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Read This Book

Read This Book…

Welcome to Read This Book, a newsletter where I recommend one book that should absolutely be put at the top of your TBR pile. Recommended books will vary across genre and age category and include shiny new books, older books you may have missed, and some classics I suggest finally getting around to. Make space for another pile of books on your floor, because here we go!

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Today’s pick is a memoir from earlier this year that took me around the globe in a way that I have never before experienced through literature.

Book cover of How to Live Free in a Dangerous World: A Decolonial Memoir by Shayla Lawson

How to Live Free in a Dangerous World: A Decolonial Memoir by Shayla Lawson

I’ve said this before, but I truly believe that poets write the best memoirs. The essays in this book range from harrowing to heartbreaking to hopeful, and each one is deeply eye-opening. Lawson has a way of making every place and every feeling palpable to readers.

The author is one person who seems to have crammed a hundred lives into their single existence. One essay takes place in Egypt. They and their young woman friends are single and not dressed as modestly as is typical, and they come a little too close to learning exactly how dangerous that could be. They describe with intimate detail a performance piece they experienced in Japan, and reading their description made it feel like I was also there.

Many of the essays are also explorations of being Black in whichever particular city and country they are in during that story. They write about being in Venice, Italy, and the gondolier who was smitten with them while not fetishizing them. They write about being married and living in Roosteren, Netherlands, and constantly battling white saviorism, thinly veiled racism, and food that sounds absolutely terrible. They write about being Black in Harare, Zimbabwe, and being in a car full of other “Black” people driving recklessly in the dark and the realization that, while they could get in trouble, it will not be from a white cop because there, the police are “Black” too. The story about when they were in France at a beautiful dinner party and opted out of the white people shenanigans really resonated with me.

They also write about becoming disabled over time, about love and community, about loss, and about learning and unlearning, especially around gender as a construct and their own identity. Lawson’s travels could easily make them seem unrelatable to folks who have not had such access; however, each essay exudes connection and cultivates understanding.


That’s it for now, book-lovers!

Patricia

Find me on Book Riot, the All the Books podcast, Bluesky, and Instagram.

Find more books by subscribing to Book Riot Newsletters.

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Bookish Goods

Bookish Good of the Week: May 19, 2024

Bamboo Book Stand

Bamboo Book Stand by BambooMN

This book stand is made out of sustainable bamboo, and would be perfect for cookbooks ‘n’ things. $18+

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Giveaways

051824-EACHouse-May2024-Giveaway

We’re giving away three copies each of Scorched Grace and Blessed Water by Margot Douaihy to three lucky Riot readers!

Enter here for a chance to win, or click the image below!

Immerse yourself in the gripping world of mystery, crime, and unexpected sweetness with our exclusive newsletter, Crime & Chocolate. Tailored for the discerning aficionado of intrigue and suspense, this newsletter is your monthly gateway to the latest and greatest in crime, mystery, and thriller novels. Join us on a journey through the shadows, where every page turned is a step deeper into the unknown.

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Kissing Books

Fancy a Cuppa Love?

Welcome, or welcome back, to the Kissing Books newsletter. I’m PN Hinton, your guide to all things romance-related. Thanks for taking time from your day to give this a read! I hope this newsletter helps to brighten up your day just a little bit more.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Bookish Goods

picture of tea bath print

Tea Bath With a Book Art Print by stasiab

Apart from a plethora of books, a comfy chair, and a good reading light, one item that brings a reading space together is an amazing bookish print. And this particular one showcases the vibes most of us want to channel once we’ve settled into those spaces. $25

New Releases

cover of The 7-10 Split

The 7-10 Split by Karmen Lee

When teacher Ava’s former childhood friend Grace returns home to Peach Blossom to take a teaching job at her high school, she is not looking to take a walk down memory lane, especially once the principal announces that Grace will be coaching the bowling team Ava has been championing for years. But when they’re tasked with bringing the new bowling team to championship victory in six months, the women decide to put the past behind them and work together for the future of the team. Now, if only they could ignore the still very much present chemistry between them. 

cover of For Pucking Keeps

For Pucking Keeps by D. Sparks

Alexis, better known as indie romance author Jazminne Starr, has just relocated to Seattle to deal with her writer’s block, broken heart, and impending deadline. She decides to write a hockey romance and, as luck would have it, her new friend and neighbor is the sister of Tor Bailey, Captain and Center for the Seattle Vipers. As they work together, the attraction between them grows. But once the romance is out there in black and white, will there still be a chance for them to continue what they had started? 

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

As promised in the last newsletter, here are some tea-themed romances to curl up with. Enjoy!

cover of Give Love a Chai

Give Love a Chai by Nanxi Wen

Tia is ready to get married and start her new life with Mr. Perfect. She just needs to divorce Andrew, her ex-childhood friend and current husband first. When she shows up at his doorstep demanding that he sign the papers, Andrew views this return as the perfect opportunity for a second chance. However, despite their history, Tia has a current love and isn’t sure if she should throw that away to try it again with Andrew.

cover of The Secret Service of Tea and Treason

The Secret Service of Tea and Treason by India Holton

Alice is the top operative at the Agency of Undercover Note Takers, a title she intends to keep. So when rumors of an assassination plot begin to float around town, she is quickly assigned to the case. She isn’t working alone though, as rival Daniel has been assigned to act as her husband for the duration of the undercover assignment. Neither are happy with this assignment but are determined to keep it up until they find their would-be villain. However, as they continue to play the part of a married couple, they soon find themselves struggling to fight their mutual and fast-growing attraction.

Yet another eerily accurate quiz, at least for me.

If you’re wanting some more hockey romances, check this list out.

Get your shelves prepared for these romances that perfectly combine astrology and Tarot.

And that’s all she wrote for today. I’ll be back in your inboxes on Monday. In the meantime you can always give me a follow over on Instagram under @pns_bookish_world. Until then, happy reading and stay hydrated.

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What's Up in YA

Defining Monsters, Comics Upon Comics, and More YA Book Talk: May 20, 2024

Hey, YA Readers!

Consider this edition of your YA newsletter ~summer is coming vibes~. You’re going to get a look at an investment bookish good to enjoy reading and lounging, two excellent new releases perfect for reading during the longer days, and then, we’ll round out the newsletter with all of the comics/graphic novels hitting shelves this month.

A small programming note: you’ll get the Thursday newsletter and Saturday newsletter this week as normal, but your next Monday newsletter will not arrive as usual. It’s Memorial Day in the states, and we’re taking it off. Thus the ~summer vibes~ today.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Grab your frozen lemonade or iced coffee and let’s hit it.

Bookish Goods

outdoor floor cushion book cover

Outdoor Floor Cushion by PatuuLiving

This outdoor cushion that you can use for reading in the shade (or sun) looks so comfortable…and it’s waterproof. If you’re looking for outdoor seating to get cozy in this season, I think this might be an awesome option. Bonus: it will work inside, too, in a way that a hammock is less easy to move indoors. Starting at $82, you have a ton of colors and sizes to choose from.

New Releases

It’s another great week of new YA books hitting shelves. I’ve got two below in two very different genres and formats, but you can see the entire list of new hardcover YA releases over here.

have you seen this girl book cover

Have You Seen This Girl by Nita Tyndall

A dark thriller with a nonbinary teen lead? Yes, please!

Copycat murders have plagued Cardinal Creek, and now, another girl has gone missing.

Sid’s dad did not do the crime this time. He’s in prison for murdering five other girls ten years ago. He killed them all, then he dumped their bodies into the lake. That lake is where the new missing girl, June, was found, but it’s clearly not Sid’s dad this time. Instead, suspicions are around Sid. The only person who believes Sid is not responsible is a new girl in town named Mavis. The problem is Mavis also doesn’t know Sid’s background and if she did, they would likely become a suspect in Mavis’s mind, too.

It’s not only Sid’s past that’s a secret, though. So, too, is the fact that they are visited by the girls murdered by their father. June’s voice is now part of what they’re hearing, and June won’t settle for anything less than an answer as to what’s going on.

Sid needs to clear their name. But the only way to do that and the only way to prove they’re not a monster or murderer is by facing their history and facing the truth of what their father did. If they don’t, they may never know peace from these murdered girls—and they certainly don’t want to go to jail for a crime they didn’t commit.

we mostly come out at night book cover

We Mostly Come Out at Night edited by Rob Costello

Monster means something slightly (or vastly!) different to everyone. This anthology, which features only trans and queer authors, attempts to explore the truth behind the experiences of being confronted by monsters—and being seen as a monster, too. It includes familiar monsters of legends and lore, as well as new ones. The contributor lineup is excellent, too, and includes Kalynn Bayron, David Bowles, H.E. Edgmon, Michael Thomas Ford, Naomi Kanakia, Claire Kann, Sam J. Miller, Alexandra Villasante, and more.

There are never enough YA horror anthologies, and this one is a worthy addition.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

May YA Comics

In one of the first sends of the YA newsletter for May, I rounded up all of the nonfiction hitting shelves this month. Now let’s look at the comics you can pick up now or in the next couple of weeks. There really is something for every kind of reader here!

the boy from clearwater book two

The Boy From Clearwater, Book Two by Yu Pei-Yun, illustrated by Zhou Jian-Xin, and translated by Lin King

This series follows a young man growing up in a volatile Taiwan, and it’s inspired by the author’s own experiences. In this volume, Kun-lin is finally released from being imprisoned at Green Island for 10 years and he’s hoping to rebuild his life. He hopes to become an editor and moves around several institutions before seeing how censorship is impacting the lives of friends and colleagues. He decides to start his own children’s magazine and hire his friends. It seems good and well.

Fast-forward 40 years, and Kun-lin meets Yu Pei-Yun while working at White Terror Memorial Park, where he provides education about human rights. Kun-lin has been working with fellow survivors following the end of martial law, but the meeting with Yu gives him an opportunity to understand, revisit, and try to work through the trauma, pain, and tumultuous life he has lived.

If you haven’t read the first title in this series, you can grab The Boy From Clearwater, Book One for $2 (I can’t guarantee by the time you read this it’ll be on sale, but give it a shot!).

breathe book cover

Breathe: Journeys to Healthy Binding by Maia Kobabe and Dr. Sarah Peitzmeier, PhD

Also shared in the roundup of YA nonfiction for May, this collection contains 25 different stories of trans and nonbinary folks who’ve elected to bind in an act of gender affirmation. In addition to the personal stories, Kobabe and Dr. Peitzmeier include research and resources to make this an accessible—and necessary—guide for young people.

escape from st hell book cover

Escape from St. Hell by Lewis Hancox

This is the sequel to Welcome to St. Hell and it follows what happens after Lew comes to understand he is a guy and wants to live life as a guy. It’s about all of the changes that happen after making such a powerful and affirming discovery, not only in terms of bodily and cognitive perspectives but also in the relationships throughout his life.

garbage night book cover

Garbage Night: The Complete Collection by Benji Lee

There are so few books written from the perspective of animals once you’re no longer reading picture books or early readers. This comic, however, brings the world of animals into the hands of teen readers.

A dog named Simon, along with his best friends a raccoon and a deer, live in a barren and ransacked backyard, fighting to find any scrap of food they can. They’re living in hope of garbage night, but it never comes. So when they hear of another town where humans have all relocated, the trio is off to find it.

They meet several other animals on their journey but something feels off. What is happening in the world around them with fellow animals…and with the humans upon which they’ve come to depend?

hotelitor book cover

Hotelitor: Luxury-Class Defense and Hospitality Unit by Josh Hicks

The Hotelitor is exactly as advertised in the title: a luxury-class spacecraft for visitors. But when it’s brutally attacked by aliens, its entry-level staff (aka many teenagers!) are stranded in space. Anna Greene is 18 and takes charge, hoping to find resolution and safety for herself and fellow low-level employees. She and her crew are far from prepared to handle what’s happening not only in space outside the Hotelitor, but also what’s happening inside with greedy VIPs and more.

karate prom book cover

Karate Prom by Kyle Starks

Don is the best fighter at Benjamin Harrison High School. But then he’s put in the ring with Sam Steadman from Lincoln High. The two fall for one another and fast.

The problem? They both have terrifying ex-partners. The two of them will have to fight through a pile of scary opponents in order to be with one another.

This sounds a little like a fun take on Scott Pilgrim.

maelstrom book cover

Maelstrom by Lorian Merriman (May 28)

Maelstrom is the demon prince of an evil tyrant. Twigs has been prophesized to fight Maelstrom in order to truly earn his title as Hero of Virtue.

Unfortunately for Twigs, Maelstrom’s mother is a necromancer and does not want to give up the throne she believes is hers. Maelstrom decides he isn’t standing for it and teams up with Twigs in an unexpected twist to take down his mother.

Except…can or should Twigs trust Maelstrom? Should Maelstrom trust his own instincts?

This one is being pitched for fans of Nimona and The Adventure Zone.

sunhead book cover

Sunhead by Alex Assan

For readers who feel alone in their fandom and/or experiences coming into themselves, this comic is going to resonate strongly. It follows Rotem, who is a huge fan of the Sunrise books and movies. She’s especially obsessed with the love interest Edmund in the series (y’all are laughing, too, right? Sunrise/Edmund like Twilight/Edward). She feels like no one else gets it because, well, no one else seems to understand her obsession.

Enter Ayala, a quiet girl in Rotem’s class who loves books and is equally obsessed with Sunrise and Edmund. But as the two of them become closer to one another, bonding over the series, Rotem begins to wonder if there’s something else drawing them together…and if it’s the Sunrise series at all.

the worst ronin book cover

The Worst Ronin by Maggie Tokuda-Hall, illustrated by Faith Schaffer

Chihiro is a 16-year-old samurai and it’s not easy. Her father has built a reputation as a samurai but Chihiro has built one instead on being obsessed with Tatsuo Nakano, the first female samurai to be accepted into an elite school.

Then Chihiro’s father is conscripted and she is given the opportunity to work alongside Tatsuo because her father no longer can, Chihiro sees it as a chance to learn from the best and secure her own spot in the elite samurai school.

But as they say, never meet your heroes (who says that anyway?). Tatsuo is not like Chihiro has built her up to be. She’s foul-mouthed with a quick temper and more, she’s turned her back on the samurai way, working instead as a ronin for hire. The two of them could not be more different but because they have to work together, it might be that they find far more common ground–and an opportunity to work through challenges, including grief–than difference.

This is getting compared to Nimona as well, and it’s also been compared to Attack on Titan.

young hag and the witch's quest book cover

Young Hag and the Witches’ Quest by Isabel Greenberg

Despite its storied history of magic and knights at the Round Table, Britain is now home only to three witches: Young Hag, her mother, and her grandmother, Ancient Crone. Grandmother has told Young Hag stories of the legends of yore, and Young Hag has grown up believing in curses, in spells, and in her own magic. But when something tragic happens to her grandmother, Young Hag decides to give up magic altogether. It hasn’t actually helped her yet.

When a changeling baby is found in the woods, Young Hag is confronted with magic yet again. Maybe she can’t ignore it or turn her back on it. Maybe she’s meant to set out on a quest to bring it back to Britain more broadly.

So now she’s going to do just that. But can she face the challenges of bringing lore and legend back to a whole country? She’ll have to work hard to believe in herself and in magic itself.

I don’t know about you, but I’m ready to climb into my reading spot beneath the shady trees with a stack of comics.

Thanks as always for hanging out. We’ll see you later this week.

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen, currently reading Time and Time Again by Chatham Greenfield

Categories
Book Radar

WICKED Releases Official Trailer and More Book Radar!

Dear Book Friends,

Happy Monday, and once again, it’s time for another round of Book Radar! I’m back with more book news and a lot of fun new trailer news to share with you as well. Yay for the movies! Yay for books! Yay for Monday? Sure. Let’s do this.

Book Deals and Reveals

when the wolf comes home book cover

Get ready, because one of my most anticipated books of 2025 has entered the chat. Here’s the cover of Nat Cassidy’s When the Wolf Comes Home. It’s out from Tor Nightfire on April 22, 2025.

Speaking of 2025 books I absolutely cannot wait for, Grady Hendrix has a new one out on January 14, 2025. And People has the exclusive cover reveal! “Think Rosemary’s Baby set in a home for unwed mothers in 1970,” says publisher Berkley, about Hendrix’s latest, Witchcraft for Wayward Girls.

Let’s talk trailers. First up, here’s the trailer for the highly anticipated film Wicked, starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande. Part I is out this November!

Here’s another highly-anticipated book adaptation that just got a trailer: It Ends with Us. The film, starring Blake Lively, is out in August.

Even more film adaptation news. Keira Knightley is set to star in the upcoming film adaption of Ruth Ware’s bestselling novel The Woman in Cabin 10 at Netflix. The film will be directed by Simon Stone.

Ken Follett will be publishing his next book with Hachette Book Group and Hachette UK in 2025. The book is not yet titled.

Today is the last day to take part in Libro.fm’s massive sale! Members always get 30% off sale audiobooks, but right now, all sale audiobooks on Libro.fm are 30% off for everyone (not just members). Just use the code NOTTODAYSATAN.

Book Riot Recommends

Hi, welcome to everyone’s favorite segment of Book Radar called Book Riot Recommends. This is where I’ll talk to you about all the books I’m reading, the books I’m loving, and the books I can’t wait to read and love in the near future. I think you’re going to love them too!

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Prepare Your Shelves!

tiananmen square book cover

Tiananmen Square by Lai Wen (Spiegel & Grau, June 4)

Y’all know I’m really careful about the books I hype up when they’re over 500 pages. I know some people read books that long all the time, but for me, if I’m sticking with a book that long, it has to be worth it. Maybe a 500+ page book is appealing to you. Maybe you’re like me and the thought of diving into a longer book is daunting. Either way, all of this is to say Tiananmen Square is totally worth it, and you will devour every page. It’s a coming-of-age story set in the years leading up to the Tiananmen Square student protests.

Growing up in a working-class neighborhood in Beijing in the 1970s, Lai is mostly ignored by her parents, who seem preoccupied with other things. But after a childish prank lands her in trouble with the police, Lai sees the realities of the Chinese state and understands what her parents went through during the Cultural Revolution. We follow Lai as she learns about the world around her, falls in love with literature, and opens up her mind to revolutionary ideas.

It’s when Lai wins a scholarship to study at the prestigious Peking University that she really begins to fight against the Communist pressure of conformity. Here, Lai meets a group of individualists who are committed to living their lives as their most authentic selves. And as the events of 1989 unfold, Lai finds herself wrapped up in the protest.

Yes, this is a novel, but author Lai Wen is drawing heavily from her own life and experiences. Expect to learn a lot about a historical moment that maybe you remember, or maybe, if like me, you were just a wee baby in 1989, you’re finding out about for the first time. But what I enjoyed most about this one is following Lai’s journey and reconnecting with the hope and idealism of youth. (yeah, ok, I’m old now—I was a baby in the ’80s)

What I’m Reading This Week

the mystery guest book cover

The Mystery Guest by Nita Prose

Come and Get It by Kiley Reid

Roland Rogers Isn’t Dead Yet by Samantha Allen

Codename: Sailor V, Volume 2 by Naoko Takeuchi

Don’t Fear the Reaper by Stephen Graham Jones

Monday Memes

Here are a buncha random literary tweets, and they’re great. Twitter might be on fire, but the bookish memes keep coming.

And Here’s A Cat Picture!

tuxedo cat curled into a ball

And to finish off everything this Monday, we have Remy curled up in a tight ball. I love him! He loves all of you.

That’s all for Book Radar. See you on Thursday. Have a great week!

Emily

Categories
The Fright Stuff

Happy Stephen King Release Week

Happy Monday, Horror Fans. Another scary thing happened to me this past week. I was walking home from the gym and a crow swooped down and attacked me. Like, claws in hair. I hated it. Anyway, enough about my scary life. Let’s talk books!

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Bookish Goods

stephen king candle

Smells Like a Stephen King Novel Candle by TrendingScentsGifts

In honor of Stephen King release week, here’s a candle just for the Stephen King fans out there. What does a Stephen King novel smell like, you ask? Actually…you get to pick your vibe. Is it earthy? Minty? Fresh and clean? You do you. This candle promises 50-60 hours of burn time for $25.

New Releases

you like it darker book cover

You Like it Darker by Stephen King

Like I said, it’s Stephen King release week. And here’s what we’re getting from the master of horror this week. You Like It Darker is a new short story collection, featuring 12 stories. As the title suggests, these stories delve into the darker side of life. Bonus: fans of the King classics will be excited to know there’s a sequel to Cujo included here!

woodworm book cover

Woodworm by Layla Martínez

But we’ve got more than King in the new release category! Woodworm is a novel in translation set in a strange house filled with ghosts, witchcraft, and secrets. The house was built by a man who wanted to hold and control his wife. Now, many years later, their daughter and her granddaughter are still unable to escape. The isolated women are already whispered about in the local community. But after a boy goes missing, paranoia surrounding the women escalates.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

the beast you are book cover

The Beast You Are by Paul Tremblay

In honor of Stephen King’s short story collection, let’s talk more horror short stories that you’re going to love. It’s no secret I’m a big Paul Tremblay fan. I love how super weird he gets with his short stories, and his latest collection is no different. The Beast You Are consists of 15 short stories and one novella. The horror in these stories is experimental and creative. It will twist your brain. So obviously you have to read it!

cover of the dangers of smoking in bed by mariana enriquez

The Dangers of Smoking in Bed by Mariana Enríquez

Yes, Mariana Enríquez has a NEW short story collection out this year, but before you get A Sunny Place for Shady People in September, read this. The Dangers of Smoking in Bed are contemporary Gothic stories that are all at once beautiful, strange, haunting, and uncanny, all set in Bueno Aires.

Well, I’m going out into the world. Wish me luck. Hopefully I don’t get attacked by another crow. Hopefully we all make it to next Monday! Until then, you can follow me (and message me) on Instagram at EmAndHerCat. Sweet dreams, horror fans!

Categories
The Kids Are All Right

Jewish American Heritage Month, Hungry Bears, And More Great Kids’ Books!

Happy Sunday, kidlit friends! Congrats to the 2024 Barnes & Noble Children’s & Young Adult Book Award Winners. I loved both I Lived Inside a Whale by Xin Li and The Misfits: A Royal Conundrum, and I’m so glad to see them win some awards.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

This week, I review books for Jewish American Heritage Month, plus some new releases.

Bookish Goods

Where the Wild Things Are Swaddle by CuddleMuffinsBlanket

Where the Wild Things Are Swaddle by CuddleMuffinsBlanket

If you know anyone expecting a baby, this customizable Where the Wild Things Are swaddle would make an adorable gift. $21+

New Releases

Cover of A Bear, a Fish, and a Fishy Wish by Daniel Bernstrom, illustrated by Brandon James Scott

A Bear, a Fish, and a Fishy Wish by Daniel Bernstrom, illustrated by Brandon James Scott

The hungry bear from A Bear, a Bee, and a Honey Tree returns in this hilarious follow-up. Bear is still hungry, and this time he spies a fish swimming upstream. Each has a wish—Bear wishes to eat the fish, and Fish wishes to reach home. Whose wish will be reached? This is so cleverly written, each line is full of sound and intention, and the illustrations are so expressive. Even though my daughter reads picture books less and less these days, she adored this one, and we’ve read it many times.

Cover of Rising by Sidura Ludwig, illustrated by Sophia Vincent Guy

Rising by Sidura Ludwig, illustrated by Sophia Vincent Guy

Told from a child’s perspective, this gentle, poetic picture book depicts a child and mother making challah for Shabbat. The illustrations show an additional rising: the mother is pregnant, and at the end, the mother holds an infant while the child makes challah with Dad. It’s a lovely, quiet Jewish picture book and includes the author’s favorite challah recipe at the end.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

May is Jewish American Heritage Month, so I thought I would review four new-ish children’s books about Jewish experiences by Jewish authors.

Cover of Challah Day! by Charlotte Offsay, illustrated by Jason Kirschner

Challah Day! by Charlotte Offsay, illustrated by Jason Kirschner

Where Rising is gentle and meditative, Challah Day! depicts the chaotic mayhem that often accompanies cooking with multiple children and pets. A family of four, plus their pet dog, prepare challah for dinner with grandparents. Offsay’s playful, rhyming text has the family joining together to follow the steps in baking the bread, while the illustrations show the mess that accompanies such preparations, from the baby throwing eggs on the floor to a braiding tug-of-war with the dog and creative ways of pouring flour. The illustrations take a whimsical turn when the children are depicted as smaller, climbing flour bags and hopping on sugar and oil. It’s a picture book full of Jewish joy. Back matter includes a description of why challah is important and a recipe.

Cover of The Blue Butterfly of Cochin by Ariana Mizrahi, illustrated by Siona Benjamin

The Blue Butterfly of Cochin by Ariana Mizrahi, illustrated by Siona Benjamin

This lovely picture book tells the story of Jewish life in Cochin, India. It is the first time I’ve read a children’s book centering Indian Jewish experiences. Leah is a storyteller, and after Shabbat, she tells stories to children in the synagogue’s courtyard. Butterflies listen nearby, and then one day, a butterfly notices that Leah seems sad and lands on her shoulder and asks why. She tells the butterfly that she and her family are leaving India to live in Israel. Leah misses India when she moves, but remembering her stories and the butterflies helps her.

Cover of Across So Many Seas by Ruth Behar

Across So Many Seas by Ruth Behar

This is one of my favorite middle grade novels of the year so far. It’s a beautiful historical fiction following four Jewish 12-year-old girls in the same family across the centuries. It begins with a young girl’s expulsion from Spain in 1492, then to Turkey, where the family finds refuge, then to Cuba, where Fidel Castro forces the family to leave, and finally to Miami. It’s really moving to read about how each journey is filled with terror and grief for lost homes and family, but then each new country becomes home and becomes loved and becomes integrated into the family’s culture, only for them to be rejected from the country once more for being Jewish. Behar has several other middle grade novels depicting Jewish experiences.

Cover of Shira and Esther's Double Dream Debut by Anna E. Jordan

Shira and Esther’s Double Dream Debut by Anna E. Jordan

This joyful, cute middle grade is like a Jewish The Parent Trap and has sadly gone a bit under the radar. It takes place in the 1940s in a fictionalized city. Through some kind of magic, Shira and Esther were born nearly identical in the same hospital on the same day. But the girls could not be more different otherwise. Shira’s rabbi father looks down on her dreams of performing, while Esther’s stage performer mother is equally dismissive of Esther’s goals to learn more about Jewish religion. When the two 12-year-old girls meet for the first time, they hatch a plan to switch places and fulfill their dreams. It’s a delightful read.

Trolls at Bernheim Forest, The Kids Are All Right

For Mother’s Day, my spouse surprised me with a day trip to Bernheim Forest in Kentucky to see the trolls. They were amazing! I loved the park as a whole.

If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, Bluesky @AReaderlyMom.bsky.social, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.

All the best,

Margaret Kingsbury

Categories
Giveaways

051724-FoulDays-Giveaway

We’re giving away three copies of Foul Days by Genoveva Dimova to three lucky Riot readers!

Enter here for a chance to win, or click the image below!

The Witcher meets Naomi Novik in this fast-paced fantasy rooted in Slavic folklore, from an assured new voice in genre fiction.

As a witch in the walled city of Chernograd, Kosara has plenty of practice treating lycanthrope bites, bargaining with kikimoras, and slaying bloodsucking upirs. There’s only one monster she can’t defeat: her ex, the Zmey, known as the Tsar of Monsters. She’s defied him one too many times and now he’s hunting her. Betrayed by someone close to her, Kosara’s only choice is to trade her shadow—the source of her powers—for a quick escape.

Categories
True Story

Fall in Love with Cuisine

As many of you already know, when I’m not wandering around my library or walking the Corgis, I’m probably going to be cooking. Besides the fact that cooking is the perfect activity to get in some audiobook listening time, it’s also a great way to express creativity, spend time with the people you love, or explore the world through new-to-you cuisine.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Today, I’m sharing two of my favorite cookbooks, both of which include beautiful photography and mouth-watering recipes. But first, bookish goods!

Bookish Goods

a photo of a purple sweatshirt embroidered with the words "happiest when reading"

Happiest When Reading Embroidered Sweatshirt by embroideredking 

I’ve been very into embroidered sweatshirts at the moment. This one has perfected the beautiful simplicity of design. $67

New Releases

a graphic of the cover of Magical/Realism: Essays on Music, Memory, Fantasy, and Borders by Vanessa Angélica Villarreal

Magical/Realism: Essays on Music, Memory, Fantasy, and Borders by Vanessa Angélica Villarreal

When Vanessa Angélica Villarreal becomes a mother, she decides to return to Mexico to learn more about her grandmother and her family. But when Villarreal returns, she finds that her entire life — her marriage, her family, her reality — has fallen apart. With Magical/Realism, Villarreal puts her life back together using everything from pop culture references to video games.

a graphic of the cover of The Infernal Machine: A True Story of Dynamite, Terror, and the Rise of the Modern Detective by Steven Johnson

The Infernal Machine: A True Story of Dynamite, Terror, and the Rise of the Modern Detective by Steven Johnson

The author of The Ghost Map returns to tell the story of the evolution of the NYPD. Set against the backdrop of 1914 New York City, Steven Johnson tells the story of the anarchy movement that led to the birth of the modern detective, when the NYPD stopped responding to crime and started solving it.

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

Riot Recommendations

a graphic of the cover of I Am a Filipino: And This Is How We Cook by Miguel Trinidad and Nicole Ponseca

I Am a Filipino: And This Is How We Cook by Miguel Trinidad and Nicole Ponseca

This incredible cookbook is a 2019 James Beard Award Finalist. Plus, it was named a Best Cookbook of the Year by The New Yorker, Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, New York Times Book Review, Houston Chronicle, Food52, PopSugar, and more. This phenomenal cookbook invites readers into the diverse range of Filipino cuisine with all of its many influences, including Chinese, Arab, Mexican, and Spanish cooking techniques. The authors invite readers to learn more about the origins of their recipes, creating a cookbook that is such a wonderful celebration of Filipino cooking.

a graphic of the covers of In Bibi's Kitchen: The Recipes and Stories of Grandmothers from the Eight African Countries that Touch the Indian Ocean by Hawa Hassan

In Bibi’s Kitchen: The Recipes and Stories of Grandmothers from the Eight African Countries that Touch the Indian Ocean by Hawa Hassan (with Julia Turshen) 

My favorite cookbooks are those that have at least some little snippet of storytelling in them. I want to know more about where the recipe came from. Where did the cookbook author first discover their love of food? In Bibi’s Kitchen does that and more. Somali chef Hawa Hassan talks to bibis (grandmothers) from South Africa, Mozambique, Madagascar, Comoros, Tanzania, Kenya, Somalia, and Eritrea. They share their recipes and wisdom around their love of food. This cookbook feels like travel writing, a memoir, and a cookbook all rolled into one!

That’s it for this week! You can find me over on my substack Winchester Ave, over on Instagram @kdwinchester, on TikTok @kendrawinchester, or on my podcast Read Appalachia. As always, feel free to drop me a line at kendra.d.winchester@gmail.com. For even MORE bookish content, you can find my articles over on Book Riot.

Happy reading, Friends!

~ Kendra