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True Story

New Releases: Ghosts & Flowers

I continue — continue! To shirk reading like the chores of yore and instead do things like watching sitcoms from the early 2000s on Hulu instead. Also my wife got me a Nintendo Switch for my birthday and it is all I am now interested in. WELL. I amend that statement. I still love compiling lists of books. And looking at book stacks. Mm. Book stacks.

So in that grand tradition, here’s your new release highlights for this week:

Swimming to Freedom Cover

Swimming to Freedom: My Escape from China and the Cultural Revolution by Kent Wong

Ok first of all, I love this cover. Now, what’s it about? Wong’s memoir is about “a childhood amid revolutionary times, where boyish adventures and school days mixed with dire poverty and political persecution.” His father, a “patriotic Chinese official” was caught by Mao’s Hundred Flowers Campaign, which was a time when people were encouraged to express their true feelings about the government, and then later hundreds of thousands were sent to prison camps for “re-education.” Wong was one of half a million Freedom Swimmers who swam to Hong Kong to escape.

The Haunting of Alma Fielding

The Haunting of Alma Fielding: A True Ghost Story by Kate Summerscale

A Hungarian ghost hunter! A suburban housewife! A possible poltergeist! This story takes place in 1930s London when Alma Fielding started experiencing things flying off the shelves, tortoises appearing in her car, etc. Y’know. Ghost stuff. This is the story of her, ghost hunter Nandor Fodor (fun name), and an imminent war.

Buses Are A Comin Cover

Buses Are a Comin’: Memoir of a Freedom Rider by Charles Person, Richard Rooker

Is it possible to talk about Freedom Riders without getting emotional? Freedom Riders were incredibly brave men and women who rode interstate buses into segregated states to “challenge the non-enforcement of the U.S. Supreme Court decisions that ruled that segregated public buses were unconstitutional.” Charles Person was the youngest of the original Freedom Riders, being 18 when they started. The bus he rode was attacked by a mob, with several Riders severely beaten. This is his story.

All About Flowers Cover

All About Flowers: James Vick’s Nineteenth-Century Seed Company by Thomas J. Mickey

Like I’m not highlighting this book. In the 1880s, James Vick spent $100,000 a year on advertising, publishing full-color floral guides multiple times a year, and getting rave reviews for his magazine. He employed 150 people and received 3000 letters a day. If you were into flowers and lived in the mid-to-late 19th century, you knew about Vick’s Illustrated Floral Guide.


For more nonfiction new releases, check out the For Real podcast which I co-host with the excellent Kim here at Book Riot. If you have any questions/comments/book suggestions, you can find me on social media @itsalicetime. Until next time, enjoy those facts, fellow nerds.