Categories
In Reading Color

Spring These Books into Your TBR

Welcome to In Reading Color, a space where we focus on literature by and about people of color.

After February, while being the shortest month of the year, felt long, we are somehow in spring. But I’m not mad! I am a very in-between kind of person when it comes to seasons and weather and prefer fall and spring, anyway. And while spring isn’t quite in full force, hopefully it’ll push through soon because these half 75 degrees, half 30 degrees just weeks aren’t it.

Indecisive weather aside, these new spring releases are looking crisp! Let’s get into a few, shall we?

Disorientation by Elaine Hsieh Chou  cover

Disorientation by Elaine Hsieh Chou

Ingrid Yang is 29 and going through it as a PhD student. For years, she’s been researching the late Chinese poet, Xiao-Wen Cho, even though she had no interest in him prior to starting her PhD (or any interest in since having started, if we’re keeping it real). Instead, the subject of her future dissertation was chosen by her adviser, a white guy who starts off being very invested in Chinese culture, and ends up… being the opposite of that. One day she finds a note in the Chou archives that leads to a helluva discovery. With her best friend, she sets out to get to the bottom of the mystery. There are book burnings, Anti-Asian propaganda, and a reckoning with how white men factor into her life that Ingrid experiences in this funny dark academia novel.

Four Aunties and a Wedding by Jesse Q. Sutanto cover

Four Aunties and a Wedding by Jesse Q. Sutanto (March 29, 2022)

Finally, Meddy Chan’s Aunties from Dial A for Aunties are back and still just as Med-dlesome (ha!). There is a grand wedding as in the first book but this time it’s Meddy’s! They hire another Chinese-Indonesian family to handle all the particulars, and practice their British phrases in anticipation of meeting her fiancé’s family. The wedding planner family’s photographer, Staphanie, and Meddy bond until Meddy overhears her talking about assassinating someone. Bloop! Now Meddy and her aunts try to stop this mafia family from taking out one of their wedding guests. Hijinks follows, naturally.

cover of Memphis by Tara Stringfellow, featuring illustrations of four Black women sitting amongst grass and flowers

Memphis by Tara Stringfellow (April 5, 2022)

Joan is an artist who paints the women of North Memphis, where her mother moved her and her sister in order to escape domestic violence. It’s also there that Joan’s grandfather was lynched 50 years earlier. Stringfellow jumps back and forth through time to tell the story of a Black family’s continued brushes with violence, tragedy, and trauma. Only by seeing the women in her family in a new light can she hope to break free of her family’s generational curse.

cover of An Unlasting Home by Mai Al-Nakib

An Unlasting Home by Mai Al-Nakib (April 12, 2022)

This is another muligenerational tale of women in a family that spreads across Kuwait,the United States, Lebanon, Iraq, and India. Sara, after having moved back to Kuwait from California, is a professor of philosophy at Kuwait University with a complex relationship with her home country. This is made even more complex once she teaches a class on Nietzsche that brings with it a charge of blasphemy on her. As she tries to fight the charge and figure out what her future will look like, the story weaves in and out, telling the stories of Sara’s grandmothers starting in the ’20s and how their actions led to today. No matter which country they found themselves in over the years, they were, like Sara after her mother died, always tied back to Kuwait.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

A Little Sumn Extra

New Actors Added to Cast of Anansi Boys Series

25 of the Best Murder Mystery Books

An interesting reflection on what exactly science fiction is

Books to help understand the maternal mental health crisis

The latest in censorship news


Thanks for reading; it’s been cute! If you want to reach out and connect, email me at erica@riotnewmedia.com or tweet at me @erica_eze_. You can find me on the Hey YA podcast with the fab Tirzah Price, as well as in the In The Club newsletter.

Until next time,

E