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In The Club

In the Club 03/03/21

Welcome to In The Club, a newsletter of resources to keep your book group well-met, well-read, and well-fed. Today I’m giving you all a list of books by Latinx authors that are both great for book club talk and would make, in my opinion, fabulous on-screen adaptations. I had a lot of fun coming up with this list and could have added 20 more titles! We’ll start with these four.


To the club!!

Nibbles and Sips

This week I have a cocktail for you that I thew together because Trader Joe’s insists on selling you an entire crop of basil instead of the usual handful of leaves you really need. I’d made all the pasta sauces and still had a crap ton of the stuff, so I boiled it down with equal parts sugar and water to make a basil simple syrup. From that, I made this tasty lemon basil treat which you can make with or sans booze. I eyeballed this one so the ratios aren’t precise measurements–go by taste!

Ingredients: lemon juice, basil simple syrup, gin, tonic water (or other sparkly beverage)

In a shaker, pour in (more or less) two parts lemon juice, one part gin, and one part basil simple syrup. Shake it up with ice and pour into your glass, topping off with the tonic water or bubble of choices. For a little extra fancy, first rim your class with a citrus sugar (sugar mixed with the zest of your favorite citrus fruits). Voila!

Yo Quiero Adaptations

My two reactions to this post about Netflix admitting they need more Latinx content: 1)Pero like duh, Netfleex. 2)Ooooh let me make a list of some books I want to see adapted! I was already noodling on this idea with the announcement that America Ferrara will be adapting Erika L. Sánchez’ I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter. So let’s do this! Here are some picks that double as excellent book club selections. For each of these, have a little fun and come up with a dream cast!

For a Creepy Gothic Horror Flick:

Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Is anyone surprised that this is the first book on my list? It’s almost cheating to include it since there is, in fact, a Hulu series in the works. I can’t even begin to tell you how excited I am to see those opening scenes in 1950s Mexico City, that creepy ass house in the countryside, the entire <insert spoilers and swear words here> situation, and the fashion!! My brain immediately pictured Nazanin Mandi as Noemi from the first time I saw the cover, but I’ll be happy as long as they cast a Latina with beautiful brown skin.

Book Club Bonus: Gothic horror tropes! Which ones did you pick up on and how does this book both employ them and flip the script?

For a Historical Romance Series with a Bookish Twist:

A Summer for Scandal by Lydia San Andres

The success of Bridgerton has reminded me how much I enjoy a historical romance with lots of drama, and what I wouldn’t give to see it done with Latinx flair. Enter the books from Lydia San Andres’ Arroyo Blanco series, which are set in a fictional island in the Spanish Caribbean. Emilia Cruz is a romance author in secret; she puts out some seriously steamy content under an assumed name because judgy society folk gon’ judge. Ruben Torres, the darling of the literary world, is moonlighting as the literary critic of a gossip paper, but he’s also doing that in secret because, ya know, all of that is beneath him. Emilia and Ruben are thrown together in a hilarious meet-not-so-cute (a boating party + a capsized boat), and it’s not long before they feel an undeniable attraction to one another. The problem is, Ruben has been absolutely eviscerating Emilia’s serial in that gossip mag, and neither one of them knows about the other’s secret identity.

Book Club Bonus: One might argue that telenovelas already exist, and trust: I got my life from those growing up (where my Amor Real fans at?!). But Adult Me wants a version of those with less sexism and colorism, more sex positivity, and less problematic themes overall. If you’re familiar with the telenovela scene, discuss how an adaptation like this one could be part of a larger course correction (which we’re already seeing hints of, praise be). Otherwise, go for the obvious meta theme: the belittling of romance and erotica in literature.

For an Epic Adventure Fantasy Series Full of Righteous Rebellion:

Incendiary by Zoraida Córdova

My kingdom for this adaptation! Renata is a memory thief who was kidnapped as a child and brought to the palace of Andalucia where she was forced to use her powers to kill thousands and thousands of people. Years later, she’s been rescued by the Whispers, a group of rebel spies working against the crown who don’t entirely trust Renata given her dark past. When Dez—the commander of her unit and the object of Renata’s affection—is taken captive by the (truly hateful, awful, no good, very bad) evil prince, Renata must return to the palace to complete Dez’ top secret mission. But doing so stirs up a lot of old stuff and reveals a secret from her past that could change everything. The whole thing is set in a lush, magical world inspired by Inquisition Spain and had me yelling, “Oh no she did not!” real early on.

Book Club Bonus: Inquisition-era Spain was a scary place for so many people, leading to the cruel and senseless deaths and forced conversion of Jewish and Muslim people. Discuss the parallels you see here and how this sort of oppression is one that rears its head both constantly and cyclically throughout history. Then discuss the role of present day youth in activism, from climate change to social justice. The last few years have made me acutely aware of the hypocrisy of a society that devours stories of rebellion against oppressive forces like this one while also discrediting these kinds of movements in real life. There’s a lot to get into there.

For a Super Fun and Sweary Space Romp:

Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes

Who doesn’t want a thrilling space opera with a super prickly spaceship captain of Cuban descent who swears a ton PLUS CATS? Who, I ask you!? This book follows Eva Innocente, captain of La Sirena Negra, a cargo ship that ferries goods across the universe. When a shady corporation kidnaps her sister and demands the mother of all ransoms, Eva spirals into a web of lies and deception, alienating her beloved crew as she tries to raise the funds. This book is so damn hilarious and would be super fun to see on screen; move over Baby Yodita, here come the space gatos!

Book Club Bonus: Talk about the importance of found family in this book and as it applies in real life. Also take turns assessing what you would do in Eva’s shoes. It’s not an easy answer for most!

Suggestion Section

Speaking of dream adaptations and casts, I totally forgot this was the entire theme of last week’s SFF Yeah podcast episode!

March book club picks from Jenna Bush Hager, PBS NewsHour, BuzzFeed, and Vox. Also of note is Boston.com‘s selection of Fat Chance, Charlie Vega which sounds soooo good.

Is your book club looking for more short fiction, perhaps of a speculative nature? Check out these speculative short story collections for inspiration.

The Bloody Scotland Crime Festival has launched a virtual book club and those are words I like the sound of.


Thanks for hanging with me today! Shoot me an email at vanessa@riotnewmedia.com with your burning book club questions or find me on Twitter and the gram @buenosdiazsd. Sign up for the Audiobooks newsletter and catch me once a month on the All the Books podcast.

Stay bad & bookish, my friends. 
Vanessa