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In The Club

Days at the Morisaki Bookshop, and More Books to Gift

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

With us being firmly in the holiday season, I’ve been thinking of some of the best books to gift to people (and myself, let’s be real). Depending on how your book club operates, you may or may not be doing gifts this year, but if you are, I’d suggest looking at other people’s Goodreads to see what they’ve read as a first step.

For whoever you’re gifting books to, I’ve got a couple celebrity memoirs, a sparkling poetry collection, a holiday romance, and more.

Nibbles and Sips

biscuits

Honey Butter Biscuits by homeandbelly

I do love a honeyed biscuit, and these look ridiculous. Listen, these may even replace rolls for tomorrow…

You’ll need:

all-purpose flour, unsalted butter, frozen and grated, baking powder, salt, honey, very cold buttermilk, Honey butter, butter, and honey.

For exact ingredient amounts and instructions, go to homeandbelly’s IG page.


a graphic of the cover of The Woman in Me by Britney Spears

The Woman in Me by Britney Spears

I’m sure you’ve heard about this one in the last month. It’s definitely one of the memoirs to get this year, if you get any of them at all. Or, maybe I should say it’s the audiobook to listen to — if you haven’t heard, Britney Spears recorded most of the audiobook, with Michelle Williams stepping in to do parts that were too traumatic for Britney. And let me tell you, William’s impersonation of JT will have you gagging. If I were him, I’d leave the country.

As far as the contents of the memoir go, it covers about what you would expect: Britney Spears’ life of fame, motherhood, relationships, and more. I grew up listening to Britney and remember trying to learn the choreography of her music videos with my older sister in the early aughts. After her conservatorship, I’m glad to see her have a win.

cover of Promises of Gold by José Olivarez, translated by David Ruano

Promises of Gold by José Olivarez, translated by David Ruano

Now I know a collection of poetry as a gift is not for everyone — even some readers — because a lot of people are still not used to reading it regularly. But even if someone has just an inkling of interest in poetry, I think this National Book Award finalist would make a great gift. Olivarez explores the many forms of love — from romantic to familial and platonic — and how aspects of society complicate it. Even as he examines race, identity, and culture, he still goes back to love, and poet David Ruano provides a Spanish translation to accompany Olivarez’s poems.

cover of Making It So: A Memoir by Patrick Stewart; color photo of the author

Making It So by Patrick Stewart

Another celebrity memoir! I don’t read many memoirs throughout the year, but I feel like they make great gifts if you’re looking for bookish things. I’ve noticed that whenever my non-reader friends ask about books, they usually are more interested in memoirs, so maybe that’s why. In any case, Sir Patrick Stewart’s story starts in Yorkshire, England, and continues to the top of Hollywood — where he starred as Captain Picard in Startrek and Professor Xavier in X-Men — and a knighthood in 2010.

cover of Three Holidays and a Wedding

Three Holidays and a Wedding by Uzma Jalaluddin and Marissa Stapley

Here’s a fun holiday romance that takes place when Ramadan, Hanukkah, and Christmas overlap. It follows Maryam Aziz and Anna Gibson, strangers sitting next to each other on a plane. Maryam is on her way to her sister’s wedding, and Anna to her boyfriend’s wealthy family’s place for the holidays. When the plane experiences severe turbulence, it shakes the women (ha) into confessing some of the things they’ve been holding close to them. An emergency landing leaves them snowed in in the picturesque town of Snow Falls, where the actor Anna has a crush on just so happens to be filming a romance movie. Now, if the two women could just realize what’s in front of them…

cover of Days at the Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa

Days at the Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa, translated by Eric Ozawa

Books about books just hit different in winter, I think. Here, 25-year-old Takako finds out her boyfriend is marrying someone else and takes up her eccentric uncle’s offer to stay in a small room above the used Tokyo bookstore that’s been in their family for generations. Takako has never been much of a reader, but the books of Morisaki bookshop turn out to be excellent tools for mending broken hearts.

cover image for Barbacoa, Bomba, and Betrayal

Barbacoa, Bomba, and Betrayal by Raquel V. Reyes

I love a good, cozy mystery series during the winter, and this is the third book in the food-centric cozy series Caribbean Kitchen (you don’t need to have read the first). Here, Miriam keeps getting called away — first to her parents’ in the Dominican Republic, where she investigates a possible property vandal, then to Puerto Rico to film a special for Three Kings Day. Two of her friends keep her company in Puerto Rico, but there are mysteries surrounding their boyfriends — one is a telenovela heartthrob who goes missing, and the other is an image of perfection…with a suspiciously large duffle bag of cash. Through pages of delicious food descriptions and African drumming, Miriam will sleuth her way to tying everything together.

We’re here to enrich your reading life! Get to know the world of books and publishing better with a subscription to The Deep Dive, Book Riot’s staff-written publication delivered directly to your inbox. Find a guide to reading logs and trackers, hear about why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and more from our familiar in-house experts. Get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox, or upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features connecting you to like-minded readers.

Suggestion Section

Cozy Reads for the Winter Quiz

The Best Bookish Holiday Sweaters!

Lighthearted Murder Mysteries For the Faint of Heart

Cookbook Showdown: The Best Dinner Roll Recipes, Tested


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in our In Reading Color Substack as well as chattin’ with my co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

A Florida Man Deception, Neurodivergent Women in Pop Culture, and More New Nonfiction

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

It is that time of year when we get inundated with everyone’s best-of lists. They’re a little predictable and maybe even a little redundant, but I actually like them because I like to see which great books released this year that I missed. Most of the time, I’ve already heard of most of the books, but there is sometimes a little surprise that pokes through, like with Hit Parade of Tears: Stories by Izumi Suzuki, courtesy of Bookshop.org.

I’ll do a best-of roundup for this newsletter soon, but for today, I’ve got some 2023 nonfiction titles to help us revel in Nonfiction November.

Nibbles and Sips

glazed bundt cake

Baklava Banana Bundt Cake by dessertribe 

The name of this alone sounds ridiculous. For this, you’ll need a lot of the usual cake-baking ingredients, as well as ripe bananas, coconut oil, chopped nuts, maple syrup, honey, lemon juice, and powdered sugar.

For a full list of ingredients, visit dessertribe’s Instagram page.


a graphic of the cover of Truth Telling: Seven Conversations About Indigenous Life in Canada by Michelle Good

Truth Telling: Seven Conversations about Indigenous Life in Canada by Michelle Good

In these essays, Good tells the truth about the Indigenous experience in Canada. Looking at both historical and contemporary issues, she speaks on everything from unhonored treaties to cultural appropriation, to flat-out racism. Canada’s current treatment of its Indigenous population and how it values their lives are explored, as well as how to right the wrongs of the past and the present.

cover of Gator Country: Deception, Danger, and Alligators in the Everglades by Rebecca Renner

Gator Country: Deception, Danger, and Alligators in the Everglades by Rebecca Renner

I don’t know who needs to read this, but this has to become a docuseries on Netflix. It tells how Officer Jeff Babauta infiltrates the world of illegal alligator poaching by — get this — becoming a Florida Man. He develops a pony-tailed, whiskey-laden alter ego and gets in good with people who deal in glow-in-the-dark alligators and other Florida-specific things I’m sure you didn’t realize you’d be reading about today. But as Officer Babauta soon learns, many of the so-called criminals he’s gone undercover to catch are really just trying to make ends meet under the crushing weight of capitalism.

cover image for Liliana's Invincible Summer

Liliana’s Invincible Summer by Cristina Rivera Garza

Propelled by feminist movements around the world, Cristina Rivera Garza wrote a request to the attorney general concerning her sister Lilian, who was murdered 29 years ago in Mexico City. Garza’s family is certain her sister’s abusive boyfriend was the culprit, but he was never brought to justice. Here, Garza brings her sister’s last summer back to life while also confronting the culture that normalized violence against women, allowing for such a tragedy.

cover of The Autists: Women on the Spectrum

The Autists: Women on the Spectrum by Clara Törnvall, translated by Alice E. Olsson

For the longest time, people thought of autism as only applicable to boys. Times have changed, and people’s understanding has gotten a lot better, but there is still a ways to go. In The Autists, Törnvall hopes to help people see another side of autism, specifically another side of women on the spectrum. She uses her own experiences as an autistic person to explore things like pop culture, myth, and society through the lens of autistic womanhood. In doing so, she shows all there is to gain from stepping outside of the neurotypical perspective.

Indulge your inner book nerd and join a community of like-minded readers looking to expand their knowledge and their TBR. Subscribe to The Deep Dive, where Book Riot’s editorial staff draws from their collective expertise to bring you compelling stories, informed takes, tips, hacks, and more. Find out why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and explore the great wide world of books and publishing. Get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox, or upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features.

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Book Club:

More To Read

The Best High Fantasy Books for Magical Escapes

The 20 Most Influential Mystery Novels of the Last 10 Years

The 20 Best Gifts for Readers 2023

A Pennsylvania Public Library Had Funding Cut Because of LGBTQ+ Books. Then, An Olympian Stepped In.


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Women Hunt a Serial Killer and Other New Mysteries for the Club

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

I’m finally settling into it being fall without having Halloween to look forward to, which means my reading is shifting a bit. This means I’m looking a little more at mysteries, romances, and other cozy things. It’s while experiencing this latest personal trend that I decided to list out some mysteries for your book clubs — though these tend towards the more serious as opposed to the cozy (but obviously, I love both).

Get ready for an occult mystery in 1909 Boston, a mystery surrounding a Japanese American family in the 1940s, a modern mystery that takes on social justice issues, and a story of a serial killer but told from his potential victims’ perspectives.

Nibbles and Sips

wontons in a bowl

Wontons by Maxine and her Granny

Dumplings and wontons are such satisfying comfort foods, and I imagine a grandma’s recipe will be the most comforting. Maxine’s granny’s wontons look delicious and her Instagram page includes vegan modifications.

You’ll need: ground pork or tofu, shiitake mushrooms, ginger, water chestnuts, soy sauce, sesame oil, cornstarch, and wonton skins.

For a full list of ingredients and instructions, visit her Insta post.


cover of Evergreen by Naomi Hirahara

Evergreen by Naomi Hirahara

This is the second book in a series that has an award-winning first book — Clark and Division — but I don’t think you need to have read the first to appreciate this one. It’s 1946, and the Ito family has been released from the Manzanar detention center and allowed to return to their home state, California, like many other Japanese Americans who were forced into incarceration camps. Aki Ito returns to life as a nurse’s aide and comes across an abused elderly man who turns out to be the father of her husband’s best friend, Shinji Watanabe. The case has her wondering if her husband’s friend could really be guilty of elder abuse, but then a shooting sets her on the path of answering even bigger questions.

cover of Blood Betrayal by Ausma Zehanat Khan

Blood Betrayal by Ausma Zehanat Khan

This is another second book in a series that you don’t have to read the first one to enjoy. Here, Detective Inaya Rahman is caught between two cases that deal with deeply embedded racism and prejudice. In one case, officer Harry Cooper is following up on a report of vandals in Blackwater Falls, Colorado, when he comes across a young Black man who he said was armed. But the alleged gun was actually a spray paint can. Then, in Denver, a Latine teen is killed during a drug raid that goes south. As people protest on both sides of the cases, Rahman gets a visit from Officer John Broda, a man who assaulted her when they worked together in the past. His son Kelly is the cop who shot the teen during the drug raid, and he wants her help in exonerating him.

cover of Bright Young Women by Jessica Knoll; pink and yellow close-up image of a young woman's eyes

Bright Young Women by Jessica Knoll

Here’s another example of our fascination with serial killers, but from a refreshing perspective. This time, the tragedy is told up front, and the lives of the victims and those they cared about are expanded upon rather than the inverse. In 1978, while the news of a serial killer terrorized the Pacific Northwest, the young women of a sorority at Florida State University’s Tallahassee campus are preparing for an exciting night. What they don’t know is that that same killer from the other side of the country will visit them and that Pamela Schumacher’s decision to stay home will make her the sole survivor of something terrible. Meanwhile, back in the PNW, Tina believes her girlfriend Ruth was a victim of the same person responsible for the Tallahassee Tragedy. Both Pamela and Tina are set on a course to uncover the truth that sends them hurdling towards each other.

cover of Relentless Melt by Jeremy P. Bushnell

Relentless Melt by Jeremy P. Bushnell

To be cute, I thought I’d add in a book that mixes in some fantasy. This is described as “Stranger Things meets the Golden Age of Detective fiction” and follows Artie Quick, a young Bostonian woman living in 1909. During the day, she’s a regular ole salesgirl of women’s accessories, but at night, she dons men’s clothing and explores her interest in criminal investigation by taking classes at the YMCA’s Evening Institute for Younger Men. In a bid to apply her learning, she and her bestie Theodore, a well-off young man interested in the occult, investigate a number of violent abductions that lead them to those in power.

Power up your reading life with thoughtful writing on books and publishing, courtesy of The Deep Dive. Over at our Substack publication, you’ll find timely stories, informed takes, and useful advice from our in-house experts. We’re here to share our expertise and perspective, drawing from our backgrounds as booksellers, librarians, educators, authors, editors, and publishing professionals. Find out why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and then get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox. You can also upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features connecting you to like-minded readers.

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Can You Guess the Fantasy Book Based On a Vague Description?

Is tome. Your Secret to Finally Finishing Your Novel?

What’s With All the Writing Cults in Fiction? An Exploration

What Are The Book-Owning and Book-Reading Habits of Americans? Two New Reports Shed Insight

How Isaac’s Reading List on HEARTSTOPPER is Diversifying Booklists


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

The Best Books for Book Clubs Out This Month

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

How is it already November?! With the spooky season now (slightly) behind us, I’ve got a fresh crop of new books out this month that I think would do well as book club picks.

There’s a folkloric generational tale of Métis women, a Nigerian murder mystery, a new novel by Michael Cunningham, and a reflection on the state of the United States by poet Tracy K. Smith. There’s also mention of a couple book club picks for the various online book clubs we like to keep up with.

With that said, on to the club!

Nibbles and Sips

plain cookeis

Orange Cookies by John at Preppy Kitchen

Orange cookies are something I’d never thought of, but they sound so right. The recipe also looks pretty simple! You need the usual cookie fare: baking soda, sugar, butter, flour, egg, and salt, but add orange zest, orange juice (obvi), and powdered sugar (for the icing).

For full instructions and ingredient measurements, go to the Preppy Kitchen site or follow along with the video.


cover of A Grandmother Begins the Story by Michelle Porter

A Grandmother Begins the Story by Michelle Porter

This fiction debut from the award-winning Porter follows generations of Métis women and the bison that lived around them as everyone tries to figure things out. Young mother Carter is trying to find out more about her heritage, even as she struggles to balance her emotions, while her mother is trying not to make the same mistakes as Carter’s grandmother. This is all while Geneviève struggles with internal demons, and Mamé, who is in the Afterlife, sees her legacy being realized in her descendants but must cut her ties to the land of the living and let them forge their own path into the future.

cover of Gaslight by Femi Kayode

Gaslight by Femi Kayode

Here’s a murder mystery set in a place I don’t usually see with murder mysteries: Nigeria. Philip Taiwo starts working on a case based around a megachurch in Ogun State, where a bishop’s wife was murdered, and a young woman went missing. As Taiwo will soon learn, there are secrets that, if uncovered, will threaten the entire church.

cover of Day by Michael Cunningham

Day by Michael Cunningham

The Pulitzer-winning author of The Hours serves up a meditation on the complexities of family. Dan and Isabel are married and also both “a little bit in love with Isabel’s younger brother, Robbie” (I haven’t read the book yet, so I am also curious what this means). When the pandemic hits, each family member’s anxieties manifest in different ways: young Violet obsesses over her family’s safety, while teenage Nathan focuses on breaking rules. Meanwhile, Isabel and Dan are having communication issues, and Robbie is stranded in Iceland with little more than his secret Instagram life as solace.

cover of To Free the Captives: A Plea for the American Soul

To Free the Captives: A Plea for the American Soul by Tracy K. Smith

Smith is another Pulitzer winner but for poetry. In To Free the Captives, Smith explores the questions: “Where are we going as a nation? Where have we been?” Using both personal and collective history, she looks at how we as a country have related to each other, how this has influenced our current state, and what the future may hold for us. She contends with the dichotomy of being a successful Black person in America — her father returned from WWI as a hero but with no job prospects as a Black man, for instance — and she looks to our ancestors for sources of hope.

We’re here to enrich your reading life! Get to know the world of books and publishing better with a subscription to The Deep Dive, Book Riot’s staff-written publication delivered directly to your inbox. Find a guide to reading logs and trackers, hear about why the bestseller list is broken, analyze some anticipated books, and more from our familiar in-house experts. Get a free subscription for weekly content delivered to your inbox, or upgrade to paid-for bonus content and community features connecting you to like-minded readers.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

More To Read

20 Must-Read Historical Fiction Books Set in France

8 of the Most Violent, Original Endings of Classic Fairy Tales

20 of TikTok’s Favorite Nonfiction Books


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Oprah’s 103rd Book Club Pick and Indigenous Books

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

Oprah has chosen her 103rd book club pick, and it’s one I’d mentioned earlier this month as one of the best books coming out in October for book clubs.

As for me, I was recently picking up some books I had on hold at my library and decided to walk around to see what was on display (can you ever just pick up your held books and go, or do you also have to give the library a look around each time?). There were some spooky books near the front of the library, which is to be expected, but when I wandered over to the kids’ and teens’ sections, I also saw some Indigenous books and displays highlighting Native American Heritage Month.

Of course, I’d already started thinking about the Indigenous books I’d like to highlight for November, but seeing the displays put me on to some books I hadn’t heard of before. It was also a good reminder to up my children’s fiction game.

So today, I have some Indigenous books for adults and teens, and one that I found for kids because I think that reading children’s books is actually something all of us should do more of. I especially think it’s helpful to read children’s nonfiction because it can give quicker dives into topics that lend themselves to deeper study later if desired.

Before we get to those books and the rest of the Club, a reminder to check out our personalized TBR service, where you can get book recommendations tailored to you.

Nibbles and Sips

a plate of apple fritters next to a container of fresh apples

Apple Fritter Cake by Rosie

I’m in my comfort food era. Can y’all tell? I think the algorithm knows because it’s basically all that I’m getting recommended food-wise on my socials. But listen, I’m not complaining!

For this particular recipe, you’ll need:

Self-rising flour, baking powder, baking soda, light brown sugar, milk, vinegar, yogurt, vegetable oil, and cinnamon for the sponge cake.

For the filling: Granny Smith apples, sugar, cinnamon, cornflour, water, and brown sugar.

Finally, the glaze gets: powdered sugar, milk, and vanilla extract.

For a full list of measurements and instructions (plus a video), visit Rosie’s page.


cover of A Council of Dolls by Mona Susan Power

A Council of Dolls by Mona Susan Power

Council of Dolls, by PEN Award-winning Power, follows three generations of Yanktonai Dakota women and the dolls that have guided their lives. Cora, born in 1888 during the “Indian Wars,” gets sent to a school by white men to have her identity stripped from her. The teachers burn her beaded buckskin doll Winona, but the doll’s spirit may live on. In 1925, Lillian is born, and she too will suffer through a residential school but resists the abuse of the nuns there. Her doll, Mae, defends her and her sister, Blanche, when they need it most. Finally, there’s Sissy, a child of the ’60s, whose doll Ethel may actually save her life.

cover of Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology; black with brightly colored illustrated cartoon border of flowers, snakes, and monsters

Never Whistle at Night: an Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology, edited by Shane Hawk and Theodore C. Van Alst Jr.

The unsettling stories in this collection begin with the belief that many Indigenous people share — that whistling at night can not only summon evil spirits but invite them to follow you home. The stories of these evil spirits, ghosts, curses, hauntings, and more are told by an amazing cadre of both well-known and emerging Indigenous authors, from Rebecca Roanhorse to Cherie Dimaline to Richard Van Camp, and more. Monstrous manifestations from Indigenous mythology intermix with social horrors like the effects of colonialism to paint a viscerally terrifying picture.

into the bright open book cover

Into the Bright Open by Cherie Dimaline

These classic remixes have been amazing so far. Before this retelling, there was My Dear Henry: A Jekyll & Hyde Remix by Kalynn Bayron, Self-Made Boys: A Great Gatsby Remix by Anna-Marie McLemore, and others. Here, Dimaline writes a queer and Métis take on The Secret Garden. Mary Lennox is orphaned at 15 and sent to live with an estranged uncle in the Georgian Bay. Where she expects to find a cold, aloof household, she instead finds one with welcoming people, many of whom are Indigenous. She also finds her cousin, Olive, who has been kept away in an attic for years because of her “condition.” Once the two girls become besties, Mary will go up against Olive’s ill-tempered stepmother as she tries to free her cousin from something that seems sinister. She realizes that to do so, she may need to explore the locked away and overgrown garden that she found.

cover of Swim Home to the Vanished

Swim Home to the Vanished by Brendan Shay Basham

If the phrase “battle of the brujas” resonates with you, this is one for your TBR. When Damien’s brother Kai vanished, swallowed by the river, Damien was swallowed by grief. He literally tries to run from his despair by traveling as far away from his small town as he can until he reaches a village totally new to him. But the day he arrives, another’s sibling was being laid to rest, and Damien’s status as an outsider leaves him ignored by all except the mother of the dead girl, Ana Maria. Now, Ana Maria has her own darkness hovering over her — there are those who suspect that she was involved somehow with her daughter’s death — and soon, the tension between her remaining daughters and her will result in that battle of the brujas I mentioned earlier.

cover of Voices of the People by Joseph Bruchac

Voices of the People by Joseph Bruchac

This big, beautiful book is one of the ones I saw on display in the children’s section. It’s so eye-catching. It’s a middle grade collection of poems and illustrations that introduces readers to Indigenous leaders through the ages. We learn about everyone from Peacemaker, who lived in 1000 A.D., to current-day Maria Tallchief and Cherokee chief Wilma Mankiller.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

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Book Club:

More To Read


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

More of the Best October Releases for Your Book Club

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

There are so many great books coming out this month that I thought to do another round of some of the best ones for book clubs. There’s a queer Detroit memoir, a passioned look at the field of forensic science by the host of a true crime podcast, a horror tale that takes place during Jim Crow in the ’50s, and more.

Before we get to the Club, here’s a reminder to check out our personalized TBR service, where you can get book recommendations tailored to you.

Nibbles and Sips

Caramel Apple Moscow Mules

Caramel Apple Moscow Mule by Cheryl

I haven’t tried this yet, but it sounds like an interesting twist on a favorite. You’ll need:

caramel vodka, apple cider, lime, ginger beer, cinnamon sticks, and apple slices for garnish.

For a full list of measurements and instructions, go here.

Memoir, True Crime, Romance, and Historical Horrors

cover of Everything I Learned, I Learned in a Chinese Restaurant: A Memoir by Curtis Chin; rainbow background with a restaurant order slip on the front

Everything I Learned, I Learned in a Chinese Restaurant by Curtis Chin

This funny and insightful memoir follows Chin, a gay American-born Chinese kid growing up in Detroit in the ’80s. Though the city has its issues — like segregation, for one — the Chinese restaurant his grandfather opened is a safe haven for many. All of Detroit — from drag queens to the city’s first Black mayor — are welcomed and gather around Chin’s family’s sweet-and-sour pork and scooch into their vinyl booths.

cover of Lay Them to Rest: On the Road with the Cold Case Investigators Who Identify the Nameless by Laurah Norton

Lay Them to Rest: On the Road with the Cold Case Investigators Who Identify the Nameless by Laurah Norton

True crime lovers! I know I don’t usually have many suggestions for you, but today I’ve got you. Host of the true-crime podcast The Fall Line, Norton guides us through the vast world of forensic science, taking us from its (first recorded) beginnings with the ancient Roman death masks to our modern-day 3D facial reconstruction technology. We’re also walked through a case she solves in real-time alongside forensic anthropologist Dr. Amy Michael.

cover of Hold My Girl by Charlene Carr

Hold My Girl by Charlene Carr

Two women undergo IVF, but only one conceives. Katherine, with her type A personality, finally has the perfect life once she has a baby. Thing is, the baby’s complexion is a little too different from her own, and it’s throwing her off…Then there’s Tess, who visited the same fertility clinic as Katherine but whose baby was stillborn. Two years later, she’s struggling with depression and a dead-end job, but a call from the clinic puts things on the upswing for Tess: they tell her that her and Katherine’s eggs were switched.

cover of Iris Kelly Doesn't Date

Iris Kelly Doesn’t Date by Ashley Herring Blake (Oct. 24)

All of the people in Iris Kelly’s life are in love. Her parents, her friends, her siblings, and she really hates — *is happy for them*. Truly. Tear-soaked Lyft rides home notwithstanding. Her lack of love is especially confounding since she’s a romance writer, and it’s probably partially why she’s been out of ideas since her debut. To distract herself from her pitiful state, she goes out to a bar and hooks up with the sexy stranger Stefania. Only, the one-night stand has made the hottest of messes when vomit and crying both make appearances. To distract herself from that, she tries for a local play and meets Stefania, or Stevie, again, who wants Iris to play as her fake girlfriend for reasons. Of course she goes along with it, and sparks fly, but neither is trying to make the first move to make it official.

cover of The Reformatory by Tananarive Due

The Reformatory by Tananarive Due (Oct. 31)

Due has been killing the Black horror game for a minute now. In her latest, 12-year-old Robbie Stevens is sent to the Gracetown School for Boys reformatory in Florida in 1950 for defending his sister from a rich white kid. If you got shudders thinking of a Black kid being sent to a reformatory in Florida in the ’50s, I did too. The horrors are just as real as you’d think, and the haints (ghosts) Robbie sees show him the terrors that were met upon the boys who have gone missing from the reformatory and worse things that have yet to come. Hopefully, his sister Gloria can get him out before it’s too late.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

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Book Club:

More To Read

Nonfiction About Witches, Ghosts, and Other Odd Creatures

Look Again: 10 Great 2023 Mysteries You May Have Missed

What Would an Author-Centered Publishing Company Look Like?

8 of the Most Shocking First Lines in Fiction


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Indigenous Ghosts and Final Girls — Horror for Your Book Club

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

What’s your reading looking like right about now? I’d say mine has geared towards the cozy, but I feel like I’ve been saying that all year (and I know I’m not alone). I think we are just in our collective cozy era, and I love that for us.

Speaking of, today’s recommendations are decidedly not cozy and, in fact, are pretty disconcerting. It’s Spooky Month, and so I’ve highlighted some great new scary books for you to dissect with your club. They’re all by people of color, and I think it would be interesting to discuss within your clubs what horror stories look like written by people of color versus non-people of color. Then, how do certain ethnicities and regions (if you can break it down that far) differ in what they find scary? It’s interesting to look at horror as a way to view what a society views as acceptable vs. unacceptable behavior; what it values and what it doesn’t.

Before we get to the Club, a reminder to check out our personalized TBR service, where you can get book recommendations tailored to you.

Nibbles and Sips

Pumpkin Cheesecake Bars with Biscoff Crust

Pumpkin Cheesecake Bars with Biscoff Crust by Camila

You may be over-pumpkin’d, but I promise you these are really good! I felt inspired to share this recipe with you after buying some pumpkin cheesecake bites at Target. They aren’t too cloying, and their pumpkin flavor is very natural.

Here, Camila gives recipes for a Biscoff crust in addition to the cheesecake. For the crust, you need Biscoff cookies, brown sugar, and unsalted butter.

For the cheesecake: cream cheese, sugar, brown sugar, sour cream, large eggs, vanilla extract, pumpkin puree, pumpkin pie spice, cinnamon powder, and nutmeg.

For full instructions and quantities, click here. For a video, click here.


cover of Out There Screaming: An Anthology of New Black Horror

Out There Screaming: An Anthology of New Black Horror, edited by Jordan Peele

This looks to be a ridiculously good collection of new horror stories by Black authors. A girl travels to the depths of the earth seeking a parent-killing demon. Freedom riders get stranded on a quiet road in Alabama, where they start to witness the uncanny.

Writers include  Erin E. Adams, Violet Allen, Lesley Nneka Arimah, Maurice Broaddus, Chesya Burke, P. Djèlí Clark, Ezra Claytan Daniels, Tananarive Due, Nalo Hopkinson, N. K. Jemisin, Justin C. Key, L. D. Lewis, Nnedi Okorafor, Tochi Onyebuchi, Rebecca Roanhorse, Nicole D. Sconiers, Rion Amilcar Scott, Terence Taylor, and Cadwell Turnbull.

cover of Nefando by Mónica Ojeda, translated by Sarah Booker

Nefando by Mónica Ojeda, translated by Sarah Booker

From the National Book Award Finalist and author of Jawbone comes a cerebral techno-horror. Six struggling creatives share an apartment in Barcelona — Kiki Ortega, who’s writing a pornographic novel; El Cuco Martinez, a video game designer; Iván Herrera, a writer with body dysphoria; and the Terán siblings, Emilio, Irene, and Cecilia. All of them are connected to the controversial and mysterious cult video game Nefando. A game in which players could find catharsis from trauma, but also maybe a slip in personal ethics. This explores what happens in the darkest parts of the web and how there are those of us who go towards pain.

You're Not Supposed to Die Tonight cover

You’re Not Supposed to Die Tonight by Kalynn Bayron

Bayron has such a talent for taking familiar narratives and reworking them in a way that is simultaneously thought-provoking and natural. In You’re Not Supposed to Die Tonight, 17-year-old Charity Curtis has the summer job any horror lover would want: playing the Final Girl in a full-contact horror game. At Camp Mirror Lake, she and her co-workers act out scenes from the beloved slasher movie Curse of Camp Mirror Lake, trying to make the experience feel as real as possible for guests. But then things get a little too real when her co-workers start disappearing. Now, Charity and her girlfriend Bezi are trying to get to the bottom of the murders happening around them while becoming the Final Girls of their own story. Fans of horror will appreciate Bayron’s subversive take on many of the tropes of the genre, including how race and gender have traditionally been portrayed.

cover of Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology; black with brightly colored illustrated cartoon border of flowers, snakes, and monsters

Never Whistle at Night: an Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology, edited by Shane Hawk and Theodore C. Van Alst Jr.

The unsettling stories in this collection begin with the belief that many Indigenous people share — that whistling at night can not only summon evil spirits but invite them to follow you home. The stories of these evil spirits, ghosts, curses, hauntings, and more are told by an amazing cadre of both well-known and emerging Indigenous authors, from Rebecca Roanhorse to Cherie Dimaline to Richard Van Camp, and more. Monstrous manifestations from Indigenous mythology intermix with social horrors like the effects of colonialism to paint a viscerally terrifying picture.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

More To Read

20 Must-Read Mystery Books as Recommended by Mystery Writers

The 20 Best Debut Fantasy Books Ever Written

8 New Nonfiction Books to Read in October 2023

The Bestselling Books of the Week, According to All the Lists


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

A Stunning Memoir and More of the Best Books Out in October

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

It’s already time again for a top-of-the-month books list?! *laugh/cries* Though it’s not all bad because I have rediscovered my love for Aldi (it’s a grocery store, if you’re not familiar) and have settled into a routine of French pressed coffee with Aldi brand pumpkin spice creamer and an apple cider cake doughnut. When I tell y’all a new level of flavor is unlocked when I dip that donut in the coffee! I thought at first it’d be too much, but the creamer is graciously not cloying, and I am just living my best life over here.

So, now that I’ve updated you on my coffee habits, let’s get to the club!

Before we do, though, here’s a reminder to check out our personalized TBR service, where you can get book recommendations tailored to you.

Nibbles and Sips

korean veggie pancake

Korean vegetable pancakes by Maxine Sharf

Sometimes I crave something green, but also a little greasy. Just a little. And these veggie pancakes hit the spot. The ingredients are also pretty ubiquitous in North American kitchens, I think. You’ll need: flour, salt, water, leek greens, carrot, scallions, red cabbage, Jalapeño slices, and avocado oil (or any oil).

Mix the ingredients and fry up your little pancakes!

For more detailed instructions, ingredients, and a video, please visit here.


a graphic of the cover of A Man of Two Faces: A Memoir, A History, A Memorial by Viet Thanh Nguyen

A Man of Two Faces by Viet Thanh Nguyen

Nguyen, author of the bestselling The Sympathizer, writes a memoir that feels original, with humor strewn throughout. He details his journey from Vietnam to the U.S. as a child and how he was separated from his family but eventually reunited. The longer he lives in the U.S., the more he sees that it isn’t quite the promised land it’s been labeled as.

cover of Blackouts by Justin Torres

Blackouts by Justin Torres (Oct. 10)

This National Book Award finalist is a highly imaginative look at personal and combined histories. The narrator reunites with a man he met in a hospital when he was much younger — a man who is now dying. He promises to finish a project the man, named Juan, was working on that involved a ’40s research book titled Sex Variants: A Study in Homosexual Patterns (which actually existed). Much of Juan’s copy of the book has blackouts (or redactions — places where pieces of text are blacked out, only allowing certain words to be read). As Juan’s health continues to fade, the two share stories of past joys and lost loves.

cover of Family Meal by Bryan Washington

Family Meal by Bryan Washington (Oct. 10)

After Cam’s love, Kai dies and starts haunting him, he leaves L.A. for a visit to his hometown of Houston. There, he reunites with his former bestie TJ. But it’s not super easy to fall back in step with how their old friendship used to be after such a long estrangement, especially with TJ not knowing what to do with the new Cam, who is bent on destroying himself. With luxurious descriptions of food and food preparation, Washington tells a story of messy relationships and found family.

cover of Let Us Descend by Jesmyn Ward

Let Us Descend by Jesmyn Ward (Oct. 24)

Ms. Ward has been snatching edges for a minute, and I’m sure this will be one of the most talked about books of the year. The title is from Dante Alighieri’s Inferno (“‘Let us descend,’ the poet now began, ‘and enter this blind world.’”).

Annis is our guide as we descend into the hellish world of American slavery. Sold by her white enslaver father, she nurtures her spirit with memories of her mother and the stories she told her of her African warrior grandmother. As she’s forced to journey through the harshest conditions — from the Carolinas’ rice fields to New Orleans’ markets for enslaved people — she finds herself both aided and potentially manipulated by spirits. This is a magically rendered account of a terrible time in history.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

More To Read

The finalists for the National Book Awards have been announced

The Atlantic had their annual festival last week with some interesting guests. Click here for a recording of the live streams.

10 of the Most Polarizing Books to Ponder

The Worst First Lines in Literature: The Lyttle Lytton Contest


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

A Nature-Loving Book Club

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

I’ve gotten into the unfortunate habit of mostly staying in the house, which is a marked difference from how I was in the spring. This was brought on by the heat of the last days of summer, but now I am looking to change my hermit ways and do a little frolicking outside. And, because of who I am, this got me thinking about nature books.

The books below not only highlight the many wonders of nature but also look at things like climate change and who has access to something that feels like it should be open to everyone.

Before we get to the Club, Book Riot’s editorial team is writing for casual and power readers alike over at The Deep Dive! During the month of September, all new free subscribers will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler, plus five mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Nibbles and Sips

cauliflower baked in a red sauce

Harissa Roasted Cauliflower by Vegan Explore Girl

I know veggies aren’t always seen as a comfort food — which is the kind of food I prefer for book clubs — but this looks decadent. It calls for roasting an entire head of cauliflower after marinading it with harissa paste, making a lemony garlic yogurt sauce, frying chili, shallot, and pine nuts, and finally drizzling with tahini. The entire ingredient list, plus instructions and a video, can be found here.


a graphic of the cover of World of Wonders by Aimee Nezhukumatathil

World of Wonders by Aimee Nezhukumatathil, illustrated by Fumi Nakamura

Poet Nezhukumatathil’s childhood took her from mental institutions where her mother worked to the Arizona mountains where she hiked with her father, but no matter her physical environment, she always knew to seek comfort and guidance in the fauna she found around her. This illustrated memoir is a lovely ode to the natural world.

cover of An Immense World by Ed Yong; photo of a monkey looking up at a butterfly

An Immense World by Ed Yong

Science journalist Yong paints a vivid picture of all that can be sensed in the world. Turtles can outline the Earth’s magnetic fields, giant squids see sparkling whales, plants hold the songs of courting insects, and there are even humans who use sonar like bats. I love books that show how rewarding it is to step outside of our own singular experiences as humans.

cover of America the Beautiful

America the Beautiful? by Blythe Roberson

Writer and comedian Blythe Roberson ponders on America’s view of travel — and all the alleged freedom it brings — as she takes to the road in her stepdad’s Prius. If road trips are the ultimate acts of freedom — as many American travel writers have stated — who truly has the financial means to be free? And why does it seem like all the travel narratives lauded as classics of the genre seem to be written by white guys? Roberson actually quits her day job to go on the ultimate American AdventureTM, traveling to national parks, the ocean, the Pacific Coast, and more — all the while exploring just how our view of travel fits into things like enlightenment, conservation, freedom, and climate change.

cover of Wild Girls

Wild Girls: How the Outdoors Shaped the Women Who Challenged a Nation by Tiya Miles

The latest from the National Book Award-winner for All That She Carried shows how some history-making women of the 19th century subverted gender norms by finding freedom in physicality and their environments. The outdoor labor Harriet Tubman was forced to do taught her the skills she’d need to bring herself and others to freedom. Dakota writer Gertrude Simmons Bonnin found freedom from the American Indian boarding school she attended when she played basketball outside. And Louisa May Alcott found her feminist voice in writing that was inspired by nature walks.

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Suggestion Section

The 2023 Booker Prize Shortlist Has Been Announced

No Sob Stories Here: 10 Lighthearted Classic Books

10 Books from 2013 That Aged Badly & 10 Still Worth Reading

The Best New Book Releases Out September 19, 2023


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica

Categories
In The Club

Fall-Friendly Books

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

I am in a very fall kind of reading mood and will be recommending books accordingly. What the season means to each of us differs, so I’ve tried to include different kinds of books that a wide variety of fall-mood readers would like. Below, I’ve got a witchy romance, a contemporary romance, a newly released cozy foodie mystery, and a gorgeously illustrated graphic novel that’s all about feels.

But before we get to them, Book Riot’s editorial team is writing for casual and power readers alike over at The Deep Dive! During the month of September, all new free subscribers will be entered to win Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler, plus 5 mystery books from The Deep Dive. To enter, simply start a free subscription to The Deep Dive. No payment method required!

Nibbles and Sips

hummus with a side of pita

Homemade Hummus by Turkuaz Kitchen

It’s been a minute since I’ve had fresh hummus, which I think is worlds apart from store-bought. It’s surprisingly simple to make for it to be so good, and I love the aesthetics of this YouTuber (though I’m using a food processor rather than a mortar and pestle).

What you’ll need:

-2 cups chickpeas

-1/4 cup lemon juice

-1/2 cup tahini

-1/2 tsp cumin

-salt

-iced water

-2 tbsp olive oil

Mix everything together.

-Optional if you want meat: ground beef, garlic, pepper paste, tomato paste, black pepper, paprika. Instructions are within the video description.

You can make the tortilla chips from scratch or just get them store-bought like me!


Cover of The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna

The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna

Witches are few and far between in the UK, which is why Mika Moon and her group of witches meet only so often — safety is priority, and too many witches in one place tend to draw attention. Even though Mika is used to the loneliness, a big part of her rejects it, and she posts videos on a YouTube-like site where she shares magic tips, pretending to be a witch. But someone sees her for what she really is and invites her to a house out in the middle of nowhere to tutor three young witches into their magic. Somehow, she agrees and finds with the inhabitants of the house — especially a grumpy librarian — a family like none she’s ever experienced. But the transition from being a loner orphan witch to a loved one isn’t easy, and she’ll have to make some changes to adjust.

cover of You, Again by Kate Goldbeck

You, Again by Kate Goldbeck

If I’m being honest with y’all, a big part of the reason I chose to include this one is the cover. It’s gorgeous! So fall. But also, since this is a romance, it’ll have that happily ever after, which I associate with coziness. Here, Ari and Josh meet and instantly dislike each other. They’re also both sleeping with the same woman. After some years pass, and they fully expect to never see each other again, a chance meeting sends them back into each other’s lives, this time a little worse for wear. They’re both recovering from breakups and find comfort in each other. This leads to a friends-with-benefits situationship, which eventually leads to you-know-what.

cover of Murder and Mamon by Mia P. Manansala

Murder and Mamon by Mia P. Manansala

I like a cozy, foodie mystery any season, but I feel like they really lend themselves to fall. In this fourth entry into the Tita Rosie’s Kitchen Mystery series, Lila Macapagal’s godmothers open a new laundromat. But when the body of one of their nieces visiting from the Philippines is found in the building next to a message painted on the floor, Lila will have to air out their dirty laundry (ha) to find out who did it. This is another book with the same endearing characters and delectable food descriptions that fans of the series have come to love.

cover of Feelings: A Story in Seasons by Manjit Thapp

Feelings: A Story in Seasons by Manjit Thapp

So I actually first picked this one up in the summer and felt it really fit the season. And now I feel like I can say the same about it for fall. This is probably because it follows a young woman — who is modeled somewhat after the author — as she grapples with all her feelings through the seasons. While it handles some potentially heavy topics like mental health, I feel it has a quietly contemplative quality to it that lends itself to autumn. Also, the artwork and color palette are so pretty.

*Book Club Discussion: If you feel comfortable, you can discuss how the artwork made you feel and if it accurately represented the feelings mentioned. Also, what emotions did reading the book evoke overall?

Book Riot has podcasts to keep your ears listening for days! Check them out and subscribe.

Suggestion Section

Book Club:

More To Read

10 Incredible Character Arcs in Fantasy Series

13 Book Clubs New September 2023 Picks, From Reese’s Book Club To Mocha Girls Read

The 2023 National Book Awards Longlists Have Been Announced

Middle Schoolers Can’t Borrow Fahrenheit 451, Any YA Books, Without Parental Permission in Dripping Springs ISD


I hope this newsletter found you well, and as always, thanks for hanging out! If you have any comments or just want to connect, send an email to erica@riotnewmedia.com or holla at me on Twitter @erica_eze_. You can also catch me talking more mess in the new In Reading Color newsletter as well as chattin’ with my new co-host Tirzah Price on the Hey YA podcast.

Until next time,

Erica