strain and serve. I like to add a tiny bit of milk and honey or agave, but the milk is just a me thing.

Note: Not all cinnamon is good for you, apparently! Here’s a quick breakdown of the potential health benefits of cinnamon, but also why you shouldn’t use the Cassia variety. Go with Ceylon cinnamon (aka “true” or Mexican cinnamon).

Ladies First

Friday’s news of RBG’s passing brought heaviness, worry, terror, and sadness for all of the reasons. My thoughts go out to anyone else who sat there crying on their couch like I did. To honor RBG’s legacy, today’s club recs are biographies, histories, and memoirs by and about the women of the Supreme Court.

Before you proceed, two things. First, I haven’t read any of these myself but think it’s important to read up on these women and their contributions. Second, none of these women are perfect or above reproach. We can (and should) honor what they achieved while also reviewing their record with a critical eye.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg: A Life by Jane Sherron de Hart – This recent and extensive biography is the result of fifteen years of research and interviews documenting the central experiences that shaped Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s approach to justice, advocacy for gender equality, and jurisprudence. “At the heart of her story and abiding beliefs is her Jewish background, specifically the concept of tikkun olam, the Hebrew injunction to “repair the world,” with its profound meaning for a young girl who grew up during the Holocaust and World War II.”

My Beloved World by Sonia Sotomayor – Current Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor is the first Hispanic and third woman appointed to the US Supreme Court. This memoir is her personal recounting of a life that began in a Bronx housing project and led her to the federal bench.

Out of Order: Stories from the History of the Supreme Court by Sandra Day O’Connor – Sandra Day O’Connor broke up the boys club by becoming the first woman named to the United States Supreme Court. In her own words: “I called this book Out of Order because it reflects my goal, which is to share a different side of the Supreme Court. Most people know the Court only as it exists between bangs of the gavel, when the Court comes to order to hear arguments or give opinions. But the stories of the Court and the Justices that come from the ‘out of order’ moments add to the richness of the Court as both a branch of our government and a human institution.”

Elena Kagan: A Biography by Meg Greene – This biography covers Elena Kagan’s early life, college years at Princeton, Oxford, and Harvard (no big deal) and her extensive legal career, including a job as a clerk for a federal Court of Appeals judge and for Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. It documents her rise to the bench and provides an “overview of Kagan’s legal thought and writings that reveals the basic tenets of her philosophies.”

Suggestion Section

Next up in Tor.com’s Terry Pratchett Book Club: a discussion of Mort.

EW’s Quarantine Book Club picked up a book from my TBR: Susanna Clarke’s Piranesi.

Stephanie Yeboah talked to Bustle about fat phobia, fat representation, and her book Fattily Ever After, which reminded me of Carole Bell’s recent piece for Book Riot about fat representation in romance. This would make for an excellent book club topic – more representation isn’t necessarily better if the rep isn’t good.

OH LOOK it’s the white hot center of my interests: a Book Club candle with all the warm and lovely scents of fall!


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

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In The Club

In the Club 091620

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. It’s Mexican Independence Day! That’s right: it’s the day that everyone thinks is Cinco de Mayo (insert facepalm here). To celebrate, I’ll be doing my very best grito at midnight*, cooking some delicious Mexican food, and of course sharing some works by some fantastic Mexican authors for you to read in your book clubs. Let’s kick off Hispanic Heritage Month with a bang then, shall we?

To the club!!

*probs closer to 9PM because I am an old and midnight is past my bedtime


Nibbles and Sips

Today I’m going a little left and recommending two food shows instead of the usual nibbles and sips, shows that made my mouth water, my soul long to travel, and my heart swell with pride for the stock from which I come. Both of these are on Netflix, and they are:

Show: Chef’s Table: BBQ
Episode: Rosalia Chay Chuc

Show: Street Food: Latin America
Episode: Oaxaca, Mexico (watch the whole thing though, it’s fantastic)

Both of these shows feature some truly inspiring Mexican cooks making food their way, the old way, folks who have remained steadfast in their culinary approach in a world urging them to change with the times. The entire Street Food series is fantastic, but Doña Vale is, I think, my fave. That lady oozes strong IDGAF energy and I hope to someday try those scrumptious-looking memelas!

Mexican Authors to Add to Your List

gods of jade and shadowI’m coming in hot and recommending not one title, but an author, and that author is Silvia Moreno Garcia. I don’t know how to talk about her without sounding like a starry-eyed fangirl, but let’s face it: that’s precisely what I am. She’s given us vampires in Mexico City in Certain Dark Things, a folkloric jaunt through Jazz Age Mexico with the Mayan God of Death in Gods of Jade and Shadow, a coming-of-age thriller set on the coast of Baja California with Untamed Shore, and my favorite read of 2020 so far: the gothic horror masterpiece that is Mexican Gothic. This isn’t even her entire catalog! Give this woman her flowers, please.

Spirit Run: A 6,000-Mile Marathon Through North America’s Stolen Land by Noé Álvarez – Noé Álvarez, the son of working class Mexican immigrants, was a first-generation college student in search of a sense of belonging. That’s when he first heard about a Native American/First Nations movement called the Peace and Dignity Journeys, a series of epic marathons through what were once Indigenous lands wherein participants seek to renew cultural connections to those lands. At 19, Álvarez dropped out of school to embark on a four month, 6,000 mile journey from Canada to Guatemala. This book is the story of that journey, a tale of pushing limits, self discovery, and pondering the heartbreaking history of this stolen land.

Pedro Páramo by Juan Rulfo – For shame! I confess that I have not read what many consider to be theeeee great Mexican novel. One of the best pitches I’ve seen for the book is one I saw in The Guardian of all places, where the book is described as “a ghost story stuffed into another ghost story stuffed into a coffin made of dust, memory, and soil.” It’s about a man named Juan Preciado who travels to his recently deceased mother’s hometown and comes across a literal ghost town on the way.

Suggestion Section

Reese Witherspoon chose Furia by Yamile Saied Méndez as the September YA pick for her book club! It made my heart happy to see Yamile share her joy.

This Electric Literature profile on Yaa Gyasi’s latest release Transcendent Kingdom reminded me what a perfect book club pick this novel would be—just ask Barnes & Noble and The Today Show’s Jenna Bush Hager (that second link includes lots of good book cub questions). It examines issues like addiction, grief, faith, mental health, and race. I have so many thoughts on this one and I’m not even all the way through.


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

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In The Club

In the Club 9/09

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. Things are looking a little spooky here in Portland and I wish I meant that in a good way. The winds and smoke blowing in from Northern CA and now fires of our own have this place looking like a house is about to drop on a witch in sparkly red shoes. *shivers*

Before I dive into today’s book club nibbles and reads, seeing caravans of gun-toting “vigilantes” descend on my city has shaken me a little bit. It’s not surprising, but still upsetting. So here’s a friendly reminder to make sure you’re registered to vote and that you’re still doing your part to effect change. Black lives still matter, always have and always will; whether you’re on the ground protesting, donating to bail funds, or spreading the word to get resources to the people who need them, keep on keepin’ on.

To the club!!


Nibbles and Sips

I’m hanging on to these last days of summer and taking advantage of seasonal produce. If peaches are available where you are, please treat yourself to this delicious peach and burrata salad from the ladies of Food Heaven. Founders Wendy and Jess are two Black registered dietitians who take a very honest and accessible approach to nutrition. They don’t push weight loss (amen!) and teach an intuitive approach to eating (again, not about weight loss, just getting the nutrition your body needs). These two are funny as hell and their recipes are delicious! Learn more from their website, podcast, and check them out on the gram. I know this reads like an ad, but I promise you these women have never heard of me. I’m just a girl standing in front of a hunk of burrata asking it to love me.

Recipe tip: I grilled the peaches on the stove with a tiny bit of agave because ya girl was not about to turn on the oven in this heat, and I also did a super quick pickle on the red onions with some red wine vinegar and red pepper flakes.

A Religious Experience – I’ve been pulling from the Read Harder challenge for inspiration lately because the books I’ve been reading for the show just feel so timely. We most recently covered the task on religious memoirs outside of our own tradition (or lack thereof) and I thought I’d suggest this same them for the club. These are books that have reminded me of a few truths I hope you’ll discuss and unpack:

  • Religious divide is hardly a new thing in this country or in the world.
  • Not all people who’ve been cast out by the faith they were raised in want a clean break from that community (though I understand why many would, truly). Many just want to find a safe space therein.
  • For a country allegedly built on the separation of church and state, religion has been very intentionally woven into the fabric of the US and it was done for a very specific purpose (see God Land).
  • It’s easy to think one’s faith is “better” or worse than another, but I’ve found that so many of the most beautiful and the most hateful/hurtful/prejudiced parts feel very similar from religion to religion. This sounds dire, but it can also be strangely hopeful if you look at it from a “we’re more alike than you think” perspective.

We Have Always Been Here: A Queer Muslim Memoir by Samra Habib –  Samra Habib was born and raised in Lahore, Pakistan where her Ahmadi Muslim family experienced regular threats from Islamic extremists. Her family went to Canada as refugees, where young Samra assumed the worst of her troubles were behind her. It wasn’t long before she discovered a whole new set of challenges awaited her: bullies, racism, the threat of poverty, and an arranged marriage while she was still in high school. Slowly, Samra begins to begrudge the pattern of the men in her life policing her every move while the women encouraged pious obedience. This brief but impactful memoir follows Samra as she grows to embrace her creative, feminist spirit and her queerness while also finding a safe space in the Muslim community. (TW: brief reference to childhood sexual abuse)

Educated by Tara Westover – You’ve heard me rave about this one before so I’ll keep it brief, but I can’t talk about memoirs + religion without talking about this story. Tara Westover was raised in rural Idaho by survivalist and fundamentalist Mormon parents who “homeschooled” their children (mainly put them to work in the scrap yard) and denied the validity of modern medicine. Westover decides she wants to go to school and sneakily finds a way to get into BYU, attending school for the very first time at age 17. Tara not only graduated, but went on to earn a PhD from Cambridge. That is all impressive enough on its own, but even more so when you throw in the verbal and physical abuse she endured.

cover image of God Land by Lyz LenzGod Land: A Story of Faith, Loss, and Renewal in Middle America by Lyz Lenz – Before the 2016 election, Lyz Lenz was already in a politically divided marriage and was writing about a trend she’d observed in the closure of small churches in America’s heartland (including one she’s started in her own home). Then the election came (a moment of silence, please). Lenz watched as her country and her marriage were torn apart by issues of faith and politics and what began as a journalistic endeavor also became a deeply personal memoir. “From drugstores in Sydney, Iowa, to skeet shooting in rural Illinois, to the mega churches of Minneapolis, Lenz set out to discover the changing forces of faith and tradition in God’s country.”

Suggestion Section

Apple and Oprah have partnered up to launch a new podcast based on the Oprah book Club. The podcast title, which may surprise you, is Oprah’s Book Club.

Move over, Reese and Oprah. Malala Yousafzai, Steph Curry, and Richard Branson want in on the celebrity book club game.

Susan Orlean says we can expect exceptional writing and lots of wine in her new book club. And here’s a reminder of the time she got drunk and tweeted about it and had a delightful sense of humor about the whole thing.

Ah, remember that sweet, sweet feeling of falling into a book club for the first time?

… and then maybe finding you’re too slow a reader for book club?

Consider joining the #APSTogether book club, an online offering from A Public Space that pairs writers and readers for monthly book discussions.


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

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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
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
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
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